Question 1 At the time of his retirement, which of the following best characterizes Amin's: | tax concerns? | liquidity requirements? | A. | Significant | Significant | B. | Significant | Insignificant | C. | Insignificant | Significant | D. | Insignificant | Insignificant |
A. Answer A. B. Answer B. C. Answer C. D. Answer D. Correct answer = A
"The Portfolio Management Process and the Investment Policy Statement," John L. Maginn, Donald L. Tuttle, Dennis W. McLeavey, and Jerald E. Pinto 2008 Modular Level II, Vol. 6, pp. 506-508 Study Session 18-72-c define investment objectives and constraints and explain and distinguish among the types of investment objectives and constraints Amin's tax concerns are significant because he is in a relatively high tax bracket. His liquidity considerations are also significant. Within the next two years, he needs to: (a) liquidate $800,000 of investments to pay off the mortgage on his primary residence and purchase a second home, and (b) transfer $1 million in cash and/or liquid securities to fund the educational trust. The $1.8 million represents 36% of his current investment portfolio.
Question 2 One year after retirement, which of the following best characterizes Amin's liquidity risk on the: | asset side? | liability side? | A. | Significant | Significant | B. | Significant | Insignificant | C. | Insignificant | Significant | D. | Insignificant | Insignificant |
A. Answer A. B. Answer B. C. Answer C. D. Answer D. Correct answer = A
"The Portfolio Management Process and the Investment Policy Statement," John L. Maginn, Donald L. Tuttle, Dennis W. McLeavey, and Jerald E. Pinto 2008 Modular Level II, Vol. 6, pp. 506-507 Study Session 18-72-c define investment objectives and constraints and explain and distinguish among the types of investment objectives and constraints Liquidity risk on the asset side is significant because 2/3 of the assets (private equity and real estate) are illiquid. Liquidity risk regarding liquidity requirements is significant because his funding requirement for living expenses is nearly $300,000 pretax ($185,000 / 0.65). Amin has expressed significant concern regarding asset liquidity (price risk, i.e., wide swings in the market value of the portfolio). His liability liquidity, i.e., his spending rate to cover annual living expenses at 5.78% = [$250,000 - 100,000 x (1.00 - 0.35)] / $5,000,000 - 1,800,000)) on a pretax and pre-inflation total return basis of over 13%, is significant relative to the expected returns that CHT is forecasting.
Question 3 With respect to risk tolerance at the time of his retirement, which of the following best characterizes Amin's: | ability to take risk? | willingness to take risk? | A. | Below average | Below average | B. | Below average | Above average | C. | Above average | Below average | D. | Above average | Above average |
A. Answer A. B. Answer B. C. Answer C. D. Answer D. Correct answer = C
"The Portfolio Management Process and the Investment Policy Statement," John L. Maginn, Donald L. Tuttle, Dennis W. McLeavey, and Jerald E. Pinto 2008 Modular Level II, Vol. 6, pp. 501-503, 507 Study Session 18-72-c, e define investment objectives and constraints and explain and distinguish among the types of investment objectives and constraints; explain how capital market expectations and the investment policy statement help influence the strategic asset allocation decision and discuss how an investor's investment time horizon may influence the investor's strategic asset allocation Amin has an above-average ability to take risk based on his age and financial position, but has expressed a below-average willingness to take risk when he retires. His current portfolio demonstrates an above-average willingness to take risk prior to retirement.
Question 4 Given Amin's concerns regarding negative returns, the most appropriate measure of risk for his portfolio is: A. value at risk. B. tracking risk. C. standard deviation. D. economic factor risk. Correct answer = A
"The Portfolio Management Process and the Investment Policy Statement," John L. Maginn, Donald L. Tuttle, Dennis W. McLeavey, and Jerald E. Pinto 2008 Modular Level II, Vol. 6, p. 502 Study Session 18-72-c define investment objectives and constraints and explain and distinguish among the types of investment objectives and constraints Value at risk is a measure of downside risk. It can be used to measure the probability of negative returns over a specified time period.
Question 5 Which of the following best characterizes Amin's: | return objective? | overall risk tolerance? | A. | Below average | Below average | B. | Below average | Above average | C. | Above average | Below average | D. | Above average | Above average |
A. Answer A. B. Answer B. C. Answer C. D. Answer D. Correct answer = C
"The Portfolio Management Process and the Investment Policy Statement," John L. Maginn, Donald L. Tuttle, Dennis W. McLeavey, and Jerald E. Pinto 2008 Modular Level II, Vol. 6, pp. 501-506 Study Session 18-72-c define investment objectives and constraints and explain and distinguish among the types of investment objectives and constraints Amin's return objective, as calculated by Schmit, is above average at over 13% [(5.78% + 3.00%) / (1.00 - 0.35) = 13.5%] relative to the expected average annual returns that CHT is forecasting. His risk tolerance is below average as reflected in his selection of the conservative portfolio.
Question 6 If Schmit follows Duncan's advice regarding an appropriate strategic asset allocation, the most appropriate factor to combine with Amin's investment policy statement is the: A. investment strategy. B. investor specifications. C. capital market expectations. D. maximal and minimal permissible asset class values. Correct answer = C
"The Portfolio Management Process and the Investment Policy Statement," John L. Maginn, Donald L. Tuttle, Dennis W. McLeavey, and Jerald E. Pinto 2008 Modular Level II, Vol. 6, pp. 497-498 Study Session 18-72-d discuss the role of the investment policy statement in the portfolio management process and explain the elements of an investment policy statement Capital market expectations, when combined with the investment policy statement, form the basis for creating the strategic asset allocation that is the most appropriate for the client.
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