Question 1 - #8026 1 - #8026 Part 1) The correct answer was C) violated none of the Standards. The information published in the Wall Street Journal was public information, so Henderson did not violate Standard II(A). While Henderson did not do any independent research, the Journal is a credible source, and even the hint of an accounting scandal can be enough to sink a stock. As such, using the story to justify a downgrade did not violate Standard V(A) or Standard V(B). Part 2) The correct answer was C) violated Standard II(A): Material Nonpublic Information by taking investment action. Watkins violated the CFA Institute Standards because the information was both material and nonpublic. It does not matter if the information was not misappropriated, not received in a breach of duty or not related to a tender offer. Watkins still cannot trade or cause others to trade. CFA candidates are indeed subject to the CFA Institute Standards. While the misappropriated information did not involve a tender offer, Watkins’ use of it still violated the Standards simply because it was material nonpublic information. Part 3) The correct answer was A) did not violate Standard I(B): Independence and Objectivity, but his supervisor violated Standard IV(C): Responsibilities of Supervisors. Black’s conduct does not violate Standard I(B), because a reasonable person would not call his independence into question, even though his ethics are suspect. Black’s supervisor should have asked Black where he got the information before the research report was circulated, and the failure to do so means that the supervisor violated Standard IV(C). Black is also clearly in violation of Standard II(A): Material Nonpublic Information, because he would clearly have known that the information received from his Brother was both material and nonpublic. However, Standard II(A) is not one of the choices. Black’s failure to follow his own advice does not violate Standard III(B). Ignoring all of the other details, knowledge that an earnings restatement is possible could certainly be considered a reasonable basis to dump a stock, so Black did not violate Standard V(A). Standard VI(A) pertains only when a relationship would impair investment judgment, and that is not the case here. Part 4) The correct answer was C) violated Standard II(A): Material Nonpublic Information by taking investment action based on information not accessible to the public. The way in which Aggregate handled the conference call was an instance of selective dissemination, Members and Candidates must be aware that disclosure to selected analysts is not necessarily public disclosure. Thus, until the material information is made public, Sanders cannot trade or cause others to trade. Once the information is made public, Sanders must disseminate the information to her clients first, and give them adequate time to act on the recommendation before trading for her own account. In the absence of knowledge of any company policy with stricter requirements, 3 hours is probably sufficient, and we cannot assume she violated Standard VI(B). Standard III(B) does not require equal dissemination of information but rather fair dissemination. Nothing in the question indicated that Sanders disseminated the information unfairly. Part 5) The correct answer was A) violated Standard II(A): Material Nonpublic Information by using information obtained from Watkins. Martinez was aware of how Watkins obtained the information; therefore, Martinez violated II(A) by trading on material nonpublic information. Martinez has no fiduciary duty to Watkins, and as such did not violate Standard III(A). It would be difficult to argue that Cho’s thorough research is not sufficient reason to trade Aggregate stock, so Martinez did not violate Standard V(A). Part 6) Your answer: B was correct! Aggregate’s selective disclosure did violate the fair-dealing Standard, and while Black violated a number of Standards, his brother’s fiduciary duty cannot be imposed on him. Black did not violate the fiduciary-duties Standard. While Cho did not violate the insider-trading standard because he came to his conclusions through the mosaic method, Watkins certainly did because he misappropriated the information. Martinez violated the Standard on material nonpublic information. Henderson did not violate the reasonable-basis Standard. Sanders did violate the insider-trading Standard.
[此贴子已经被作者于2007-5-13 16:41:35编辑过] |