2023 CFA LIII MockExamA-AM
2023 CFA LIII MockExamA-AM
2023 CFA LIII MockExamA-AM
Session 1
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Session 1 of the 2023 Practice Exam has 11 question sets. The format consists of
either a free form constructed response question set (essay), or a question set
consisting of a vignette or a short case followed by four multiple choice questions based
on the vignette. Each question set is allocated 12 minutes for a total of 132 minutes.
Total 132
Julie Brown, a research analyst at an investment management firm, has developed and
validated a questionnaire for determining a client’s preference and capacity for taking
risk. The end product of the questionnaire is the investor’s risk aversion coefficient or
lambda (λ). Brown administers the questionnaire to a new client, Robert Simon, and
finds that Simon, with a lambda value of 4, is moderately risk averse. Taking into
account Simon’s level of risk aversion, Exhibit 1 presents three strategic asset allocation
choices developed by Brown.
Exhibit 1
Strategic Asset Allocation A B C
Expected return 9.25% 7.25% 6.85%
Standard deviation of return 13% 10% 5%
Brown takes a second approach to determining Simon’s strategic asset allocation that
distinguishes a nominal risk-free asset and minimizes volatility subject to satisfying his
expected return objective. Simon’s primary goal is to maintain his portfolio’s purchasing
power, after a 2% annual distribution of assets. The management fee charged to Simon
is 30 bps of the portfolio value. Economists at Brown’s firm expect the annual rate of
inflation to be 4.5%. As of the date of the optimization, the risk-free rate is determined to
be 2.2%. Exhibit 2 presents the corner portfolios that partially define the risky-asset
efficient frontier.
Exhibit 2
Portfolio 1 2 3
Expected nominal return 9.45% 8.88% 7.24%
Standard deviation 20.65% 18.10% 13.95%
Sharpe ratio 0.351 0.369 0.361
Concerned with the accuracy of her analysis, Brown decides to examine the marginal
contribution to total risk (MCTR) of each asset class in Portfolio 2. Brown forms a
version of the global market portfolio using approximate global market-capitalization
weights for the six asset classes in the opportunity set. She then calculates the beta of
each asset class relative to this version of the global market portfolio. Exhibit 3 lists
these beta values along with the weights of the asset classes in Portfolio 2.
Exhibit 3
Asset Class Weight Beta
Domestic equity 30.4% 1.09
International equity 24.4% 1.05
Domestic fixed income 20.0% 0.98
International fixed income 15.0% 0.39
Real assets 10.0% 1.60
Cash 0.2% 0.00
Total 100.0% –
For each asset class Brown considers the balance of the portfolio to be a single
hypothetical asset and computes the asset class’s correlation with it, which is the asset
class’s correlation factor. The volatility factor of each asset class is the volatility of the
balance of the portfolio, excluding the asset class itself. Exhibit 4 lists these factors and
the firm’s recommended corridor widths for the asset classes Simon is likely to consider
for investment. Brown assumes that Simon’s risk tolerance is constant across all asset
classes.
Exhibit 4
Volatility
Factor Correlation
with Factor with
Corridor Rest of Rest of
Asset Class Width Cost Portfolio Portfolio
Domestic equity ± 5% 10 bps 14% 0.52
International equity ± 8% 12 bps 16% 0.45
Domestic fixed income ± 4% 6 bps 22% 0.35
International fixed income ± 6% 8 bps 20% 0.28
Real assets ± 10% 25 bps 15% 0.19
1. Which strategic asset allocation in Exhibit 1 would provide the highest certainty-
equivalent return for Simon?
A. Allocation A
B. Allocation B
C. Allocation C
2. Given Simon’s return objective, what is the most appropriate strategic asset
allocation between a portfolio and the risk-free asset?
3. Which asset class in Portfolio 2 has the highest marginal contribution to total
risk?
A. Real assets
B. Domestic equity
C. Domestic fixed income
A. volatility.
B. correlation.
C. transaction costs.
Emily Reed is the founder and CIO of Two Bridges Capital (TBC), a New York-based
investment manager with $2 billion in assets under management (AUM). TBC manages
US equity portfolios for institutional clients by applying an actively managed quantitative
strategy developed by Reed five years ago. The strategy, branded Accelerated Equity
(AE), produced strong results for the first two years before underperforming for the last
three. Eager to improve results, Reed meets with her mentor, Danielle Schiller, for
advice.
