Chapter 24 - Fundamentals of Corporate Finance 9th Edition - Test Bank

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Test bank for Fundamentals of Corporate Finance 9th Edition by Ross

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  • 24Student: ___________________________________________________________________________

    1. Which one of the following grants its owner the right to buy or to sell an asset at a prespecified price at any time during a stated period?

    A. optionB. forward contractC. futures contractD. swapE. intrinsic contract

    2. Elizabeth owns a call option on 100 shares of Microsoft stock. She has decided to buy those shares. This purchase is commonly referred to as:

    A. striking the asset.B. expiring the option.C. exercising the option.D. putting the collar.E. the collar option.

    3. Marti owns an option that allows him to purchase ABC stock at $50 a share. The $50 price is referred to as the:

    A. opening price.B. intrinsic value.C. strike price.D. market price.E. time value.

    4. What is the final day on which an option can be exercised called?

    A. payment dateB. ex-option dateC. opening dateD. expiration dateE. intrinsic date

    5. Felicia purchased an option which she can exercise anytime within the next six months. Which type of option did she purchase?

    A. market-readyB. portableC. dailyD. EuropeanE. American

    6. Brad purchased an option that he can only exercise on the final day of the option period. Which type of option did he purchase?

    A. EuropeanB. AmericanC. inflexibleD. datedE. pointed

  • 7. Which of the following grants its owner the right to purchase an asset at a stated price?

    I. American call

    II. European call

    III. American put

    IV. European put

    A. I onlyB. I and II onlyC. I and III onlyD. II and IV onlyE. III and IV only

    8. The owner of a put option has the _____ an asset at a fixed price during a stated period of time.

    A. right to sellB. right to buyC. obligation to sellD. obligation to buyE. obligation to trade

    9. Which one of the following terms applies to the value of an option on its expiration date?

    A. strike priceB. upper limitC. deadline priceD. time valueE. intrinsic value

    10. Suzie is the controller of The Price Rite Company. She has been granted to the right to buy 1,000 shares of her employer's stock at $25 a share anytime within the next three years. Which one of the following has Suzie been granted?

    A. employee stock optionB. company bonus optionC. employee grantD. employee exercise optionE. company benefits option

    11. Which one of the following terms applies to an option that has an office building as its underlying asset?

    A. financial optionB. liquid optionC. fixed optionD. real optionE. concrete option

    12. The investment timing decision is the:

    A. determination of when an option should be exercised.B. decision of when to purchase an option on an underlying asset.C. analysis of determining when an asset should be sold.D. determination of when a project should be abandoned.E. evaluation of the optimal time to begin a project.

    13. Lucas Enterprises recently opted to open a new retail outlet. If the outlet outperforms the expectations, the manager can opt to increase the store's size. If it underperforms, the manager can opt to close the store. These choices that the manager has been given are called:

    A. call options.B. put options.C. straddles.D. managerial options.E. executive options.

  • 14. Which one of the following considers all of the options implicit in a project?

    A. expansion planningB. contingency planningC. asset management reviewD. prospective evaluationE. strategic evaluation

    15. KT Enterprises has expanded its operations into a new field, which is the production of everyday dinnerware. If this project goes well, the firm has the option to expand its production into fine china. What type of option is this?

    A. financialB. strategicC. putD. intangibleE. call

    16. Amy is a current shareholder of DJ Industries. She has been given the right to purchase an additional 25 shares of DJ Industries stock at a price of $32 a share if she exercises that right within the next 12 months. What is this security called that Amy has been given?

    A. convertible bondB. warrantC. straddleD. spreadE. put

    17. Jeff owns a $1,000 face value bond. He can exchange that bond for 25 shares of KNJ stock at any time within the next 2 years. What type of bond does Jeff own?

    A. securedB. warrantedC. convertibleD. junkE. callable

    18. The dollar amount of a bond's par value that is exchangeable for one share of stock is called the:

    A. conversion premium.B. par value.C. conversion value.D. conversion price.E. conversion ratio.

    19. Alicia owns a $1,000 face value bond that can be converted into 20 shares of AB Limited stock. Which one of the following terms refers to these 20 shares?

    A. conversion premiumB. straight bond valueC. conversion valueD. conversion priceE. conversion ratio

    20. The difference between the conversion price and the current stock price, divided by the current stock price, is called the:

    A. conversion premium.B. straight bond value.C. conversion value.D. conversion price.E. conversion ratio.

  • 21. Latetia owns a convertible bond. Which one of the following terms would describe the value of this bond if it were not convertible?

    A. conversion premiumB. straight bond valueC. conversion valueD. inverted valueE. market value

    22. Brad owns a convertible bond. Which one of the following terms would apply to the value of this bond if he were to convert it into shares of stock today?

