Q1. Which of the following most likely represents the timeline of a private equity fund?
A) The commitment period of 5 years, the life of the fund reaching 7-10 years, an option to extend the fund 5 more years.
B) The commitment period of 2 years, the life of the fund reaching 5 years, an option to extend the fund 3 more years.
C) The commitment period of 7-10 years, the life of the fund reaching 12-15 years, an option to extend the fund 5 more years.
Q2. Which of the following most likely represents the compensation to a sponsor of a private equity fund?
A) A management fee of 2% and an incentive fee of 20%.
B) A management fee of 10% and an incentive fee of 10%.
C) A management fee of 2% and an incentive fee of 2%.
Q3. In the life of a private equity fund, capital calls represent the:
A) request for more capital by the fund sponsor from the investors after the commitment period.
B) request for more capital by the fund sponsor from the investors during the commitment period.
C) request for more capital by the fund sponsor from the investors at the beginning of the fund prior to the commitment period.
Q4. If a hedge fund goal is the elimination of systematic risk, a problem for the fund in motivating the manager is that:
A) it is impossible to gauge the degree to which systematic risk has been eliminated.
B) the standard incentive fee only applies to assets under management and would not reward the elimination of systematic risk.
C) the standard incentive fee only applies to raw earnings and would not reward the elimination of systematic risk.
Q5. Hedge fund managers with good track records:
A) usually lower their fees to increase the assets under management.
B) often demand higher incentive fees.
C) generally continue to have good track records.
Q6. For hedge funds, the basic incentive fee for managers may not be adequate because:
A) they are usually too low, e.g., 2% or less.
B) a manager usually earns a minimum incentive fee regardless of the performance of the fund.
C) a hedge fund manager may have several goals other than earning a high return, e.g., lowering downside risk |