Q18. An investor is considering acquiring a common stock that he would like to hold for one year. He expects to receive both $1.50 in dividends and $26 from the sale of the stock at the end of the year. What is the maximum price he should pay for the stock today to earn a 15 percent return?
A) $27.30.
B) $23.91.
C) $24.11.
Q19. Assume that a stock paid a dividend of $1.50 last year. Next year, an investor believes that the dividend will be 20% higher and that the stock will be selling for $50 at year-end. Assume a beta of 2.0, a risk-free rate of 6%, and an expected market return of 15%. What is the value of the stock?
A) $41.77.
B) $45.00.
C) $40.32.
Q20. The following data pertains to a common stock:
- It will pay no dividends for two years.
- The dividend three years from now is expected to be $1.
- Dividends are expected to grow at a 7% rate from that point onward.
If an investor requires a 17% return on this stock, what will they be willing to pay for this stock now?
A) $ 7.30
B) $10.00.
C) $ 6.24.
Q21. A firm will not pay dividends until four years from now. Starting in year four dividends will be $2.20 per share, the retention ratio will be 40%, and ROE will be 15%. If k = 10%, what should be the value of the stock?
A) $55.25.
B) $58.89.
C) $41.32.
Q22. Utilizing the infinite period dividend discount model, all else held equal, if the required rate of return (Ke) decreases, the model yields a price that is:
A) reduced, due to increased spread between growth and required return.
B) reduced, due to the reduction in discount rate.
C) increased, due to a smaller spread between required return and growth.
Q23. A stock has the following elements: last year’s dividend = $1, next year’s dividend is 10% higher, the price will be $25 at year-end, the risk-free rate is 5%, the market premium is 5%, and the stock’s beta is 1.2.
What happens to the price of the stock if the beta of the stock increases to 1.5? It will:
A) increase.
B) remain unchanged.
C) decrease.
Q24. What will be the current price of the stock with a beta of 1.5?
A) $23.51.
B) $20.23.
C) $23.20.
Q25. What value would be placed on a stock that currently pays no dividend but is expected to start paying a $1 dividend five years from now? Once the stock starts paying dividends, the dividend is expected to grow at a 5 percent annual rate. The appropriate discount rate is 12 percent.
A) $8.11.
B) $9.08.
C) $14.29.
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