    A. conversion premiumB. straight bond valueC. conversion valueD. inverted valueE. prescribed value

    23. Which one of the following statements correctly describes your situation as the holder of a European call option?

    A. You are obligated to buy if the option is exercised.B. You have a right to sell.C. You have a right to buy but only on the expiration date.D. You are obligated to sell if the option is exercised.E. You have a right to buy at any time before the option expires.

    24. Julie opted to exercise her August option on June 20th and as a result received $2,500 for the sale of her shares. Which one of the following did Julie own?

    A. warrantB. American callC. American putD. European callE. European put

    25. Josh opted to exercise his January option at the end of December and paid $3,250 at that time to acquire 100 shares of stock. Which one of the following did Josh own?

    A. American callB. American putC. European callD. European putE. European convertible bond

    26. Steve owns an option which grants him the right to purchase shares of Lokier Tool stock at a price of $45 a share. Currently, the stock is selling for $52.40 a share. Steve would like to realize his profits but is not permitted to exercise the option for another two weeks. Which one of the following does Steve own?

    A. straight bondB. American callC. American putD. European callE. European put

    27. What is the primary difference between an American call option and a European call option?

    A. The American call has a fixed strike price while the European strike price varies over time.B. An American call is a right to buy while a European call is an obligation to buy.C. An American call has an expiration date while the European call does not.D.

    An American call is written on 100 shares of the underlying security while the European call covers 1,000 shares.

    E.

    An American call an be exercised at any time up to the expiration date while the European call can only be exercised on the expiration date.

  • 28. You own a July $15 call on ABC stock. Assume today is April 20 and the call has zero intrinsic value. Which one of the following best describes this option?

    A. worthlessB. unfundedC. expiredD. in-the-moneyE. out-of-the-money

    29. A $20 put option on Wildwood stock expires today. The current price of the stock is $18.50. Which one of the following best describes this option?

    A. fundedB. unfundedC. at-the-moneyD. in-the-moneyE. out-of-the-money

    30. Which one of the following describes the maximum value of a call option?

    A. strike price minus the initial cost of the optionB. exercise price plus the price of the underlying stockC. strike priceD. market price of the underlying stockE. purchase price

    31. Which one of the following describes the lower bound of a call's value?

    A. strike price or zero, whichever is greaterB. stock price minus the exercise price or zero, whichever is greaterC. strike price or the stock price, whichever is lowerD. strike price or zero, whichever is lowerE. stock price minus the exercise price or zero, whichever is lower

    32. Which one of the following describes the intrinsic value of a call option?

    A. the call's upper bound valueB. the call's lower bound valueC. market price of the underlying securityD. zero, if the call is in-the-moneyE. negative amount, if the call is out-of-the-money.

    33. Which one of the following describes the intrinsic value of a put option?

    A. lesser of the strike price or the stock priceB. lesser of the stock price minus the exercise price or zeroC. lesser of the stock price or zeroD. greater of the strike price minus the stock price or zeroE. greater of the stock price minus the exercise price or zero

    34. Which one of the following statements is correct?

    A. The value of a call decreases as the price of the underlying stock increases.B. The value of a call increases as the exercise price decreases.C. The value of a put increases as the price of the underlying stock increases.D. The value of a put decreases as the exercise price increases.E. The intrinsic value of a put must be zero on the expiration date.

  • 35. An increase in which of the following will increase the value of a call?

    I. time to expiration

    II. underlying stock price

    III. risk-free rate of return

    IV. price volatility of the underlying stock

    A. I and III onlyB. II, III, and IV onlyC. I, III, and IV onlyD. I, II, and III onlyE. I, II, III, and IV

    36. Which of the following will decrease the value of a call option?

    I. a decrease in the exercise price

    II. a decrease in the value of the underlying security

    III. an increase in the risk-free rate

    IV. an increase in the time to expiration

    A. II onlyB. I and II onlyC. III and IV onlyD. I, II, and IV onlyE. I, II, and III only

    37. Mark owns both a March $20 put and a March $20 call on Alpha stock. Which one of the following statements correctly relates to Mark's position? Ignore taxes and transaction costs.

    A. A price decrease in Alpha stock will increase the value of Mark's call option.B. A March $30 call is worth more than Mark's $20 call.C.

    The time premium on an April $20 put is less than the time premium on Mark's put. (Assume both puts expire in the same calendar year.)

    D. A price increase in Alpha stock from $26 to $28 will increase the value of Mark's put.E.

    If the intrinsic value of Mark's put increases by $1 then the intrinsic value of his call must either decrease by $1 or equal zero.

    38. Travis owns both a September $30 call and a September $30 put. If the call finishes at-the-money, then the put will:

    A. also finish in-the-money.B. finish at-the-money.C. finish out-of-the-money.D. either finish at-the-money or in-the-money.E. either finish at-the-money or out-of-the-money.

    39. Which one of the following statements regarding employee stock options (ESOs) is correct?

    A.

