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SOA Exam IFM

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Reasons to use derivatives - answer-1. To manage/reduce risk 2. To speculate - like placing a bet on what will happen in the future 3. To reduce transaction costs 4. To minimize taxes/avoid regulatory issues Market order - answer-a request to buy or sell a stock at the current market price - ...

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  • September 30, 2024
  • 27
  • 2024/2025
  • Exam (elaborations)
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TOPDOCTOR
SOA Exam IFM
Reasons to use derivatives - answer-1. To manage/reduce risk

2. To speculate - like placing a bet on what will happen in the future

3. To reduce transaction costs

4. To minimize taxes/avoid regulatory issues



Market order - answer-a request to buy or sell a stock at the current market price - advantage: can
immediately own or sell the stock

disadvantage: the price could move more favorably in the future



Limit order - answer-An order to a broker to buy a specific stock only if its price is below a certain level,
or to sell a specific stock only if its price is above a certain level

-Advantage: can trade at a better price

-Disadvantage: could never be executed if price does not reach cutoff point



Stop-loss order - answer-an order to sell a particular stock whenever the price of the asset falls to (or
below) a certain price.

-Advantage: you are able to minimize losses before they get worse

-Disadvantages: you could sell lower than specified cutoff point if there is a big jump in price, could
never be executed



Short-selling - answer-1. Borrow shares of stock now

2. Immediately sell the borrowed stock

3. Buy the shares back at a future time



Haircut - answer-Additional collateral placed with lender by short-seller to compensate for risk that the
short-seller is unable to afford to buy the stock back (it belongs to the short-seller)

,Short rebate and repo rate - answer-The interest earned on the collateral from short-selling in the stock
market and bond market, respectively. These rates are typically lower than market interest rates and are
based on supply and demand.



Lease rate - answer-The payment required by the lender during a short-sale to cover missed dividend
payments.



Four ways of buying a stock - answer-1. Outright purchase: pay for the stock at time 0 and receive it at
time 0

2. Forward contract: pay for the stock at time T and receive it at time T

3. Prepaid forward contract: pay for the stock at time 0 and receive it at time T

4. Fully leveraged purchase: receive the stock at time 0 and pay for it at time T (borrow the money to
buy the stock now)



Five differences between forwards and futures - answer-1. Customization - futures are standardized,
forwards can be customized

2. Marked-to-market - gains and losses are settled daily in futures

3. Liquidity - forward agreements are difficult to enter/exit

4. Credit risk - reduced in futures because gains/losses are determined frequently

5. Pricing limits - forwards do not have price limits, but futures do (trading is halted if price drops below
X% during a trading day)



Bermudan-style option - answer-An option that can only be exercised at specific times during its term.



Floor - answer-The combination of a long asset and a long put or a long call and a long bond
(asset+put=call+bond)



Cap - answer-The combination of a short asset and a long call or a long put and a short bond (-
asset+call=put-bond)



Covered call - answer-When the writer of a call also owns the stock he is obligated to sell;

Used to increase income in a time when you do not expect the stock price to increase;

, Can be written out of the money to add insurance that the stock won't get called away;

Trading away chance of stock appreciating in future for income now



Covered put - answer-When the writer of a put also sells the stock he is obligated to buy. Beneficial if
the writer believes the price of the stock will decrease, so they can minimize their losses.



Bull spread - answer-An option spread created by buying a call and selling a higher-strike call, or buying
a put and selling a higher-strike put. Used when an investor believes the price of an asset will increase
between two strike prices.



Bear spread - answer-An option spread created by selling a call and buying a higher-strike call or selling a
put and buying a higher-strike put. Used when an investor believes the price of the asset will decrease
between two strike prices.



Box spread - answer-A four option strategy consisting of buying a bull spread and buying a bear spread,
where one spread uses calls and the other uses otherwise identical puts. Used to lend/borrow money -
equivalent to a zero-coupon bond.



Ratio spread - answer-An option strategy created by buying m options at one strike price and then
selling n options with a different strike price, where m is not equal to n.



Collar - answer-An option strategy created by purchasing a put at a lower strike price and selling a call at
a higher strike price. Used when investor wishes to benefit from the stock price decreasing.



Collared stock - answer-An option strategy created as a combination of a purchased collar with a long
stock.



Straddle - answer-An option strategy created by purchasing both a call and a put with the same strike
and time to expiration. Used when investor believes the price of the underlying asset will experience
large moves in either direction.



Strangle - answer-An option strategy created by purchasing a put and a higher-strike call, each with the
same time to expiration. Used when investor believes the price of the underlying will experience large
moves, but desires a low initial cost.

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