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BA323 BRINCKS EXAM 1 | ALL QUESTIONS AND CORRECT ANSWERS | GRADED A+ | NEWEST VERSION, Exams of Business Administration

BA323 BRINCKS EXAM 1 | ALL QUESTIONS AND CORRECT ANSWERS | GRADED A+ | NEWEST VERSION | VERIFIED ANSWERS

Typology: Exams

2024/2025

Available from 07/03/2025

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BA323 BRINCKS EXAM 1 | ALL QUESTIONS AND
CORRECT ANSWERS | GRADED A+ | NEWEST
VERSION | VERIFIED ANSWERS
What is the main goal of the corporation? ---------CORRECT ANSWER------
-----------Maximize shareholder value.
Who ultimately owns the corporation? What is the relationship between
shareholders, the board of directors, and management? ---------CORRECT
ANSWER-----------------Shareholders ultimately own the corporation.
Shareholders vote in the board of directors.
What are the 3 most important management positions? ---------CORRECT
ANSWER-----------------Chief Executive Officer, Chief Financial Officer, and
Chief Operations Officer
What is the Sarbanes-Oxley legislation? Why was it passed? ---------
CORRECT ANSWER-----------------The Sarbanes-Oxley legislation holds
CEOs and CFOs accountable for their financial reports. Can be jailed if
fraud occurs.
What is the major disadvantages and advantages of corporations
compared to other forms of business organizations? ---------CORRECT
ANSWER-----------------Advantages:
Unlimited Life
Easy Transfer of ownership
Limited liability
Ease of raising capital
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BA323 BRINCKS EXAM 1 | ALL QUESTIONS AND

CORRECT ANSWERS | GRADED A+ | NEWEST

VERSION | VERIFIED ANSWERS

What is the main goal of the corporation? ---------CORRECT ANSWER------ -----------Maximize shareholder value. Who ultimately owns the corporation? What is the relationship between shareholders, the board of directors, and management? ---------CORRECT ANSWER-----------------Shareholders ultimately own the corporation. Shareholders vote in the board of directors. What are the 3 most important management positions? ---------CORRECT ANSWER-----------------Chief Executive Officer, Chief Financial Officer, and Chief Operations Officer What is the Sarbanes-Oxley legislation? Why was it passed? --------- CORRECT ANSWER-----------------The Sarbanes-Oxley legislation holds CEOs and CFOs accountable for their financial reports. Can be jailed if fraud occurs. What is the major disadvantages and advantages of corporations compared to other forms of business organizations? ---------CORRECT ANSWER-----------------Advantages: Unlimited Life Easy Transfer of ownership Limited liability Ease of raising capital

Disadvantages: Double taxation Cost of setup and report filing What is a stock's intrinsic value? In an efficient market, will a stock's price equal the stock's intrinsic value? ---------CORRECT ANSWER----------------- A stock's intrinsic value is its "true" value in equilibrium. In theory, if the market is efficient the stock's price should equal its intrinsic value. Why do shareholders have a conflict of interest with managers? --------- CORRECT ANSWER-----------------Managers tend to conflict with shareholders since they tend to act within self-interest (Compensation packages, interventions by shareholders, threat of firing, and threat of takeover) •What is corporate governance? •What are various strategies for aligning the interests of shareholders and management? •Change in CEO Compensation starting in the 1980s •Why is it a good idea for CEO compensation to track an overall market index like the S&P 500? ---------CORRECT ANSWER----------------- Corporate governance is the act of holding managers accountable for poor performance. Strategies to align interests of shareholders and management include: Using stock as a form of compensation. Vesting periods. Stronger oversight by board or outside investors. CEO compensation is tracked with an overall market index because it correlates with the corporations performance.

Financial intermediaries (banks) ---------CORRECT ANSWER----------------- Loans made through a financial intermediary (banks, insurance company, mutual fund). Intermediaries obtain funds from savers on exchange for securities •Why do most companies use underwriters to raise capital instead of using direct transfers?