    ESOs grant an employee the right to buy a fixed number of shares of company stock at the market price.

    B. Employees must exercise their ESOs prior to those ESOs becoming vested.C. Employees may forfeit their ESOs if they terminate their employment with the issuing firm.D. If a firm issue ESOs it must make them available to all employees.E. Employees can sell their ESOs if they do not want to personally exercise them.

    40. Employee stock options are primarily designed to do which one of the following?

    A. provide employees with put options on their shares of company stockB. provide an immediately vested benefit to key employeesC. influence the actions and priorities of employeesD. distribute excess cash to key employees to avoid corporate taxationE. provide an immediate capital gain to certain employees

  • 41. Employee stock options:

    A. usually have a positive intrinsic value when issued.B. must be backdated at least six months to comply with Sarbanes-Oxley.C. are generally "underwater" when issued.D. are frequently repriced if the options are in-the-money.E. are generally issued with a zero intrinsic value.

    42. The Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002 requires firms to report ESO grants within how many days of the grant?

    A. 2 calendar daysB. 2 business daysC. 7 calendar daysD. 30 business daysE. 45 calendar days

    43. Delta Importers has a pure discount loan with a face value of $180,000 due in one year. The assets of the firm are currently worth $265,000. The shareholders in this firm basically own a _____ option on the assets of the firm with a strike price of _____.

    A. put; $180,000.B. put; $265,000.C. warrant; $265,000.D. call; $180,000.E. call; $265,000.

    44. Jack and Jill are house hunting. They find House A situated on a hill. They really like the house but want to continue searching the market for one more week before making their final decision to buy the house. To avoid having someone else purchase House A while they continue their house hunting, they decide to place a $2,500 deposit on House A. This deposit will apply to the purchase price if they buy House A. If they do not buy House A, they will forfeit the $2,500. Essentially, Jack and Jill have a _____ on House A.

    A. financial putB. financial callC. warrantD. real putE. real call

    45. The option to wait:

    I. may be of minimal value if a project is dependent upon rapidly changing technology.

    II. is partially dependent upon the discount rate applied to the project being evaluated.

    III. is defined as temporarily shutting down a project for a period of time.

    IV. has a value equal to the NPV of a project if it is started at a later date minus the NPV if the project is started today.

    A. I and III onlyB. II and IV onlyC. I and II onlyD. II, III, and IV onlyE. I, II, and IV only

    46. Ignoring which of the following will cause the NPV of a project to be underestimated?

    I. option to abandon

    II. option to expand

    III. option to wait

    IV. option to contract

    A. I and III onlyB. II, III, and IV onlyC. I, II, and III onlyD. I, III, and IV onlyE. I, II, III, and IV

  • 47. Which one of the following is an example of a strategic option for a restaurant?

    A.

    opening a new restaurant with a different look and an entirely different menu to see if that type of restaurant appeals to the public

    B. deciding to close one hour earlier during the winter months due to slow salesC. abandoning a menu item based on customer complaintsD. deciding to open only two new locations next year instead of the five that were originally scheduledE. deciding to create separate lunch and dinner menus rather than have them combined on one menu

    48. Last month, Hill Side Markets introduced a new board game. Consumer demand has been overwhelming and appears that strong demand will exist over the long-term as young children absolutely love the game. Given this, which one of the following options should Hill Side Markets consider in respect to this game?

    A. suspensionB. expansionC. abandonmentD. contractionE. withdrawal

    49. Three months ago, Toy Town introduced a new toy for pre-school children. The store expected this toy to be an instant success and a fast moving item. To their surprise, children have zero interest in this toy so sales have been abysmal. Which one of the following options should Toy Town consider in respect to this toy?

    A. suspensionB. expansionC. abandonmentD. contractionE. re-introduction

    50. Which of the following are managerial options once a project is commenced?

    I. modifying the production process

    II. re-pricing the product

    III. revising the marketing plan

    IV. modifying the product's color and shape

    A. I and II onlyB. III and IV onlyC. I, II, and III onlyD. II, III, and IV onlyE. I, II, III, and IV

    51. Which one of the following statements related to warrants is correct?

    A. Warrants are generally issued as an attachment to publicly-issued bonds.B. Warrants are excluded from trading on an organized exchange.C. Warrants are structured as long-term put options.D. Warrants are issued by individual investors.E. Warrants are generally added as an incentive to a private debt issue.

    52. Which of the following statements are correct concerning warrants?

    I. Warrants are similar to put options.

    II. Warrants are similar to call options.

    III. When a warrant is exercised, the issuer is not involved in the transaction.

    IV. When a warrant is exercised, the issuer must issue new shares of stock.

    A. I onlyB. II onlyC. I and III onlyD. II and IV onlyE. I and IV only

  • 53. When warrants are exercised, the:

    A. earnings per share decrease.B. earnings per share remain constant.C. total equity in a firm remains constant.D. total equity in a firm decreases.E. number of bonds outstanding increases.

