Adapt (FM1)
Adapt (FM1)
Adapt (FM1)
2.
3.
4.
SOLUTION:
At expiration, the stock price is 50 and therefore both options are out-ofthe-money; A and B are eliminated.
With a strike price of 45 and a minimum stock price of 46, option A is
never in the money; D is eliminated.
With a strike price of 55, option B will be in the money at the time the
stock price is 58; C is eliminated and E is the answer.
5.
6. Jeff deposits 10 into a fund today and 20 fifteen years later. Interest for
the first 10 years is credited at a nominal discount rate of d compounded
quarterly, and thereafter at a nominal interest rate of 6% compounded
semiannually. The accumulated balance in the fund at the end of 30 years
is 100.
Calculate d.
7. John borrows 10000 for 10 years and uses a sinking fund to repay the
principal. The sinking fund deposits earn an annual effective interest rate
of 5 percent. The total required payment for both the interest and the
sinking fund deposit made at the end of each year is 1445.04.
Calculate the annual effective interest rate charged on the loan.
9. Jim buys a 10-year bond with par value of 10000 and 8 percent
semiannual coupons. The redemption value of the bond at the end of 10
years is 10500.
Calculate the purchase price to yield 6 percent convertible quarterly.
SOLUTION :
Note: The coupons are paid out semiannually, interest is convertible quarterly,
hence we need to translate it into semiannual interest.
10. Travis purchased a soccer team and financed the purchase with a 15 year
loan.
Interest was charged at 6.00% per annum and payments were made on
an annual basis
with the first payment made one year after the loan was originated.
Travis's principal payment in the 14th year was $73,309.19.
How much interest was paid with the payment in the 4th year?
SOLUTION:
12.
Additional info :
i)
The total profit from a bear spread created by selling a 40 strike call
and buying a 45 strike call
ii)
The total profit from a bull spread created by buying a 40 strike put and
selling a 45 strike put
iii)
The total profit from a straddle created by selling a 40 strike call and
selling a 40 strike put
iv)
The total profit from a strangle created by buying a 40 strike put and
buying a 45 strike call
4.6% (1-year)
5.3% (2-year)
5.4% (3-year)
14.
SOLUTION:
15. Professor JT receives a perpetuity for his retirement that pays $300 at
the end of year 6, $600 at the end of year 10,
$900 at the end of year 14, with payments continuing to be made every
four years thereafter at an amount equal to $300 more than the
immediately preceding payment.
The present value of the third payment is $535.35.
Calculate the present value of this perpetuity.
SOLUTION:
i equals 16%.
Now, if we use the formula for a perpetuity immediate the present value
at the start of the perpetuity is
That is the value at the start of the perpetuity- that is at time 2 because it
is the value of a perpetuity immediate!
We must discount that back to time zero to get the present value.
That is discount for 2 years, or one-half of a 4 year period.
16.
The current price of a medical companys stock is 75. The expected value
of the stock price in three years is 90 per share. The stock pays no
dividends.
You are also given:
I.
II.
III.
For stocks without dividends and in the absence of transaction costs, the
stocks forward price is the future value of its spot price based on the riskfree interest rate; otherwise there would be an arbitrage opportunity.
Because the risk-free interest rate is positive, the forward price must be
greater than the spot price of 75.
Because these investors are risk-averse (i.e. they prefer not to take risks if
the average rate of return is the same) they need to receive on the
average a greater return than the risk-free interest rate on the shares they
invest in this stock. In other words, they need to receive a risk premium
(incentive) for taking on risk.
The forward price only includes the risk-free interest rate and not the risk
premium, so the forward price is less than the expected value of the
future stock price, namely 90.
17. Gertrude deposits 10,000 in a bank. During the first year, the bank
credits an annual effective rate of interest i. During the second year, the
bank credits an annual effective rate of interest (i 5 percent). At the end
of two years, she has 12,093.75 in the bank.
What would Gertrude have in the bank at the end of three years, if the
annual effective rate of interest were (i + 9%) for each of the three years?
SOLUTION:
PV(assets) = PV(liabilities)
II.
III.
There is one asset cash inflow before the liability cash outflow, and
one asset cash inflow after the liability cash outflow.
SOLUTION:
22. A 10,000 par value 10-year bond with 8% annual coupons is bought
at a premium to yield an annual effective rate of 6%.
Calculate the interest portion of the 7th coupon.
23. The President of SALT Solutions would like to reward his staff by paying
each employee a bonus. The President has informed his staff that the
bonuses totaling 25,000 will be paid on Bonus Day but the exact date is
not given.
In order to fund this bonus payment, the President invests in a zero
coupon bond with a face amount of 20,016 that matures 1 year before
Bonus Day. He also invests in a zero coupon bond with a face amount of
B that matures 5 years after Bonus Day.
Assuming a force of interest of 4%, determine the minimum value for B so
that the investments will be sufficient to pay the bonus on Bonus Day
regardless of the size of interest rate changes.
SOLUTION:
Therefore, for every K2-strike call we write, we buy 0.2 units of K1-strike call
and 0.8 units of K3-strike call.
In particular, for every 48-strike call that we write, we buy 0.2 units of 40strike calls and 0.8 units of 50-strike calls.
Hence, to create an asymmetric butterfly spread, if Angus writes 10 units
of 48-strike calls, he has to:
26.
A three year annual coupon $1000 par bond has a coupon rate of 4%. Use the
yield curve above to find the price P and then use this price to find the yield to
maturity.
SOLUTION:
28. All of the following are reasons for a corporation not to engage in hedging,
except:
SOLUTION:
Calculate the smallest amount the company needs to disburse today to purchase
assets that will exactly match these liabilities.
SOLUTION:
The strategy is to use the two highest yielding assets: the one-year
coupon bond and the two-year zero coupon bond.
The cost of these bonds is
30. A perpetuity of $1 each year, with the first payment due immediately, has a
present value of $25 at an annual effective rate of i%. The owner exchanges it
for another perpetuity with the first payment due immediately and subsequent
payments due at two year intervals. What should the payment of the second
perpetuity be, in order to keep the same interest rate, i%, and the same present
value?
SOLUTION:
31. Larry is repaying a loan with payments of $2,500 at the end of every
two years. If the amount of interest in the fourth installment is $2,458,
find the amount of principal in the seventh installment.
Assume an annual effective interest rate of 13%.
SOLUTION:
32. Calculate the nominal rate of interest convertible once every three years
that is equivalent to a nominal rate of discount convertible monthly.
SOLUTION:
a) Modified duration may change at different rates for each of the assets and liabilities as
time goes by.
b) Redington immunization requires infrequent rebalancing to keep modified duration of
assets equal to modified duration of liabilities.
c) This technique is designed to work only for small changes in the interest rate.
d) The yield curve is assumed to be flat.
e) The yield curve shifts in parallel when the interest rate changes.
ANSWER:
All are true except B. Immunization requires frequent rebalancing.
34. Sally lends 10,000 to Tim. Tim agrees to pay back the loan over 5
years with monthly payments payable at the end of each month.
Sally can reinvest the monthly payments from Tim in a savings account
paying interest at 6%, compounded monthly. The yield rate earned on
Sallys investment over the five-year period turned out to be 7.45%,
compounded semi-annually.
What nominal rate of interest, compounded monthly, did Sally charge Tim
on the loan?
SOLUTION:
35. On December 31, 1984, Smith borrowed $5,000 to be repaid in four years
with level payments made at the end of every quarter. The first payment was
made on March 31, 1985. The effective annual interest rate was 4%. What was
the amount of interest paid in 1986?
SOLUTION: