PREVIOUS YEAR SOLVED PAPERS - July 2018

76. Match the items of List-II with the items of List-I and select the correct code:

List-I  List-II
(a) Liquidity Risk(i) Risk related to purchasing power of Income.
(b) Business Risk(ii) Risk related to Firm’s capital structure.
(c) Financial Risk (iii) Risk related to inability to pay its dues on time.
(d) Inflation Risk(iv) Risk related to fluctuation in profits.

CODES
 (a)(b)(c)(d)
1(ii)(iii)(iv)(i)
2(i)(iv)(iii)(ii)
3(iii)(ii)(iv)(i)
4(iii)(iv)(ii)(i)

  • Option : D
  • Explanation : Interest Rate Risk: The variability in a security’s return resulting from changes in the level of interest rates is referred to as interest rate risk. Such changes generally affect securities inversely; that is, other things being equal, security prices move inversely to interest rates. Interest rate risk affects bonds more directly than common stocks, but it affects both and is a very important consideration for most investors.
    Market Risk: The variability in returns resulting from fluctuations in the overall market—that is, the aggregate stock market— is referred to as market risk. All securities are exposed to market risk, although it affects primarily common stocks. Market risk includes a wide range of factors exogenous to securities themselves, including recessions, wars, structural changes in the economy, and changes in consumer preferences.
    Inflation Risk: A factor affecting all securities is purchasing power risk, or the chance that the purchasing power of invested dollars will decline. With uncertain inflation, the real (inflation-adjusted) return involves risk even if the nominal return is safe (e.g., a Treasury bond). This risk is related to interest rate risk, since interest rates generally rise as inflation increases, because lenders demand additional inflation premiums to compensate for the loss of purchasing power.
    Business Risk: The risk of doing business in a particular industry or environment is called business risk. For example, AT&T, the traditional telephone powerhouse, faces major changes today in the rapidly changing telecommunications industry.
    Financial Risk: Financial risk is associated with the use of debt financing by companies. The larger the proportion of assets financed by debt (as opposed to equity), the larger the variability in the returns, other things being equal. Financial risk involves the concept of financial leverage, explained in managerial finance courses.
    Liquidity Risk: Liquidity risk is the risk associated with the particular secondary market in which a security trades. An investment that can be bought or sold quickly and without significant price concession is considered liquid. The more uncertainty about the time element and the price concession, the greater the liquidity risk. A Treasury bill has little or no liquidity risk, whereas a small OTC stock may have substantial liquidity risk.
    Currency Risk (Exchange Rate Risk): All investors who invest internationally in today’s increasingly global investment arena face the prospect of uncertainty in the returns after they convert the foreign gains back to their own currency. Unlike the past when most US investors ignored international investing alternatives, investors today are part of a global economy.
    To take another example, a US investor who buys a German stock denominated in marks must ultimately convert the returns from this stock back to dollars. If the exchange rate has moved against the investor, losses from these exchange rate movements can partially or totally negate the original return earned.
    Obviously, US investors who invest only in US stocks on US markets do not face this risk, but in today’s global environment where investors increasingly consider alternatives from other countries, currency fluctuations have become important US investors who invest in such financial assets as international mutual funds, global mutual funds, closedend single-country funds, foreign stocks, and foreign bonds are affected by currency risk.
    Country Risk: Country risk, also referred to as political risk, is an important risk for investors today—probably more important now than in the past. With more investors investing internationally, both directly and indirectly, the political, and therefore economic, stability and viability of a country’s economy need to be considered. The United States has one of the lowest country risks, and other countries can be judged on a relative basis using the United States as a benchmark. Examples of countries that needed careful monitoring in the 1990s because of country risk included the former Soviet Union and Yugoslavia, China, Hong Kong, and South Africa. In the early part of the twenty-first century, Russia, Pakistan, and several countries in South America, among others, require careful attention.
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77. Statement (I): Designing a distribution system for a service (for-profit or non-business context) involves to select the parties only through which ownership will pass.
Statement (II): The ownership channel for most of the services is long and quite complex because of inseparability characteristic.
Statement (III) : Short channels usually mean more control on the part of the seller.
Identify the correct code of being the statements correct or incorrect. These statements relate to channel strategies of products/services.

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78. An enormous collection of data on various topics from a variety of internal and external sources, compiled by a firm for its own use or for use by its clients, is called:

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79. Statement (I): A form of non-store retailing that uses advertising to contact consumers who, in turn, purchase products without visiting a retail store is called Direct selling.
Statement (II): A form of non-store retailing in which personal contact between a sales person and a consumer occurs away from a retail store is called Direct Marketing.
In the light of above statements, identify the correct code of statements being correct or incorrect.

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80. 34% of the customers who fall in one of the categories of diffusion process who are deliberate customers to accept an innovation just before the average adopter in a social system. Such customers who are above average in social and economic measures, rely quite a bit on advertisements and salesmen are known as:

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Related Quiz.
July 2018