    54. Which of the following statements are correct concerning convertible bonds?

    I. New shares of stock are issued when a convertible bond is converted.

    II. A convertible bond is similar to a bond with a call option.

    III. A convertible bond should always be worth less than a comparable straight bond.

    IV. A convertible bond can be described as having upside potential with downside protection.

    A. I and III onlyB. I, II, and IV onlyC. I, II, and III onlyD. I, III, and IV onlyE. II, III, and IV only

    55. The conversion value of a convertible bond is equal to which one of the following?

    A. Conversion ratio Stock priceB. Conversion ratio Conversion priceC. Face value of the bond/Conversion premiumD. Face value of the bond (1 + Conversion premium)E. Stock price (1 + Conversion ratio)

    56. The maximum value of a convertible bond is theoretically:

    A. equal to the conversion value minus the straight bond value.B. equal to the face value of the bond multiplied by (1 + Conversion price).C. limited to the maximum straight bond value.D. limited by the face value of the bond.E. unlimited.

    57. What is the cost of two November $25 put option contracts on Dove stock given the following price quotes?

    A. $0.15B. $0.30C. $1.50D. $15.00E. $30.00

    58. What is the value of five August $25 call contracts on Dove stock?

    A. $34B. $68C. $340D. $680E. $3,400

  • 59. What is the intrinsic value of the November $25 call on Dove stock?

    A. -$0.98B. $0C. $0.15D. $6.12E. $7.10

    60. You purchased six call option contracts on ABC stock with a strike price of $32.50 when the option was quoted at $1.80. The option expires today when the value of ABC stock is $34.60. Ignoring trading costs and taxes, what is the net profit or loss on this investment?

    A. $0B. $180C. $210D. $840E. $1,260

    61. You sold one call option contract with a strike price of $55 when the option was quoted at $0.80. The option expires today when the value of the underlying stock is $53.70. Ignoring trading costs and taxes, what is the net profit or loss on this investment?

    A. -$250B. -$80C. $0D. $50E. $80

    62. You sold three $35 call option contracts at a quoted price of $1.40. What is your net profit or loss on this investment if the price of the underlying asset is $36.70 on the option expiration date?

    A. -$510B. -$90C. $90D. $510E. $930

    63. You wrote eight call option contracts with a strike price of $42.50 at a call price of $1.35 per share. What is your net gain or loss on this investment if the price of the underlying stock is $40.30 per share on the option expiration date?

    A. -$2,840B. -$1,760C. -$1,080D. $1,080E. $1,760

  • 64. The market price of Southern Press stock has been relatively volatile and you think this volatility will continue for a couple more months. Thus, you decide to purchase a two-month European call option on this stock with a strike price of $45 and an option price of $2.20. You also purchase a two-month European put option on the stock with a strike price of $45 and an option price of $0.30. What will be your net profit or loss on these option positions if the stock price is $48 on the day the options expire? Ignore trading costs and taxes.

    A. -$30B. $50C. $80D. $270E. $330

    65. Several rumors concerning Value Rite stock are causing the market price of the stock to be quite volatile. Given this situation, you decide to buy both a one-month European $25 put and a one-month European $25 call on this stock. The call price per share is $0.60 and the put price per share is $2.10. What will be your net profit or loss on these option positions if the stock price is $18 on the day the options expire? Ignore trading costs and taxes.

    A. -$210B. -$150C. -$60D. $430E. $490

    66. Three months ago, Central Supply stock was selling for $51.40 a share. At that time, you purchased five put options on the stock with a strike price of $50 per share and an option price of $0.60 per share. The option expires today when the value of the stock is $42.70 per share. What is your net profit or loss on this investment? Ignore trading costs and taxes.

    A. -$1,300B. -$1,000C. -$300D. $3,350E. $3,650

    67. You wrote two put options on Xylo stock with an exercise price of $30 per share and an option price of $1.05 per share. Today, the contracts expire and the stock is selling for $31.15 a share. What is your net profit or loss on this investment? Ignore trading costs and taxes.

    A. -$115B. -$105C. $20D. $105E. $210

    68. You sold ten put contracts on Cross Town Bank stock at an option price per share of $0.85. The options have an exercise price of $37.50 per share. The options were exercised today when the stock price was $34 a share. What is your net profit or loss on this investment assuming that you closed out your positions at a stock price of $34? Ignore transaction costs and taxes.

    A. -$3,500B. -$2,650C. $1,800D. $850E. $3,500

  • 69. You own eight call option contracts on Swift Water Tours stock with a strike price of $15. When you purchased the shares the option price was $0.30 and the stock price was $15.25. What is the total intrinsic value of these options if the stock is currently selling for $16.08 a share?