Reed begins by expressing her eagerness to find new ways for AE to generate
additional income and reduce costs. She explains that the strategy generates a regular
stream of dividends by virtue of its broad diversification but that this is the only source of
income for AE. Reed is reluctant to reduce management or performance fees and would
prefer to explore other ways of improving after-fee returns. She also states that TBC’s
clients are all non-taxable entities. Schiller suggests several changes Reed can make to
both generate additional income and reduce costs without changing management or
performance fees.
After noting Schiller’s suggestions, Reed turns the discussion to her investment
process, which posits that overweighting an unconventional factor related to consumer
spending results in excess returns versus the US equity market. After developing her
thesis, Reed acquired ten years of historical unstructured data through a third party
provider, processed it for consistency, and back-tested and evaluated the AE strategy.
Schiller responds by asking Reed if she considered any pitfalls associated with
quantitative strategies while evaluating the back-tested results.
Exhibit 1
AE CC Factor Return
3-year performance (annualized) 7.5% 12.0% –
Active share 0.92 0.71 –
Active risk 15.1% 7.2% –
Number of positions 42 124 –
Beta to:
Market 0.96 0.97 7.8%
Size 0.20 0.20 9.2%
Value 0.10 0.05 3.2%
Momentum –0.20 0.30 8.1%
R 2 0.72 0.98 –
© 2023 CFA Society Boston 6
Before concluding their discussion, Reed mentions to Schiller that as AE’s AUM have
grown over the last five years, she has increased the percentage weighting of small-cap
companies. Currently, the average small-cap company in her pipeline has a market
capitalization of $1 billion and 2% of its capitalization trades each day. Reed has a rule
that limits an individual position size to 2% of AE’s AUM and another rule that limits
AE’s daily trading activity to 5% of a company’s daily volume. Schiller is surprised to
learn that Reed has been purchasing small-cap names and wonders what else may
have changed about the AE product over the last five years. She asks Reed if she can
provide some additional historical data. The data are provided in Exhibit 2.
Exhibit 2
First 2 Last 3
Years Years
Performance – AE (annualized) 12.5% 7.5%
Performance – Russell 1000® (annualized) 8.4% 10.0%
Average AUM ($ millions) 235 1,770
Average number of positions 18 40
Portfolio turnover (average) 40% 20%
Beta to:
Market 0.84 0.96
Size 0.05 0.20
Value 0.20 0.10
Quality 0.30 0.00
Momentum 0.00 –0.20
A. Describe one suggestion Schiller can make to increase income and one
suggestion she can make to reduce costs without changing management and
performance fees.
B. Describe two pitfalls associated with quantitative strategies that Reed should
have considered while evaluating the back-tested results of AE.
D. Calculate the number of days it would take Reed to purchase the maximum
allowable position in the average small-cap company in her pipeline.
Alpha Gamma Advisors (AGA) is a Florida-based investment firm that provides multiple
investment and hedging services to its clients. Ying Yue is a portfolio manager and Pete
David is a senior derivatives analyst at AGA. Yue manages client portfolios and David
oversees hedging portfolio risk using exchange-traded derivative instruments. Yue is
meeting with David to review client portfolios and to discuss hedging strategies.
Condon meets with Yue and David to review his position in TMC stock and seek
suitable strategies based on his immediate outlook and portfolio requirements. Condon
explains that he is confident about the long-term performance of TMC stock and does
not want to sell his position. Condon also mentions that he must generate immediate
cash flow of $1 million to pay for client redemptions and wants to gain downside
protection from any negative earnings surprises. Condon asks Yue and David to
develop option strategies that would meet at least one of these two objectives. David
gathers TMC option prices and Greeks as shown in Exhibit 1. Each option contract
covers 100 shares.
Exhibit 1
Call Call Call Exercise Put Put
Vega Delta Premium Price Premium Put Vega
Delta
0.161 0.895 32.15 680 1.21 –0.213 0.161
0.197 0.763 23.04 690 2.83 –0.347 0.197
0.215 0.652 15.54 700 5.27 –0.422 0.215
0.321 0.507 9.71 710 9.23 –0.515 0.321
0.226 0.383 5.46 720 15.66 –0.613 0.226
0.191 0.273 3.41 730 22.81 –0.746 0.191
0.176 0.214 2.12 740 31.31 –0.892 0.176
After reviewing the data, David recommends that Condon use one of the following
strategies.
