Caia Level 1

Caia Level 1 Questions

Caia Level 1 Questions


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Chapter 15 - What are strategies used in relative value hedge funds?

- Volatility arbitrage strategies - Fixed -income arbitrage strategies - Relative value multi -strategies

Chapter 15 - What is the goal of the classic relative value strategie trade?

Identifying abnormal spreads between two related prices or rates and establishing a position anticipating convergence to normal levels

Chapter 15 - What involves the classical convertible bond arbitrage trade?

the purchase of a company's convertible bonds with the simultaneous short sale of the company's common stock

Chapter 15 - What are the 3 types of convertible bonds regarding moneyness?

- busted convertible - -> high conversion premium; far out -of -the -money - hybrid convertibles - -> moderate conversion ratios; close to being at -the -money - equity -like convertible - -> in -the -money

Chapter 15 - Regarding the greeks, a change in value of an option with resprect to a change in the value of the underlying asset refers to?

delta

Chapter 15 - Regarding the greeks, a change in the value of the underlying asset with resprect to a chage in delta refers to?

gamma

Chapter 15 - Regarding the greeks, the rate of change between an option portfolio and time, or time sensitivity refers to?

theta

Chapter 15 - What is the relationship between realized and implied volatility?

realized volatility refers to the actual observed volatility or standard deviation of the underlying stock, whereas implied volatility refers to the standard deviation of returns based on the observed market option price

Chapter 15 - What are the 4 reasons issuers may continue to offer convertible bonds at attractive prices?

- Agents may underestimate the true costs of issuing convertible bonds - Agents of small firms may not have any other options than to issue convertible bonds - Potential conflict of interest between straight bond investors and shareholder regarding the volatility of corporate assets - Indirect equity issuance costs

Chapter 15 - What are the 2 components of the total return of a convertible arbitrage strategy?

- income (coupon payment - stock dividend + rebate - financing expenses) - capital gains/losses (gains on stock and bond - losses on stock and bond)

Chapter 15 - What are risks of convertible bond arbitrage?

- interest rate risk - Equity and volatility risk - correlation risk - credit risk - legal risk - liquidity and crisis risk

Chapter 15 - Regarding the greeks, the rate of change between an option portfolio's value and the underlying asset's volatility - in other words, sensitivity to volatility - refers to?

vega

Chapter 15 - What are the 2 volatility arbitrage strategies?

- long volatility fund - market -neutral volatility fund

Chapter 15 - Market protection of large losses without the purchase of put options refers to what strategy?

Tail risk strategy

Chapter 15 - The classic dispersion trade?

takes a long position in options of individual equities and a short position in a related index option

Chapter 15 - the purchase of one fixed -income security with the simultaneous sale of a similar fixed -income security refers to what strategy?

fixed -income arbitrage strategy

Chapter 15 - A position of the return of the hedge that are insensitive to changes in the general level of market interest rates is said to be?

duration -neutral

Chapter 15 - What is the difference between inter -curve and intra -curve arbitrage?

inter -curve arbitrage refers to spread trades of bonds with identical maturities whereas intra -curve arbitrage refers to yield curve trades of bonds with different maturities

Chapter 15 - What are risks of ABS and MBS arbitrage?

- interest rate risk - prepayment risk - credit risk spreads - interest rate volatility - liquidity

Chapter 16 - A Hedge fund that eliminates exposure to market risk by balancing the long and short positions (Beta = 0) is called..

Equity market -neutral fund

Chapter 16 - What are market anomalies?

investment strategies that over time consistently result in abnormal returns or higher return than predicted by market models such as the CAPM

Chapter 16 - State 7 matket anomalies?

- market efficiency test - predicting persistence of market anomalies - accounting accruals - price momentum - earnings momentum - net stock isuance - insider trading

Chapter 16 - What are the 2 key components of the Fundamental Law of Active Management (FLOAM)?

- breadth - -> number of active trades - skill - -> measured by IC (information coefficient) as the correlation between actual realized and forecasted managerial return

Chapter 16 - What is the goal of non -active bets?

to reduce tracking error

Chapter 16 - Pairs trading is a strategy where stock are matched based on?

systematic risk

Chapter 16 - What are the 3 major types of equity hedge funds using a single factor model CAPM?

- short -bias - long/short - market -neutral

Chapter 17 - Hedge funds that create portfolios consisting of other hedge funds are called ?

Funds of Funds (FOFs)

Chapter 17 - How is an index called when the underlying securites can be obtained by an investor?

investable index

Chapter 17 - What are the 6 different methods to approximate the returns of a well -diversified hedge funds?

- Portfolios of single hedge -fund managers - Multi -strategy funds - One or more funds of hedge funds - Structured products whose underlying asset are hedge funds - Investable indices of firms holding many hedge funds - Replication products that offer similar returns to hedge funds using factor -based approaches or trading systems

Chapter 17 - Empirical studies suggest using how many hedge funds to optimize diversification benefits?

15 -20

Chapter 17 - How much are the estimated total minimum cost of maintaining an internal staff (for constructing and maintaining an internal evaluation system)?

1 million

Chapter 17 - What is preferable (management fees of 2% or internal staff) if assets under management are less than 50 million ?

management fees of 2%

Chapter 17 - What are the advantages of multi -strategy funds compared to FOFs?

- lower incentive fees (they avoid second layer of fees) - fees in multi -strategy funds are based on aggregated returns - greater felxibility - greater transparency - real -time access to all positions

Chapter 17 - What are the advantages of FOFs compared to mult -strategy funds?

- acces to more fund manager - diversification of operational risk -

Chapter 17 - What are the 3 reasons FOFs are less biased than individual hedge funds?

- FOFs retain the returns of liquidated funds in their track record - FOFs include investment returns from the date of the first investment - FOFs use actual weights

Chapter 17 - What are the 5 subindices of FOFs?

- compsite - conservative - diversified - market defensive - strategic

Chapter 17 - What are the main objectives of the 5 subindices of FOFs?

- composite: higher returns - diversified: higher returns - conservative: consistent return with low risk - market defensive: hedge market risk - strategic: higher returns

Chapter 18 - What are the similarities and differencies between Futures and Forwards?

- both can be either deliverable or cash settlement contracts - both have zero value at the time an investors enters into a contract - futures are exchange traded - futures contracts have standardized contract sizes and termes - futures have no counterparty risk - futures are marked -to -market - futures are regulated by the government

Chapter 18 - The relationship between forward prices and time is called..

term structure of forward prices

Chapter 18 - What are the assumptions for the simple forward pricing model?

- transaction costs, taxes do not exist - Risk free rate is zero - underlying asset can be borrowed at no cost - underlying asset has no dividend yield, convenience yield, storage cost - underlying asset can be easily obtained