    A. -$83B. -$1.08C. $0D. $108E. $864

    70. You recently purchased three put option contracts on Guillepsi stock with an exercise price of $42.50. What is the total intrinsic value of these contracts if the stock is currently selling for $43.70 a share?

    A. -$360B. -$120C. $0D. $120E. $360

    71. Last week, you purchased a call option on Edgewater stock with a strike price of $40. The stock price was $39.80 and the option price was $0.45 at that time. What is the intrinsic value per share if the stock is currently priced at $39.10?

    A. -$90B. -$70C. $0D. $70E. $90

    72. Three weeks ago, you purchased a June $30 put option on Leeper Metals stock at an option price of $1.80. The market price of the stock three weeks ago was $30.60. Today, the stock is selling at $29.80 a share. What is the intrinsic value of your put contract?

    A. -$100B. -$20C. $0D. $20E. $60

    73. This morning, you purchased a call option on Schoolhouse Supply Co. stock that expires in one year. The exercise price is $40. The current price of the stock is $43.40 and the risk-free rate of return is 3.6 percent. Assume the option will finish in the money. What is the current value of the call option?

    A. $0B. $1.49C. $3.97D. $4.79E. $5.46

    74. You currently own a one-year call option on Rail Company, Inc., stock. The current stock price is $51.80 and the risk-free rate of return is 4.25 percent. Your option has a strike price of $50 and you assume the option will finish in the money. What is the current value of your call option?

    A. $1.20B. $2.59C. $3.84D. $5.13E. $7.27

  • 75. The common stock of Hazelton Refiners is selling for $72.30 a share. U.S. Treasury bills are currently yielding 4.8 percent. What is the current value of a one-year call option on this stock if the exercise price is $70 and you assume the option will finish in the money?

    A. $0B. $1.20C. $3.00D. $4.20E. $5.51

    76. The common stock of Westover Foods is currently priced at $27.90 a share. One year from now, the stock price is expected to be either $25 or $30 a share. The risk-free rate of return is 4.2 percent. What is the current value of one call option on this stock if the exercise price is $27.50?

    A. $0B. $1.95C. $2.00D. $3.80E. $4.00

    77. You own one call option with an exercise price of $40 on S'more Good stock. The stock is currently selling for $41 a share but is expected to sell for either $37 or $43 a share in one year. The risk-free rate of return is 4.25 percent and the inflation rate is 3.6 percent. What is the current call option price if the option expires one year from now?

    A. $0.55B. $0.69C. $1.37D. $2.43E. $2.75

    78. The assets of Uptown Stores are currently worth $136,400. These assets are expected to be worth either $120,000 or $150,000 one year from now. The company has a pure discount bond outstanding with a $130,000 face value and a maturity date of one year. The risk-free rate is 4.3 percent. What is the value of the equity in this firm?

    A. $11,920B. $14,232C. $19,507D. $21,347E. $26,408

    79. Electronic Importers has a pure discount bond with a face value of $25,000 that matures in one year. The risk-free rate of return is 3.8 percent. The assets of the business are expected to be worth either $23,000 or $35,000 in one year. Currently, these assets are worth $27,500. What is the current value of the bond?

    A. $17,746B. $19,207C. $20,222D. $22,549E. $23,048

    80. The Glass House has total assets currently valued at $17,200. These assets are expected to increase in value to either $18,000 or $21,000 by next year. The company has a pure discount bond outstanding with a face value of $20,000. This bond matures in one year. Currently, U.S. Treasury bills are yielding 5.4 percent. What is the value of the equity in this firm?

    A. -$3,000.00B. -$908.00C. $0D. $40.73E. $122.20

  • 81. You are considering a project that has been assigned a discount rate of 14 percent. If you start the project today, you will incur an initial cost of $8,500 and will receive cash inflows of $5,550 a year for two years. If you wait one year to start the project, the initial cost will rise to $9,200 and the cash flows will increase to $5,800 a year for two years. What is the value of the option to wait?

    A. -$331.40B. -$194.46C. $228.51D. $230.49E. $334.68

    82. Southern Shores is considering a project that has an initial cost today of $12,500. The project has a two-year life with cash inflows of $7,500 a year. Should the firm opt to wait one year to commence this project, the initial cost will increase by 5 percent and the cash inflows will increase to $8,500 a year. What is the value of the option to wait if the applicable discount rate is 14 percent?

    A. $614.52B. $721.56C. $914.62D. $982.67E. $1,021.66

    83. Western Industrial Products is considering a project with a four-year life and an initial cost of $212,000. The discount rate for the project is 16 percent. The firm expects to sell 9,600 units on the last day of each year. The cash flow per unit is $50. The firm will have the option to abandon this project at the end of year one (after year one's sales) at which time the project's assets could be sold for an estimated $125,000. The firm should abandon the project at the end of year one if the expected level of annual sales, starting with year 2, falls to _____ units or less. Ignore taxes.