1. The number of covered call contracts required to generate a $1 million cash flow
in Strategy 1 is closest to:
A. 1,833.
B. 2,433.
C. 2,933.
2. The combined delta of Strategy 2 and Condon’s TMC stock position is closest to:
A. 0.039.
B. 0.195.
C. 1.039.
3. The minimum percentage change in TMC’s stock price required for Strategy 3 to
break even is closest to:
A. 1.04%.
B. 3.67%.
C. 4.41%.
A. Strategy 1
B. Strategy 2
C. Strategy 3
Mark Thorn is a senior investment officer at a large global asset manager, Zero Capital
(ZC). ZC manages fixed income investments for institutional clients. Thorn is preparing
for his quarterly meeting with one of his biggest clients, Alpha Corporation (AC).
In preparation for the meeting, Thorn meets with his team to discuss potential fixed
income investment strategies. Alex Book, a junior fixed income portfolio manager,
updates Thorn on the spread analysis he has used to identify potential trades. Book
makes the following statements.
Statement 2: Using putable bonds will allow us to obtain full protection from any large
deterioration in an issuer’s credit.
Statement 3: Buying MBS will add convexity to the portfolio, which will result in a
greater benefit from a large change in interest rates.
The conversation next turns to the state of the economy. Another member of Thorn’s
team, David Yung, concludes that the economy will weaken, causing the yield curve to
experience a downward parallel shift. Yung proposes two trades.
Kevin Black is a junior analyst at Capital Advisors Ltd. (CAL), a UK-based investment
firm specializing in fixed income securities. Black was tasked with evaluating a US fixed
income fund that CAL is planning to offer to its UK clients. Selected financial data for the
fund are presented in Exhibit 1. All expected values are for a one-year investment time
horizon. Black assumes that there is no reinvestment income.
Exhibit 1
Notional principal $120 million
Average annual coupon (per 100 par) $5.50
Current average bond price $94.28
Expected average bond price in 1 year
(assuming an unchanged yield curve) $95.14
Average bond modified duration 6.12
Average bond convexity 12.30
Average bond ratings BBB+/Baa1
Expected spread change +0.28%
Expected credit losses –0.05%
Expected USD gain vs. GBP +0.14%
Black meets with his supervisor, John Clooney, to present the findings of his work.
Black makes the following statements.
Statement 1: High-yield bonds are generally more liquid than investment-grade bonds
because they are equity-like.
1. The rolling yield of the fund over a one-year investment horizon is closest to:
A. 5.50%.
B. 6.41%.
C. 6.74%.
A. –1.71%.
B. 0.00%.
C. 1.72%.
A. Statement 1 only
B. Statement 2 only
C. Both Statements 1 and 2
4. Which of Clooney’s statements about emerging markets debt is(are) most likely
correct?
A. Statement 3 only
B. Statement 4 only
C. Both Statements 3 and 4
Kevin Baker is a fixed income portfolio manager at White Capital Inc. (WC). WC is a
US-based investment firm specializing in fixed income and alternative investments and
manages accounts for many institutional clients.
Baker meets with a client, Thomas Zerke, who wants to immunize a single 8-year
liability of $65,000,000. The present value of the liability is $55,450,550.
To immunize Zerke’s liability, Baker considers three possible portfolios which consist of
non-callable investment-grade coupon-paying bonds. Baker presents the details of the
portfolios in Exhibit 1 to Zerke.
Exhibit 1
Portfolio A Portfolio B Portfolio C
Market value $55,600,000 $55,300,000 $55,500,000
Cash flow yield 4.12% 4.13% 4.11%
Macaulay duration 7.98 8.01 7.50
Convexity 43.00 38.00 49.00
Average maturity 9.50 years 9.75 years 9.05 years
Average ratings A–/Baa1 BBB+/Baa1 A–/Aa3
One year later, the liability has a present value of $56,200,350 and a modified duration
of 6.54. The immunization portfolio has a market value of $57,350,400 and a modified
duration of 6.85. Baker closes the duration gap with a derivative overlay strategy using
US Treasury note futures. Based on the cheapest-to-deliver (CTD) bond, Baker
determines that the BPV (basis point value) for one futures contract is $68.49.
A. Describe the cash flow matching and the duration matching immunization
methods.
