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School of Business, Investing, and Finance
At SBIF, we use quizzes as an effective and exciting tool to teach principles of successful stock investing in an enjoyable manner. These challenging and fun quizzes are designed to teach important concepts of global and business finance AND help you with your own investing for years to come.
Congratulations - you have completed Stock Market Companion - Successful Investing Quiz 1.
You scored %%SCORE%% out of %%TOTAL%%.
Your performance has been rated as %%RATING%%
Question 1 |
A | Renaissance Period |
B | Dark Ages |
C | After the "New World" was found |
Question 2 |
A | 5.3 |
B | 9.0 |
C | 16.7 |
Question 3 |
A | The ability to decide when to be in the market and when to be out of the market. |
B | The ability to buy and hold a stock. Hint: At Stock Market Companion we teach our subscribers to engage stocks based on strategic entries AND exits. If the story behind a stock changes or the background market begins to weaken, it's wise to take profits quickly and head to the sidelines. |
C | The ability to put "everything" on one stock investment. Hint: It's never wise to put all our eggs in one stock investment. There are all kinds of things that could happen that could be disastrous. However there are times that we can heavily overweight a particular investment. |
Question 4 |
A | The Federal Reserve Beige Book offers a reasonably unbiased view of the current US economy. |
B | The Federal Reserve Beige Book teaches about US economic conditions in the past. |
C | The Federal Reserve Beige Book will tell you where to invest your money. |
Question 5 |
A | Expected corporate earnings in the near future. |
B | Interest rates |
C | Debt-ceiling debates |
Question 6 |
A | Success. We want our students to make a lot of money in stocks. |
B | Supply. Stock share prices are heavily influenced by the supply of shares available for purchase. |
C | Story. Understanding what the key catalysts are for growth at a company and understanding what person or product represents this catalyst is key to success when investing in individual company shares. |
Question 7 |
A | The share price is going UP. |
B | The share price is the lowest it's been in years and has nowhere to go but up. |
C | You like the company's products. |
D | You have completed a S.I.M.P.L.E. method analysis on the company and your rating for the company and the company's current share price indicates that this is a good time to buy the shares. |
Question 8 |
A | A new CEO. |
B | Increasing quarterly earnings and guidance for increasing earnings in the current year. |
C | News that mutual funds have purchased shares in the company. |
Question 9 |
A | Yes. The high price to earnings ratio indicates that the share price is too over priced. |
B | Yes. It's never wise to purchase shares that are expensive based on current earnings. |
C | No. Higher earnings for the company may be ahead, which justifies a high P/E.
Astute stock investors are able to participate in both value and growth stock investing. |
Question 10 |
A | Yes. Those who buy expensive subscriptions to "inside" market research firms always make money. |
B | Yes. The price of the shares already reflects what the public expects about a company's earnings. |
C | No. Free information, available to the public in company quarterly and annual reports is what you need to complete a S.I.M.P.L.E. analysis and to decide for yourself if there is a strong possibility for share price appreciation at a company. |
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Congratulations - you have completed Stock Market Companion - Successful Investing Quiz 2.
You scored %%SCORE%% out of %%TOTAL%%.
Your performance has been rated as %%RATING%%
Question 1 |
A | Stock price (or ETF) opens lower than the previous day's close. |
B | High volume (at least 1.5 times average daily volume, and preferably more). |
C | Stock price (or ETF) close is near or higher than the previous day's close. |
D | Quiet, low volume price action. |
Question 2 |
A | Last year's ISM Manufacturing Index |
B | Quarterly earnings from a year ago |
C | Expectations for near term demand |
D | Global shipping information from the previous quarter |
Question 3 |
A | The SPY data is faster. |
B | The SPY data is more accurate. |
C | We are able to easily graph volume along with the price chart. |
Question 4 |
A | It can act as a pivot point for the entire market and give us a clear idea of short term direction in the market. |
B | It validates the current market trend. |
C | There is no significance. The market is going to do whatever the market is going to do. |
Question 5 |
A | The immediate last month's sales were stronger than expected for the U.S. automotive industry and Ford just successfully completed negotiations with the union - ahead of schedule. |
B | Ford's CEO said "everything is going to be fine" but the stock price fell further. |
C | The U.S. economy is heading into a recession, but it looks like flat rolled sheet steel is going to hold its prices. |
Congratulations - you have completed Stock Market Companion - Successful Investing Quiz 3.
You scored %%SCORE%% out of %%TOTAL%%.
Your performance has been rated as %%RATING%%
Question 1 |
A | No. |
B | Not clear. |
C | Yes. |
Question 2 |
A | Not clear. |
B | Yes. |
C | No. |
Question 3 |
A | Not clear. |
B | Low volume. |
C | High volume. |
Question 4 |
A | The price went DOWN. |
B | The price went UP. |
C | Not Clear. |
Question 5 |
A | 12.3% |
B | 24.6% |
C | 2.46% |
Congratulations - you have completed Stock Market Companion - Successful Investing Quiz 4.
You scored %%SCORE%% out of %%TOTAL%%.
Your performance has been rated as %%RATING%%
Question 1 |
A | Euro |
B | Dinar |
C | Deutsche Mark |
Question 2 |
A | Consider |
B | Control |
C | Collect |
Question 3 |
A | Idea / Fear |
B | Cost / Investment |
C | Significance / Inflation |
Question 4 |
A | Stayed the same / Creating expensive entitlement programs. |
B | Decreased / Keep spending |
C | Increased / Running budget surplus and paying down debt |
Question 5 |
A | Give a bonus |
B | Lower the rate |
C | Default |
Congratulations - you have completed Stock Market Companion - Successful Investing Quiz 5.
You scored %%SCORE%% out of %%TOTAL%%.
Your performance has been rated as %%RATING%%
Question 1 |
A | The stock market will in all likelihood go down in value. |
B | The stock market will in all likelihood go up in value. |
C | The stock market won't be impacted very much. |
Question 2 |
A | Lower interest rates which lower the costs of borrowing for businesses. |
B | Lower taxes. |
C | Make more laws that restrict business. |
Question 3 |
A | Print money efficiently and regularly. |
B | Maximize employment and maintain stability in prices (low inflation). |
C | Regulate and measure bank lending. |
Question 4 |
A | Gold |
B | Labor |
C | Money |
Question 5 |
A | 1913 / Yes |
B | 1913 / No |
C | 1971 / Yes |
Congratulations - you have completed Stock Market Companion - Successful Investing Quiz 6.
You scored %%SCORE%% out of %%TOTAL%%.
Your performance has been rated as %%RATING%%
Question 1 |
A | Yes |
B | Cannot Determine |
C | No |
Question 2 |
A | 3 |
B | 2 |
C | 1 |
Question 3 |
A | Sinking |
B | Holding |
C | Pivot |
Question 4 |
A | 2x to 4x |
B | 5x to 7x |
C | 1x to 3x |
Congratulations - you have completed Stock Market Companion - Successful Investing Quiz 7.
You scored %%SCORE%% out of %%TOTAL%%.
Your performance has been rated as %%RATING%%
Question 1 |
A | exposure / well intended |
B | risks / correct |
C | choices / perfect |
Question 2 |
A | top / round |
B | bottom / round |
C | middle / high |
Question 3 |
A | trailing |
B | limit |
C | market |
Question 4 |
A | 10 |
B | 20 |
C | 30 |
Question 5 |
A | good / equal |
B | good / higher |
C | perfect / market |
Congratulations - you have completed Stock Market Companion - Successful Investing Quiz 8.
You scored %%SCORE%% out of %%TOTAL%%.
Your performance has been rated as %%RATING%%
Question 1 |
A | Benefit #2 |
B | Benefit #10 |
C | None. |
Question 2 |
A | Their names, their business models, learn from their successes, learn to do exactly what they did. |
B | What their parents did, where they went to school, what degree they earned, and the kind of car they first purchased. |
C | What they have done, the obstacles they overcame, learn from their failures, and avoid similar mistakes. |
Question 3 |
A | Fear and Greed |
B | Surprise and Happiness |
C | Like and Dislike |
Question 4 |
A | You are not always right and that it is possible to minimize your risks and the cost of being wrong. |
B | You are not always right and there is no way to prevent complete disaster. |
C | You are not always right and therefore you should not proceed forward. |
Question 5 |
A | I don't know. |
B | Yes. To improve the lives of those who come after you. |
C | No. You benefit directly. |
Congratulations - you have completed Stock Market Companion - Successful Investing Quiz 9.