    A. 1,113 unitsB. 1,267 unitsC. 1,922 unitsD. 2,034 unitsE. 2,108 units

    84. Dressler Technologies is considering a project with a 3-year life and an initial cost of $85,000. The discount rate for the project is 14.5 percent. The firm expects to sell 1,200 units on the last day of each year. The cash flow per unit is $32. The firm will have the option to abandon this project at the end two years (after year 2 sales) at which time the project's assets could be sold for an estimated $30,000. The firm's managers are interested in knowing how the project will perform if the sales forecast for year 3 of the project is revised such that there is a 50/50 chance that the sales will be either 1,000 or 1,400 units a year. What is the net present value of this project at time zero given the current sales forecasts?

    A. -$3,474B. -$2,526C. $4,191D. $6,192E. $6,887

    85. Patience is reviewing a project with projected sales of 4,200 units a year, a cash flow of $28 a unit, and a four-year project life. Assume all operating cash flows occur on the last day of each year. The initial cost of the project is $247,000. The relevant discount rate is 13 percent. Patience has the option to abandon the project after two years at which time she feels she could sell the project's assets for $110,000. At what level of annual sales, starting in year 3, should she be willing to abandon this project?

    A. 2,119 unitsB. 2,355 unitsC. 2,367 unitsD. 2,516 unitsE. 2,667 units

  • 86. You own a convertible bond with a face value of $1,000 and a market value of $1,034. The bond can be converted into 14 shares of stock. What is the conversion price?

    A. $71.43B. $72.00C. $72.67D. $73.86E. $74.33

    87. You own nine convertible bonds. These bonds have a 7 percent coupon, a $1,000 face value, and mature in 6 years. The bonds are convertible into shares of common stock at a conversion price of $25. How many shares of stock will you receive if you convert all of your bonds?

    A. 285B. 300C. 350D. 360E. 400

    88. A convertible bond has a face value of $5,000 and a conversion price of $80. The bond has a 6 percent coupon, pays interest semi-annually, and matures in 12 years. Similar bonds are yielding 7.5 percent. The current price of the stock is $41.20 per share. What is the conversion value of this bond?

    A. $1,680B. $2,415C. $2,575D. $4,651E. $5,000

    89. A convertible bond has a face value of $1,000 and a conversion price of $12.50. The bond has a 6 percent coupon, pays interest semi-annually, and matures in 12 years. Similar bonds are yielding 9 percent. The current price of the stock is $13.40 per share. What is the straight bond value?

    A. $782.57B. $781.82C. $827.74D. $832.09E. $843.47

    90. Kurt owns a convertible bond that matures in three years. The bond has a 7.5 percent coupon and pays interest semi-annually. The face value of the bond is $1,000 and the conversion price is $25. Similar bonds have a market return of 9.25 percent. The current price of the stock is $26.50 per share. What is the straight bond value?

    A. $948.20B. $955.05C. $972.80D. $987.78E. $991.15

    91. Lucinda owns a convertible bond that matures in six years. The bond has a 9 percent coupon and pays interest annually. The face value of the bond is $1,000 and the conversion price is $22. Similar bonds have a market return of 8.75 percent. The current price of the stock is $21.60 per share. What is the conversion value of this bond?

    A. $835.60B. $848.40C. $942.11D. $981.82E. $1,000.00

  • 92. Circle Stores stock is priced at $28 a share. A $40 call on this stock has five months until expiration and a call price of $0.15. Why would an investor purchase a call that is so far out of the money?

    93. What are the basic similarities and basic differences between warrants and call options?

    94. What are the upper and lower bounds for an American call option? Explain what would happen in each case if the bound was violated.

    95. Explain the rationale behind the idea that equity is a call option on a firm's assets. When would a shareholder allow this call to expire?

    96. Call options are frequently attached to bonds, making them callable at the option of the issuer. Consider a firm that just issued two sets of bonds: One is callable, has a 7 percent coupon rate, 15 years to maturity, and cannot be called during the first three years; the second is noncallable, has a 7 percent coupon rate, 15 years to maturity, and is identical to the first bond in every way except for the call option. Suppose the noncallable bonds are sold for $1,000 each. Will the callable bonds sell for more or less than $1,000? Who "purchases" the option in this case and who "sells" it?

  • 97. Explain how the floor and the ceiling prices for a convertible bond are determined.

    98. T-bills currently yield 6.3 percent. Stock in Pinta Manufacturing is currently selling for $46 per share. There is no possibility that the stock will be worth less than $39 per share in one year. What is the value of a call option on this stock if the exercise price is $22 per share?

