2024年3月22日发(作者:)

Economics of Money, Banking, and Financial Markets, 11e, Global Edition (Mishkin)

Chapter 2 An Overview of the Financial System

2.1 Function of Financial Markets

1) Every financial market has the following characteristic.

A) It determines the level of interest rates.

B) It allows common stock to be traded.

C) It allows loans to be made.

D) It channels funds from lenders-savers to borrowers-spenders.

Answer: D

AACSB: Reflective Thinking

2) Financial markets have the basic function of

A) getting people with funds to lend together with people who want to borrow funds.

B) assuring that the swings in the business cycle are less pronounced.

C) assuring that governments need never resort to printing money.

D) providing a risk-free repository of spending power.

Answer: A

AACSB: Reflective Thinking

3) Financial markets improve economic welfare because

A) they channel funds from investors to savers.

B) they allow consumers to time their purchase better.

C) they weed out inefficient firms.

D) they eliminate the need for indirect finance.

Answer: B

AACSB: Reflective Thinking

4) Well-functioning financial markets

A) cause inflation.

B) eliminate the need for indirect finance.

C) cause financial crises.

D) allow the economy to operate more efficiently.

Answer: D

AACSB: Reflective Thinking

5) A breakdown of financial markets can result in

A) financial stability.

B) rapid economic growth.

C) political instability.

D) stable prices.

Answer: C

AACSB: Reflective Thinking

6) The principal lender-savers are

A) governments.

B) businesses.

C) households.

D) foreigners.

Answer: C

AACSB: Application of Knowledge

7) Which of the following can be described as direct finance?

A) You take out a mortgage from your local bank.

B) You borrow $2500 from a friend.

C) You buy shares of common stock in the secondary market.

D) You buy shares in a mutual fund.

Answer: B

AACSB: Analytical Thinking

8) Assume that you borrow $2000 at 10% annual interest to finance a new business project. For

this loan to be profitable, the minimum amount this project must generate in annual earnings is

A) $400.

B) $201.

C) $200.

D) $199.

Answer: B

AACSB: Analytical Thinking

9) You can borrow $5000 to finance a new business venture. This new venture will generate

annual earnings of $251. The maximum interest rate that you would pay on the borrowed funds

and still increase your income is

A) 25%.

B) 12.5%.

C) 10%.

D) 5%.

Answer: D

AACSB: Analytical Thinking

10) Which of the following can be described as involving direct finance?

A) A corporation issues new shares of stock.

B) People buy shares in a mutual fund.

C) A pension fund manager buys a short-term corporate security in the secondary market.

D) An insurance company buys shares of common stock in the over-the-counter markets.

Answer: A

AACSB: Analytical Thinking

11) Which of the following can be described as involving direct finance?

A) A corporation takes out loans from a bank.

B) People buy shares in a mutual fund.

C) A corporation buys a short-term corporate security in a secondary market.

D) People buy shares of common stock in the primary markets.

Answer: D

AACSB: Analytical Thinking

12) Which of the following can be described as involving indirect finance?

A) You make a loan to your neighbor.

B) A corporation buys a share of common stock issued by another corporation in the primary

market.

C) You buy a U.S. Treasury bill from the U.S. Treasury at .

D) You make a deposit at a bank.

Answer: D

AACSB: Analytical Thinking

13) Which of the following can be described as involving indirect finance?

A) You make a loan to your neighbor.

B) You buy shares in a mutual fund.

C) You buy a U.S. Treasury bill from the U.S. Treasury at Treasury .

D) You purchase shares in an initial public offering by a corporation in the primary market.

Answer: B

AACSB: Analytical Thinking

14) Securities are ________ for the person who buys them, but are ________ for the individual

or firm that issues them.

A) assets; liabilities

B) liabilities; assets

C) negotiable; nonnegotiable

D) nonnegotiable; negotiable

Answer: A

AACSB: Reflective Thinking

15) With ________ finance, borrowers obtain funds from lenders by selling them securities in

the financial markets.

A) active

B) determined

C) indirect

D) direct

Answer: D

AACSB: Application of Knowledge

16) With direct finance, funds are channeled through the financial market from the ________

directly to the ________.

A) savers, spenders

B) spenders, investors

C) borrowers, savers

D) investors, savers

Answer: A

AACSB: Reflective Thinking

17) Distinguish between direct finance and indirect finance. Which of these is the most important

source of funds for corporations in the United States?

Answer: With direct finance, funds flow directly from the lender/saver to the borrower. With

indirect finance, funds flow from the lender/saver to a financial intermediary who then channels

the funds to the borrower/investor. Financial intermediaries (indirect finance) are the major

source of funds for corporations in the U.S.