  • What purpose do investment banks serve in the underwriting process? ---- -----CORRECT ANSWER-----------------Underwriters assess all the risk involved with a company seeking capital and decide if this risk is worth taking. Investment banks are the ones that provide capital. •Describe the capital allocation process and what role the suppliers of capital plays and the role that the users of capital play. •Why is the financial system often described as the circulatory system of the economy? ---------CORRECT ANSWER-----------------An economy consist of suppliers of capital and users of capital. Suppliers have excess funds that they would use to invest in exchange for a return on their investments. Users are those that need funds and seek out suppliers for capital. Who are suppliers of capital? Who are providers of capital? Can an entity be both at the same time? ---------CORRECT ANSWER----------------- Suppliers of capital include retail and institutional investors while users of capital are businesses, governments, and people. •What is a market? •What is the main difference between private and public markets? --------- CORRECT ANSWER-----------------A market is a venue where goods and services are exchanged. Private markets are negotiated directly between parties (bank loans) while public markets are standardized contracts traded on organized exchanges (NYSE).

•The derivative market exceeds 700 trillion. What type of derivative is most common? ---------CORRECT ANSWER-----------------Derivatives are like contracts. An individual pays for a product/service in its current value but would receive that at a later date. Forwards, futures, options, and swaps are the most common types of derivative. Know the difference between primary and secondary market transactions and be able to identify one from the other. ---------CORRECT ANSWER------ -----------Primary market is the market in which corporations raise new capital by selling new stock. The secondary market involves trading existing securities among investors and does not involve any new inflows of funds to the corporation. •What are the five different types of financial markets? •Know the difference between each type of market ---------CORRECT ANSWER-----------------Physical assets vs Financial assets Spot vs Futures Money vs Capital Primary vs secondary Public vs private Physical assets vs. Financial assets ---------CORRECT ANSWER------------- ----Physical: for products such as wheat, autos, real estate, computers and machinery. Financial: for stocks, bonds, notes and mortgages.

On average, do IPOs make or lose money over time? Why is it so important for private equity funds to invest in a large number of IPOs? ------- --CORRECT ANSWER-----------------IPOs tend to lose money over time since most companies stock value decreases over a 5 year period. Investing in multiple IPOs is used to reduce risk. What are the implications of market efficiency? ---------CORRECT ANSWER-----------------Understanding the intrinsic value of a stock and how new information may affect its value. Market efficiency is determined by the flow of information and how closely companies are followed by investors. •What is behavioral finance? Know the four behavioral biases discussed in class. ---------CORRECT ANSWER-----------------Behavioral finance are cognitive biases that cause investors to make systematic mistakes that lead to inefficiencies. Over-optimism/overconfidence ---------CORRECT ANSWER----------------- Investors are more optimistic about expected future returns than they should be. Prospect Theory ---------CORRECT ANSWER-----------------Care more about losses than gains Anchoring ---------CORRECT ANSWER-----------------Care about the first piece of information that you see too much Herding ---------CORRECT ANSWER-----------------Investors have a tendency to revise their initial forecasts to be closer to the average forecast

What is the We Company's business model? ---------CORRECT ANSWER-- ---------------WeWork was a real estate business that tried to pitch themselves as a tech firm. Why does We need to raise capital? ---------CORRECT ANSWER------------- ----WeWork needed capital in order to expand and eventually raise a profit How does We illustrate how the IPO process works? ---------CORRECT ANSWER-----------------WeWork had to be underwritten and several risk were detected. Hedge funds and derivatives: Hedge funds often use derivatives to increase risk. ---------CORRECT ANSWER-----------------Hedge funds often use derivatives to increase risk. What are Quarterly Earnings Reports? Why do investors care about them so much? ---------CORRECT ANSWER-----------------Quarterly Earnings Reports is information published by a company to show their performance.By analyzing quarterly earnings reports, investors can begin to gauge the financial health of the company and determine whether it deserves their investment. What are the four parts of an annual report? ---------CORRECT ANSWER--- --------------Balance Sheet, Income statement, Statement of Cash Flow, Statement of stock holders' equity.