    A. $21.40B. $22.00C. $24.00D. $25.30E. $25.70

    99. The price of Time Squared Corp. stock will be either $80 or $95 at the end of the year. Call options are available with one year to expiration. T-bills currently yield 6 percent and the current price of Time Squared Corp. stock is $85. What is the value of a call option if the exercise price is $75 per share?

    A. $14.25B. $15.06C. $18.78D. $24.25E. $25.06

    100.The price of Dimension, Inc. stock will be either $65 or $85 at the end of the year. Call options are available with one year to expiration. T-bills currently yield 5 percent. Suppose the current price of Dimension stock is $70. What is the value of the call option if the exercise price is $70 per share?

    A. $6.07B. $8.48C. $11.58D. $15.39E. $17.62

    101.Rackin Pinion Corporation's assets are currently worth $1,260. In one year, they will be worth either $1,200 of $1,610. The risk-free interest rate is 5 percent. Suppose Rackin Pinion has an outstanding debt issue with a face value of $1,200. What is the current value of the firm's debt?

    A. $60.00B. $114.14C. $1,142.86D. $1,263.19E. $1,504.20

    102.Buckeye Industries has a bond issue with a face value of $1,000 that is coming due in one year. The value of Buckeye's assets is currently $1,200. Jim Tressell, the CEO, believes that the assets in the firm will be worth either $600 or $1,700 in a year. The going rate on one-year T-bills is 6 percent. What is the current value of the firm's debt?

    A. $601.18B. $796.57C. $844.24D. $878.78E. $911.03

  • 103.A $1,000 convertible debenture has a conversion price for common stock of $85 per share. The common stock is selling at $92 a share. What is the conversion value of this bond?

    A. $920.00B. $923.91C. $1,000.00D. $1,082.35E. $1,092.00

    104.A bond with 10 detachable warrants has just been offered for sale at $1,000. The bond matures in 15 years and has an annual coupon of $80. Each warrant gives the owner the right to purchase two shares of stock in the company at $14 per share. Ordinary bonds (with no warrants) of similar quality are priced to yield 11 percent. What is the value of one warrant?

    A. $7.00B. $13.58C. $14.00D. $16.67E. $21.57

    105.Your company is deciding when to invest in a new machine. The new machine will increase cash flow by $240,000 per year. You believe the technology used in the machine has a 10-year life; in other words, no matter when you purchase the machine, it will be obsolete 10 years from today. The machine is currently priced at $1,200,000. The cost of the machine will decline by $120,000 per year until it reaches $720,000, where it will remain. Your required return is 8 percent. In which year should you purchase the machine?

    A. Year 0B. Year 1C. Year 2D. Year 3E. Year 4

    106.We are examining a new project. We expect to sell 9,000 units per year at $45 net cash flow apiece for the next 20 years. In other words, the annual operating cash flow is projected to be $45 9,000 = $405,000. The relevant discount rate is 14 percent, and the initial investment required is $1,730,000. After the first year, the project can be dismantled and sold for $1,350,000. If expected sales are revised based on the first year's performance, it would make sense to abandon the investment if the sales are less than which of the following number of units?

    A. 4,580 unitsB. 4,620 unitsC. 4,750 unitsD. 4,810 unitsE. 5,020 units

    107.We are examining a new project. We expect to sell 8,000 units per year at $80 net cash flow apiece for the next 15 years. In other words, the annual operating cash flow is projected to be $80 8,000 = $640,000. The relevant discount rate is 16 percent, and the initial investment required is $2,740,000. The project can be dismantled after the first year and sold for $2,130,000. Suppose you think it is likely that expected sales will be revised upward to 9,600 units if the first year is a success and revised downward to 3,000 units if the first year is not a success. Suppose the scale of the project can be doubled in one year in the sense that twice as many units can be produced and sold. Naturally, expansion would be desirable only if the project is a success. This implies that if the project is a success, projected sales after expansion will be 19,200. Assume that success and failure are equally likely. Note that abandonment is still an option if the project is a failure. What is the value of the option to expand?