AACSB: Reflective Thinking

2.2 Structure of Financial Markets

1) Which of the following statements about the characteristics of debt and equity is FALSE?

A) They can both be long-term financial instruments.

B) They can both be short-term financial instruments.

C) They both involve a claim on the issuer's income.

D) They both enable a corporation to raise funds.

Answer: B

AACSB: Reflective Thinking

2) Which of the following statements about the characteristics of debt and equities is TRUE?

A) They can both be long-term financial instruments.

B) Bond holders are residual claimants.

C) The income from bonds is typically more variable than that from equities.

D) Bonds pay dividends.

Answer: A

AACSB: Reflective Thinking

3) Which of the following statements about financial markets and securities is TRUE?

A) A bond is a long-term security that promises to make periodic payments called dividends to

the firm's residual claimants.

B) A debt instrument is intermediate term if its maturity is less than one year.

C) A debt instrument is intermediate term if its maturity is ten years or longer.

D) The maturity of a debt instrument is the number of years (term) to that instrument's expiration

date.

Answer: D

AACSB: Reflective Thinking

4) Which of the following is an example of an intermediate-term debt?

A) a fifteen-year mortgage

B) a sixty-month car loan

C) a six-month loan from a finance company

D) a thirty-year U.S. Treasury bond

Answer: B

AACSB: Analytical Thinking

5) If the maturity of a debt instrument is less than one year, the debt is called

A) short-term.

B) intermediate-term.

C) long-term.

D) prima-term.

Answer: A

AACSB: Application of Knowledge

6) Long-term debt has a maturity that is

A) between one and ten years.

B) less than a year.

C) between five and ten years.

D) ten years or longer.

Answer: D

AACSB: Application of Knowledge

7) When I purchase ________, I own a portion of a firm and have the right to vote on issues

important to the firm and to elect its directors.

A) bonds

B) bills

C) notes

D) stock

Answer: D

AACSB: Application of Knowledge

8) Equity holders are a corporation's ________. That means the corporation must pay all of its

debt holders before it pays its equity holders.

A) debtors

B) brokers

C) residual claimants

D) underwriters

Answer: C

AACSB: Reflective Thinking

9) Which of the following benefits directly from any increase in the corporation's profitability?

A) a bond holder

B) a commercial paper holder

C) a shareholder

D) a T-bill holder

Answer: C

AACSB: Reflective Thinking

10) A financial market in which previously issued securities can be resold is called a ________

market.

A) primary

B) secondary

C) tertiary

D) used securities

Answer: B

AACSB: Application of Knowledge

11) An important financial institution that assists in the initial sale of securities in the primary

market is the

A) investment bank.

B) commercial bank.

C) stock exchange.

D) brokerage house.

Answer: A

AACSB: Application of Knowledge

12) When an investment bank ________ securities, it guarantees a price for a corporation's

securities and then sells them to the public.

A) underwrites

B) undertakes

C) overwrites

D) overtakes

Answer: A

AACSB: Application of Knowledge

13) Which of the following is NOT a secondary market?

A) foreign exchange market

B) futures market

C) options market

D) IPO market

Answer: D

AACSB: Reflective Thinking

14) ________ work in the secondary markets matching buyers with sellers of securities.

A) Dealers

B) Underwriters

C) Brokers

D) Claimants

Answer: C

AACSB: Application of Knowledge

15) A corporation acquires new funds only when its securities are sold in the

A) primary market by an investment bank.

B) primary market by a stock exchange broker.

C) secondary market by a securities dealer.

D) secondary market by a commercial bank.

Answer: A

AACSB: Reflective Thinking

16) A corporation acquires new funds only when its securities are sold in the

A) secondary market by an investment bank.

B) primary market by an investment bank.

C) secondary market by a stock exchange broker.

D) secondary market by a commercial bank.

Answer: B

AACSB: Reflective Thinking

17) An important function of secondary markets is to

A) make it easier to sell financial instruments to raise funds.

B) raise funds for corporations through the sale of securities.

C) make it easier for governments to raise taxes.

D) create a market for newly constructed houses.

Answer: A

AACSB: Reflective Thinking

18) Secondary markets make financial instruments more

A) solid.

B) vapid.

C) liquid.

D) risky.

Answer: C

AACSB: Reflective Thinking

19) A liquid asset is

A) an asset that can easily and quickly be sold to raise cash.

B) a share of an ocean resort.

C) difficult to resell.

D) always sold in an over-the-counter market.

Answer: A

AACSB: Reflective Thinking

20) The higher a security's price in the secondary market the ________ funds a firm can raise by

selling securities in the ________ market.

A) more; primary

B) more; secondary

C) less; primary

D) less; secondary

Answer: A

AACSB: Reflective Thinking

21) When secondary market buyers and sellers of securities meet in one central location to

conduct trades the market is called a(n)

A) exchange.