§ Accounts receivable § Inventories Current Liabilities ---------CORRECT ANSWER-----------------Accounts payable

  • Accruals
  • Notes payable
  • Short-term lending What are ratios used for and why are they useful? ---------CORRECT ANSWER-----------------§ Ratios are used to highlight weaknesses and strengths of different firms § Using annual reports, we can analyze the firm •What are the five different categories of ratios? What do we learn about a company from each type of ratio? ---------CORRECT ANSWER----------------- •Liquidity Ratios •Asset Management Ratios •Debt Management Ratios •Profitability Ratios •Market Value Ratio Liquidity Ratios ---------CORRECT ANSWER-----------------Learn about the firm's ability to pay off debts that are maturing within a year § A company needs strong liquidity ratios to continue operating and avoid bankruptcy § "Cash is king" § Two main ratios: • Current Ratio • Quick Ratio (aka as the "Acid Test")

Current Ratio ---------CORRECT ANSWER-----------------current assets / current liabilities Quick Ratio (Acid Test) ---------CORRECT ANSWER-----------------(Current Assets - Inventory) / Current Liabilities More cautious measure of liquidity than current ratio asset management ratios ---------CORRECT ANSWER----------------- financial ratios that measure how effectively a firm is using its assets to generate revenues or cash. Too few assets: • Company can't make the products that the market demands, leaving money on the table Too many assets: • Spent too much! The company has excess assets that aren't' needed. Debt Management Ratios ---------CORRECT ANSWER-----------------A set of ratios that measure how effectively a firm manages its debt. Debt to Total Capital Ratio ---------CORRECT ANSWER-----------------Total Debt / (Total Debt + Total Equity) Operating Margin ---------CORRECT ANSWER-----------------EBIT/Sales Net Profit Margin ---------CORRECT ANSWER-----------------Net Income/Sales

•Know how a change in market conditions/corporate policy will impact ratios •If a company's business weakens (revenues decline, what will happen to ROA or ROE?) •If the company decides to increase its dividend, what will happen to debt- to-capital ratio? •Think through the numerator and denominator ---------CORRECT ANSWER-----------------"Average" performance is not necessarily good, perhaps the firm should aim higher. § Seasonal factors can distort ratios. § "Window dressing" techniques can make statements and ratios look better than they actually are. § Inflation has distorted many firms' balance sheets, so analyses must be interpreted with judgment. •What are the four factors that affect the level of interest rates? --------- CORRECT ANSWER-----------------Production opportunities, time preferences for consumption, risk, and expected inflation How do these factors affect interest rates? ---------CORRECT ANSWER----- ------------Production opportunities • The investment opportunities in productive assets § Time preferences for consumption • The preference of consumers for current consumption as opposed to saving for future consumption § Risk • The chance that investment will provide a low or negative rate of return § Inflation • Amount by which prices increase over time •What is the nominal vs real interest rate? •Which is usually larger? ---------CORRECT ANSWER-----------------Real interest rate - A real interest rate is the interest rate that takes inflation into account. This means it adjusts for inflation and gives the real rate of a bond or loan nominal interest rate - interest rate before inflation

nominal interest rate is usually larger when adjusting for inflation •If the risk-free rate increases, what will happen to interest rates? --------- CORRECT ANSWER-----------------Interest rate is not affected by risk-free rates •Why is the inflation rate and interest rates so highly correlated? --------- CORRECT ANSWER-----------------Inverse correlation. When interest rates are low, economy grows and inflation increases. •What are the five determinants of interest rates and four premiums that investors received for holding interest-paying securities ---------CORRECT ANSWER-----------------Required return on a debt security real risk-free rate of interest inflation premium default risk premium liquidity premium maturity risk premium •Know what premiums that different types of bonds have (Treasury, corporate, short versus long-term) •Which bonds have higher interest rates? ---------CORRECT ANSWER------ -----------All bond types have inflation premium, long-term bonds have maturity premiums, only corporate bonds have default-risk premiums and liquidity premiums Long-term bonds tend to have higher interest rates •What are the three types of term structures?

•Is pure expectations theory an accurate reflection of real life? Why not? --- ------CORRECT ANSWER-----------------No. Expectancy theory tends to overestimate future short-term rates.