Exhibit 1
Call Premium Strike Price Put Premium
$21.30 $90 $0.84
$10.80 $100 $1.40
$3.08 $110 $5.05
$0.93 $120 $12.65
$0.31 $130 $22.35
Statement 1: Across the option series, a delta hedge of at-the-money options would be
the most difficult to maintain because it has the highest gamma.
Another Hillside client, Mark Frazier, manages a small endowment portfolio valued at
$450 million with a beta of 1.08. Frazier has invested 40% of the portfolio in QQQ, a
technology sector ETF which has a beta of 1.45. With the recent downturn in technology
stocks, Frazier wants to reduce his exposure to QQQ and to reduce the beta of this
portion of the portfolio to 1.08, but he is also concerned about tax consequences. He
asks Cunningham to recommend a suitable strategy to temporarily eliminate the
endowment’s exposure to QQQ without having to sell any of the position. Cunningham
presents selected information for S&P 500® futures contracts and QQQ futures
contracts in Exhibit 2. She recommends selling QQQ futures contracts and buying S&P
500® futures contracts such that the beta of this portion of the portfolio is reduced to
1.08.
A. Formulate a strategy that would limit the downside exposure of SEA. Calculate
the cost of the strategy.
C. Calculate the number of QQQ futures contracts and the number of S&P 500®
futures contracts required to eliminate the QQQ exposure and to reduce the beta
of the current QQQ exposure to 1.08.
TEF’s mission is threefold: (1) support scholarships, (2) support capital improvements,
and (3) fund a portion of the university’s operating budget. In addition to considering
expected return in relation to volatility, the investment committee wants to include the
following factors in its strategic asset allocation review:
TEF’s current investment objective is to generate a real rate of return in excess of that
required to fund ongoing distributions in accordance with TEF’s mission, with a
maximum acceptable volatility of 16% per year, and to maximize the Sharpe ratio of
TEF’s total financial assets . TEF is intent on selecting portfolios that make efficient use
of asset risk. TEF employs a mean–variance optimization approach that considers only
the expected returns, risks, and correlations of the asset classes in the opportunity set.
The current financial assets of TEF consist of $45 million in domestic large and mid-cap
equities and $35 million in domestic nominal fixed income. The present value of
expected future contributions to TEF is estimated to be $230 million. The financial
liabilities of TEF consist of mortgage debt currently valued at $19 million. The present
value of expected future support is estimated to be $171 million. TEF invests through
external managers.
As part of the review of operations, a consultant examines the asset class correlations
of TEF’s current equity investments, finding that none of the classes’ pairwise
correlations exceed 0.95.
The consultant considers domestic small-cap equities a separate asset class that would
not raise any new regulatory restrictions. The consultant recommends that TEF
consider adding this asset class to its existing domestic equity allocation.
Exhibit 1
Description Mix A Mix B Mix C
Domestic equity 50% 20% 45%
Global equity, ex-domestic – 30% 10%
Fixed income, nominal 30% 15% 10%
Fixed income, inflation-linked – 15% 10%
Private/direct real estate 20% 10% 25%
Hedge funds – 10% –
Expected return 7.46% 7.41% 7.84%
Standard deviation 14.11% 13.87% 15.83%
Sharpe ratio 0.369 0.371 0.353
A. Portfolio construction
B. Performance evaluation
C. Investment manager selection
A. asset-only.
B. goals-based.
C. liability-relative.
3. Adding domestic small-cap equities to TEF’s portfolio will most likely result in:
A. Mix A
B. Mix B
C. Mix C
Anne Klein and Josh Tao are research analysts at Prudent Capital, an investment
advisory firm in the US. Klein and Tao are responsible for creating and updating the
firm’s capital market expectations. Klein focuses on equities and low-credit-quality fixed
income, utilizing only data from liquid public markets. Tao focuses on high-credit-quality
fixed income and real assets.
Klein and Tao work together to analyze the global macroeconomic environment and the
expected trend rate of economic growth. Their analysis incorporates a blend of the most
commonly used approaches: checklists, econometric models, and leading indicators. In
a recent investment committee meeting, Klein and Tao discussed the strengths and
weaknesses of each approach. During the meeting, the following statements were
made.
Klein and Tao are assessing the impact that each phase of the business cycle has on
their short- and long-term capital market expectations. Within the US, they have
observed low unemployment, strong profits, rising wages and inflation, and capacity
pressures. The central bank has communicated its intent to raise rates for the
foreseeable future.