    A. $1,774,328B. $1,809,941C. $1,828,406D. $1,848,920E. $1,872,312

  • 24 Key 1. A

    2. C

    3. C

    4. D

    5. E

    6. A

    7. B

    8. A

    9. E

    10. A

    11. D

    12. E

    13. D

    14. B

    15. B

    16. B

    17. C

    18. D

    19. E

    20. A

    21. B

    22. C

    23. C

    24. C

    25. A

    26. D

    27. E

    28. E

    29. D

    30. D

    31. B

    32. B

    33. D

    34. B

    35. E

    36. A

  • 37. E

    38. B

    39. C

    40. C

    41. E

    42. B

    43. D

    44. E

    45. E

    46. E

    47. A

    48. B

    49. C

    50. E

    51. E

    52. D

    53. A

    54. B

    55. A

    56. E

    57. E

    58. E

    59. D

    60. B

    61. E

    62. B

    63. D

    64. B

    65. D

    66. D

    67. E

    68. B

    69. E

    70. C

    71. C

    72. D

    73. D

    74. C

  • 75. E

    76. B

    77. E

    78. B

    79. E

    80. D

    81. A

    82. C

    83. A

    84. C

    85. B

    86. A

    87. D

    88. C

    89. A

    90. B

    91. D

    Feedback: Refer to section 24.392. Students should discuss the impact of time to maturity on option values. They should point out that with five months left to maturity, there is a chance that the option could finish in the money, especially if the stock price is volatile. A low option price per share such as $0.15, means that an investment in an option contract will be quite inexpensive. However, investors apparently don't have a strong feeling the stock will reach $40 by share by the expiration date, or the option price would be much higher.

    Feedback: Refer to section 24.793. Both warrants and call options grant their owners the right to purchase shares of stock at a prespecified price. Warrants are issued by corporations while call options are issued by investors. Warrants are usually attached to privately placed loans or bonds. Warrants can be detached from the debt security and traded separately. Call options are traded separately from the underlying stock.

    Feedback: Refer to section 24.294. The upper bound on a call is the stock price. If the call price exceeded the stock price, you would be paying more for the option to buy an asset than the asset itself costs. The lower bounds are: C 0 if S - E < 0 and C (S - E) if (S - E) 0. In the first case, if the exercise price exceeds the stock price, the call is out of the money and it will either be worthless or have some time value. In the second case, if the call is in the money, the call must be worth at least the difference between the asset's value and the exercise price. If the call was worth less than this value, rational investors would purchase calls, immediately exercise them, and then sell the stock at the current price, completing an arbitrage.

    Feedback: Refer to section 24.595. The analogy only works for leveraged firms. At maturity of the firm's debt, the stockholders have the option to either pay the creditors the face value of the debt or turn the firm's assets over to the firm's creditors. If the firm's assets are worth less than the face value of the debt, the stockholders will not exercise the call, that is, they will let the creditors have the assets and the firm will be liquidated.

    Feedback: Refer to section 24.796. The callable bond will sell for less than par. The bond issuer buys the option and the bondholder writes it. If the callable bonds sell for $950 each, the call option will be worth the difference between the two bond prices, or $50 per bond.

  • Feedback: Refer to section 24.797. The floor, or minimum, value of a bond is the bond's straight bond value. The ceiling, or maximum, value is theoretically unlimited since there is no upper limit on a bond's conversion value.

    98. D

    99. A

    100. A

    101. C

    102. B

    103. D

    104. E

    105. A

    106. A

    107. B

  • 24 Summary Category # of Questions

    AACSB: Analytic 45AACSB: N/A 56AACSB: Reflective thinking 6Difficulty: Basic 101Difficulty: Challenge 1Difficulty: Intermediate 5EOC #: 24-1 1EOC #: 24-12 1EOC #: 24-13 1EOC #: 24-14 1EOC #: 24-16 1EOC #: 24-4 1EOC #: 24-5 1EOC #: 24-7 1EOC #: 24-8 1EOC #: 24-9 1Learning Objective: 24-1 27Learning Objective: 24-1 and 24-6 1Learning Objective: 24-2 24Learning Objective: 24-3 5Learning Objective: 24-4 7Learning Objective: 24-5 20Learning Objective: 24-6 23Ross - Chapter 24 107Section: 24.1 25Section: 24.2 21Section: 24.3 5Section: 24.4 5Section: 24.5 7Section: 24.6 20Section: 24.7 24Topic: Abandonment and expansion 1Topic: Abandonment value 1Topic: American option 3Topic: Call intrinsic value 1Topic: Call lower bound 1Topic: Call option 1Topic: Call payoff 4Topic: Call upper bound 1Topic: Call value 6Topic: Callable bonds 1Topic: Contingency planning 1Topic: Conversion premium 1Topic: Conversion price 1Topic: Conversion ratio 1Topic: Conversion value 2Topic: Convertible bonds 11Topic: Employee stock option 4Topic: Equity as a call option 5Topic: Equity as an option 2Topic: ESO backdating 1Topic: European option 4Topic: Exercising the option 1

  • Topic: Expiration date 1Topic: Factors affecting option values 3Topic: Intrinsic value 5Topic: Investment timing decision 1Topic: Managerial options 3Topic: Option 1Topic: Option payoffs 2Topic: Option pricing bounds 1Topic: Option quotes 3Topic: Option to abandon 4Topic: Option to expand 1Topic: Option to wait 4Topic: Option value 6Topic: Put intrinsic value 1Topic: Put option 1Topic: Put payoff 3Topic: Put value 1Topic: Real options 2Topic: Straight bond value 1Topic: Strategic options 2Topic: Strike price 1Topic: Warrant values 1Topic: Warrants 4Topic: Warrants, calls, and convertibles 1