Finance Exam Questions – Can you solve ’em?
I haven’t posted in the last three months to this blog because of a heavy teaching load at NYU School of Continuing Professional Studies, where I teach “Fundamentals of Corporate Finance.” Here are five questions from a practice exam I recently gave to my students; how many of these can you solve?
1. If a company with $3 million annual revenue decreases its accounts receivables from 45 days outstanding to 30 days outstanding how much cash is freed up?
2. An investor buys a 30-year, 10% interest bond, for $100,000. If interest rates increase to 20%, the value of this bond would change to:
a. $50,211
b. $91,667
c. $104,762
d. $176,862
3. Which of the following statements distinguishing debt versus equity is true?
a. Debt is an ownership interest, while equity is not
b. A publicly-owned firm’s equity has a fluctuating market price, not its debt
c. An all-debt firm is more likely to go bankrupt than an all-equity firm
d. Companies must have some debt in place before they can sell equity
4. A firm has operating income of $50 million, interest expense of $18 million, dividends paid of $15 million, and a 40% tax rate, what is net income?
a. $10.2 million
b. $12.8 million
c. $19.2 million
d. $21.0 million
5. A premium bond has a coupon rate that:
a. is less than the yield to maturity.
b. equals zero.
c. must be variable.
d. equals the current yield.
e. exceeds the yield to maturity
ANSWERS: 1. $123,288, 2A, 3C, 4C, 5E