金融市场与机构(6)解析 下载本文

内容发布更新时间 : 2024/5/24 13:56:37星期一 下面是文章的全部内容请认真阅读。

Chapter 6

Are Financial Markets Efficient?

? Multiple Choice Questions

1.

How expectations are formed is important because expectations influence (a) the demand for assets. (b) bond prices.

(c) the risk structure of interest rates. (d) the term structure of interest rates. (e) all of the above. Answer: E 2.

According to the efficient market hypothesis, the current price of a financial security (a) is the discounted net present value of future interest payments. (b) is determined by the highest successful bidder. (c) fully reflects all available relevant information. (d) is a result of none of the above. Answer: C 3.

The efficient market hypothesis

(a) is based on the assumption that prices of securities fully reflect all available information. (b) holds that the expected return on a security equals the equilibrium return. (c) both (a) and (b). (d) neither (a) nor (b). Answer: C 4.

If the optimal forecast of the return on a security exceeds the equilibrium return, then (a) the market is inefficient.

(b) an unexploited profit opportunity exists. (c) the market is in equilibrium.

(d) only (a) and (b) of the above are true. (e) only (b) and (c) of the above are true. Answer: D

70 Mishkin/Eakins ? Financial Markets and Institutions, Fifth Edition

5.

According to the efficient market hypothesis

(a) one cannot expect to earn an abnormally high return by purchasing a security.

(b) information in newspapers and in the published reports of financial analysts is already reflected

in market prices.

(c) unexploited profit opportunities abound, thereby explaining why so many people get rich by

trading securities.

(d) all of the above are true.

(e) only (a) and (b) of the above are true. Answer: E

Another way to state the efficient market condition is that in an efficient market, (a) unexploited profit opportunities will be quickly eliminated. (b) unexploited profit opportunities will never exist.

(c) arbitrageurs guarantee that unexploited profit opportunities never exist. (d) both (a) and (c) of the above occur. Answer: A

Another way to state the efficient market hypothesis is that in an efficient market,

(a) unexploited profit opportunities will never exist as market participants, such as arbitrageurs,

ensure that they are instantaneously dissipated.

(b) unexploited profit opportunities will not exist for long, as market participants will act quickly to

eliminate them.

(c) every financial market participant must be well informed about securities. (d) only (a) and (c) of the above. Answer: B

A situation in which the price of an asset differs from its fundamental market value is called (a) an unexploited profit opportunity. (b) a bubble. (c) a correction.

(d) a mean reversion. Answer: B

A situation in which the price of an asset differs from its fundamental market value (a) indicates that unexploited profit opportunities exist.

(b) indicates that unexploited profit opportunities do not exist. (c) need not indicate that unexploited profit opportunities exist.

(d) indicates that the efficient market hypothesis is fundamentally flawed. Answer: C

6.

7.

8.

9.

10. Studies of mutual fund performance indicate that mutual funds that outperformed the market in one

time period

(a) usually beat the market in the next time period.

(b) usually beat the market in the next two subsequent time periods. (c) usually beat the market in the next three subsequent time periods. (d) usually do not beat the market in the next time period.

Chapter 6 Are Financial Markets Efficient? 71

Answer: D