1. Trang chủ
  2. » Tài Chính - Ngân Hàng

CFA 2018 level 3 schweser practice exam CFA 2018 level 3 question bank 02 behavioral finance questions

4 57 1

Đang tải... (xem toàn văn)

THÔNG TIN TÀI LIỆU

Thông tin cơ bản

Định dạng
Số trang 4
Dung lượng 17,83 KB

Các công cụ chuyển đổi và chỉnh sửa cho tài liệu này

Nội dung

Historically, X-wire has performed well and this led Clark to believe it would continue to do so in the future.. After buying the X-wire stock it continued to do well for a short period

Trang 1

BEHAVIORAL FINANCE

QUESTION 1 HAS ONE PART FOR A TOTAL OF 9 MINUTES

Samnang Kahn works for World Financial Management (WFM) as a portfolio manager for

individual investors Kahn is preparing for the yearly review of several of his clients with the first one being Kenneth Clark Clark is in his early 50s, divorced with two children, and has a total net worth of approximately $500,000 Clark works as an electrical engineer and also has an MBA He has been investing for some time on his own When he first started investing, he

thought his MBA gave him the expert knowledge needed to be a proficient investor After

several years of mediocre performance of his investments, he realized he should get some

professional help This led to his relationship with Kahn

One of Clark’s stocks is called X-wire, which Clark is familiar with from working in the

engineering field Historically, X-wire has performed well and this led Clark to believe it would continue to do so in the future After buying the X-wire stock it continued to do well for a short period of time and then decreased in price below Clark’s original purchase price Clark is

reluctant to sell it in hopes of at least breaking even in the near future

For each statement in the template provided below, state the most likely behavioral bias Clark is

exhibiting from the following choices: loss aversion, overconfidence, myopic loss aversion,

representative bias, or fear of regret Use any behavioral bias only once Explain one

consequence of the behavior from a portfolio perspective

(9 minutes)

Statement

State the most

likely behavioral bias being

exhibited

Explain one consequence of the behavior from

a portfolio perspective

When he first started

investing, he thought his

MBA gave him the expert

knowledge needed to be a

proficient investor

Historically, X-wire has

performed well and this led

Clark to believe it would

continue to do so in the

Trang 2

After buying the X-wire stock

it continued to do well for a

short period of time and then

decreased in price below

Clark’s original purchase

price Clark is reluctant to sell

it in hopes of at least breaking

even in the near future

QUESTION 2 HAS TWO PARTS (A, B) FOR A TOTAL OF 8 MINUTES

Michelle King is thinking about making changes to her defined contribution plan When King started making contributions into her plan she left her investments alone for several years,

maintaining the same asset allocation as she originally started with Because of this unsuccessful strategy, King then diversified equally among all the different investment options available to her

in her plan Over time, King has become more knowledgeable about investing and realized she needs to determine what her level of risk aversion is and allocate her portfolio accordingly, taking into consideration the number of years until she retires

A Identify and describe two behavioral traits King displayed while investing in her defined

contribution plan

(4 minutes)

B State one advantage and one disadvantage of the pyramid structure as an investment

strategy for individual investors

(4 minutes)

Trang 3

QUESTION 3 HAS FOUR PARTS (A, B, C, D) FOR A TOTAL OF 15 MINUTES

Peter Dangforth is a new CFA charterholder with big plans to convince his partners that

behavioral finance concepts can increase profitability for their investment management business

He tells them the following:

 Traditional finance is descriptive of how investors actually invest their money It assumes markets are efficient and allows the manager to focus on asset allocation rather than

identification of misvalued securities

 Behavioral finance assumes investors have greater decision-making ability and are risk seekers

 Traditional finance is based on utility theory while behavioral finance assumes that, in some cases, prospect theory and loss aversion are more useful in understanding clients

A. For each of the first two statements made by Dangforth, identify one thing that is incorrect

and restate each statement in a way that is correct

(4 minutes)

B. Regarding Dangforth’s third statement, explain two ways that utility theory and loss aversion

differ

(4 minutes)

Trang 4

Later in the week, Dangforth has two meetings

First is a meeting with a longtime client of the firm but a new client for Dangforth His

coworkers warn him that the client is very demanding and regularly brings up the time his former manager was heavily invested in technology stocks, right before the technology stock price bubble burst

Second is the monthly Investment Policy Committee meeting for the firm Dangforth finds the meetings unproductive Key issues are not discussed, trivial issues drag on, and people forget what has already been decided He really wishes this could change He is particularly frustrated because, as individuals, each committee member is well qualified, and collectively, the

committee has all the skills needed

C. Identify one contributing factor that behavioral finance suggests can explain market bubbles,

and explain how that factor can contribute to markets becoming overvalued

(3 minutes)

D. Explain why behavioral factors can be a greater impediment to effective investment decision making for investment committees than for individual committee members, and state two

actions the committee chairman can implement to improve the effectiveness of this firm’s committee

(4 minutes)

Ngày đăng: 14/06/2019, 17:20

TỪ KHÓA LIÊN QUAN

🧩 Sản phẩm bạn có thể quan tâm