Based on this assessment of the US business cycle, Klein and Tao make the following
statements.
Statement 4: Equity and low-credit-quality fixed income will deliver higher returns
over the next three years than our long-term forecasted returns.
For the US, Klein and Tao estimate the neutral real policy rate to be 2.5%, the target
inflation rate to be 2.0%, and trend real growth to be 3.0%. Their forecasts are 3.5% for
inflation and 5.0% for real growth. The US central bank is expected to target a nominal
policy rate of 5.25%.
1. Which data measurement error or bias most likely impacts the asset classes
covered by Tao more than those covered by Klein?
A. Survivorship bias
B. Transcription errors
C. Appraisal (smoothed) data
2. Which statement made during the investment committee meeting is least likely to
be correct?
A. Statement 1
B. Statement 2
C. Statement 3
3. Given Klein’s and Tao’s assessment of the US business cycle, which of the
following statements is most likely correct?
A. Statement 4
B. Statement 5
C. Statement 6
4. Based on the Taylor rule, if the central bank targets a 5.25% nominal policy rate,
what is the mostly likely near-term outcome for the US economy?
Herman Clark advises small and medium-sized companies on retirement savings plan
offerings for employees. These companies typically have less than 1,000 participants in
their retirement savings plans. Clark has been working with Castle Computer
Corporation (CCC) to improve the defined contribution (DC) plan participant experience
and results. CCC sponsors the DC retirement savings plan, but each participant has
their own account and makes their own investment decisions for that account.
Within CCC’s plan, participants can make trades without transaction costs and do not
incur taxes. Clark recommends that the company expand the number of fund offerings
in the plan and provide information to help employees make investment decisions. As
part of the education process Clark suggests that, in addition to annual returns, CCC
provide plan participants with long-term compound annual return data for the funds.
Observation 1: New plan participants tend to allocate evenly across all mutual
funds in the plan.
Observation 3: Many participants have not reallocated their portfolios since they
joined the plan.
(Adjustment bias, Framing bias, Illusion of control, Myopic loss aversion, Status
quo bias)
B. Discuss two reasons why some participants’ allocations to company stock may
be higher than expected.
i. Observation 1
ii. Observation 2
iii. Observation 3
Explain the potential impact of each bias on portfolio construction, risk, or return.
Andy Smith is a fixed income portfolio manager at Ivory Capital (IC), a US-based
investment firm specializing in fixed income and alternative investments for individual
and institutional clients.
Smith meets with Thomas Kane, a potential client who is interested in adding fixed
income investments to his personal portfolio. Kane has limited experience with fixed
income securities and has recently read a financial paper describing bonds as safe
investments that pay regular cash flows.
Smith makes the following statements about the roles of fixed income securities in a
portfolio.
Smith then proceeds to discuss the use of leverage in fixed income portfolios. He states
that there are a number of instruments that allow investors to take leveraged positions
and thus amplify gains, such as futures contracts, interest rate swaps, and repo
transactions.
Kane inquires about fixed income active management, specifically with regard to credit
strategies. Smith explains credit strategies in detail and then proceeds to show
numerical examples for the two bonds shown in Exhibit 1.
Exhibit 1
Rating Credit Spread Effective Spread Duration
A– 2.75% 5.5
BBB+ 3.25% 4.7
In the first example, Smith presents a scenario for the bond rated A– in which credit
spreads narrow by 10 bps over a three-month horizon. In the second example, Smith
presents a scenario for the bond rated BBB+ that involves an instantaneous 20 bps
decline in yields. The BBB+ rated bond has a loss given default of 20% and an
annualized probability of default of 1%.
A. Statement 1 only
B. Statement 2 only
C. Both Statements 1 and 2
2. Which of Smith’s statements about the use leverage in fixed income portfolios
is(are) correct?
A. Statement 3 only
B. Statement 4 only
C. Both Statements 3 and 4
3. Ignoring spread duration changes and assuming no default losses, the excess
return of the A– rated bond in Smith’s first example is closest to:
A. 0.1375%.
B. 0.6875%.
C. 1.2375%.
4. Ignoring spread duration changes, the expected excess return of the BBB+ rated
bond in Smith’s second example is closest to:
A. –1.14%.
B. 0.74%.
C. 0.94%.
END OF SESSION 1