B) over-the-counter market.

C) common market.

D) barter market.

Answer: A

AACSB: Application of Knowledge

22) In a(n) ________ market, dealers in different locations buy and sell securities to anyone who

comes to them and is willing to accept their prices.

A) exchange

B) over-the-counter

C) common

D) barter

Answer: B

AACSB: Application of Knowledge

23) Forty or so dealers establish a "market" in these securities by standing ready to buy and sell

them.

A) secondary stocks

B) surplus stocks

C) U.S. government bonds

D) common stocks

Answer: C

AACSB: Application of Knowledge

24) Which of the following statements about financial markets and securities is TRUE?

A) Many common stocks are traded over-the-counter, although the largest corporations usually

have their shares traded at organized stock exchanges such as the New York Stock Exchange.

B) As a corporation gets a share of the broker's commission, a corporation acquires new funds

whenever its securities are sold.

C) Capital market securities are usually more widely traded than shorter-term securities and so

tend to be more liquid.

D) Prices of capital market securities are usually more stable than prices of money market

securities, and so are often used to hold temporary surplus funds of corporations.

Answer: A

AACSB: Reflective Thinking

25) A financial market in which only short-term debt instruments are traded is called the

________ market.

A) bond

B) money

C) capital

D) stock

Answer: B

AACSB: Analytical Thinking

26) Equity instruments are traded in the ________ market.

A) money

B) bond

C) capital

D) commodities

Answer: C

AACSB: Analytical Thinking

27) Because these securities are more liquid and generally have smaller price fluctuations,

corporations and banks use the ________ securities to earn interest on temporary surplus funds.

A) money market

B) capital market

C) bond market

D) stock market

Answer: A

AACSB: Reflective Thinking

28) Corporations receive funds when their stock is sold in the primary market. Why do

corporations pay attention to what is happening to their stock in the secondary market?

Answer: The existence of the secondary market makes their stock more liquid and the price in

the secondary market sets the price that the corporation would receive if they choose to sell more

stock in the primary market.

AACSB: Reflective Thinking

29) Describe the two methods of organizing a secondary market.

Answer: A secondary market can be organized as an exchange where buyers and sellers meet

in one central location to conduct trades. An example of an exchange is the New York Stock

Exchange. A secondary market can also be organized as an over-the-counter market. In this type

of market, dealers in different locations buy and sell securities to anyone who comes to them and

is willing to accept their prices. An example of an over-the-counter market is the federal funds

market.

AACSB: Reflective Thinking

2.3 Financial Market Instruments

1) Prices of money market instruments undergo the least price fluctuations because of

A) the short terms to maturity for the securities.

B) the heavy regulations in the industry.

C) the price ceiling imposed by government regulators.

D) the lack of competition in the market.

Answer: A

AACSB: Reflective Thinking

2) U.S. Treasury bills pay no interest but are sold at a ________. That is, you will pay a lower

purchase price than the amount you receive at maturity.

A) premium

B) collateral

C) default

D) discount

Answer: D

AACSB: Analytical Thinking

3) U.S. Treasury bills are considered the safest of all money market instruments because there is

a low probability of

A) defeat.

B) default.

C) desertion.

D) demarcation.

Answer: B

AACSB: Analytical Thinking

4) A debt instrument sold by a bank to its depositors that pays annual interest of a given amount

and at maturity pays back the original purchase price is called

A) commercial paper.

B) a certificate of deposit.

C) a municipal bond.

D) federal funds.

Answer: B

AACSB: Analytical Thinking

5) A short-term debt instrument issued by well-known corporations is called

A) commercial paper.

B) corporate bonds.

C) municipal bonds.

D) commercial mortgages.

Answer: A

AACSB: Analytical Thinking

6) ________ are short-term loans in which Treasury bills serve as collateral.

A) Repurchase agreements

B) Negotiable certificates of deposit

C) Federal funds

D) U.S. government agency securities

Answer: A

AACSB: Analytical Thinking

7) Collateral is ________ the lender receives if the borrower does not pay back the loan.

A) a liability

B) an asset

C) a present

D) an offering

Answer: B

AACSB: Analytical Thinking

8) Federal funds are

A) funds raised by the federal government in the bond market.

B) loans made by the Federal Reserve System to banks.

C) loans made by banks to the Federal Reserve System.

D) loans made by banks to each other.

Answer: D

AACSB: Analytical Thinking

9) An important source of short-term funds for commercial banks are ________ which can be

resold on the secondary market.

A) negotiable CDs

B) commercial paper

C) mortgage-backed securities

D) municipal bonds

Answer: A

AACSB: Application of Knowledge