You scored %%SCORE%% out of %%TOTAL%%.
Your performance has been rated as %%RATING%%
Question 1 |
A | $17.727 trillion |
B | $17.727 million |
C | $17.727 billion |
Question 2 |
A | 1.386 |
B | 0.072 |
C | 13.86 |
Question 3 |
A | Don't know. |
B | Improvements in the overall economy AND unusually strong revenue at Boeing. |
C | Improvements in the overall economy |
Question 4 |
A | They are the 1st two consecutive quarters of positive revenue growth over the previous quarters. |
B | They are low single digit revenue growth percentages. |
C | Nothing significant. |
Question 5 |
A | Yes. |
B | We don't know. |
C | No. |
Congratulations - you have completed Stock Market Companion - Successful Investing Quiz 10.
You scored %%SCORE%% out of %%TOTAL%%.
Your performance has been rated as %%RATING%%
Question 1 |
A | Lateral |
B | Down and up |
C | Down |
Question 2 |
Corporations are led by individuals. The Chief Executive Officer (CEO) is the key operational figure in a company. Some of our best investments over our 24 year history of investing have been because we have understood the objectives of the CEO or learned of a new CEO who has arrived and had the talent to improve the entire company, over time.
Please observe our observation box #2 on the left side of the chart with an arrow from it that leads to the September 2010 price area for the DEXO chart.
In September of 2010, Dex-One Corp. hired a new _________________, and the share price moved from approx. $9/share to above $12/share for an approx. ________________% return.
Please choose from the answers below the ones that best fill the blanks from the previous sentence.
A | CEO; +33% |
B | CFO; +20% |
C | Director; +10% |
Question 3 |
A | Don't Know |
B | True |
C | False |
Question 4 |
While the share price did perk up on the news that DEXO had chosen a good CEO, the overall concern that the company may go bankrupt continued to put pressure on the shares.
Please look at the chart link established from Question #1 above (Please go back to Question #1 to re-establish the link if necessary and then return to this question), and read the observation box labeled #5. What did the company announce that changed the underlying character in the share price development of the company?
A | The company said, "everything is fine". |
B | The company announced good financial expectations for 2012. |
C | The company announced that it would NOT go bankrupt. |
Question 5 |
At Stock Market Companion we teach that successful stock investors use the S&P 500 as a road map to understand the overall condition of the market and to correlate this with investments in individual stocks.
The S&P 500 made a temporary bottom on October 4, 2011. On what day did DEXO experience it's lowest share price on this chart?
A | November 3, 2011 |
B | December 26, 2011 |
C | October 4, 2011 |
Question 6 |
On November 3, 2011 Dex-One Corporation made a financial forecast for 2012 that surprised the investment community. The share-price jumped higher. Would that have been a good time to purchase the shares?
A | Yes |
B | Maybe |
C | No |
Question 7 |
The blue line on the chart that runs along the upper edge of the share price as the share price declined is a line that represents the 50 day moving average of price. After November 29, 2011, the share price closed above this line and has so far stayed _________________ it.
A | Below |
B | On |
C | Above |
Question 8 |
If the Dex-One company has truly turned the corner in right-sizing its business and looks like it has a future without first entering bankruptcy, the share price could recover strongly. If you purchased the shares at $1.85/share and the stock eventually returns to approx. $6/share or higher, what would your percentage returns be on your investment at a $6/share share price (not including your transaction costs)?
A | 224% |
B | 100% |
C | 324% |
Congratulations - you have completed Stock Market Companion - Successful Investing Quiz 11.
You scored %%SCORE%% out of %%TOTAL%%.
Your performance has been rated as %%RATING%%
Question 1 |
A | 9.87% |
B | Can't Say |
C | 98.7% |
Question 2 |
1. Products or services become obsolete and no longer in sufficient demand to carry the cost of the corporation.
2. Too little is spent on product development necessary to adapt to the changing demands of the marketplace and to create new products relevant to the marketplace.
3. Poor management and company leadership result in missed opportunities to adapt to the marketplace and capitalize on the companies strengths and resources.
4. Companies become over-leveraged due to expensive acquisitions that do not contribute enough to the company's bottom line, and burden the company with debt that - over time - cannot be carried.
5. Fraudulent activities or statements of company financial health lead to a need to seek restructuring under bankruptcy protection.
6. Singular focus by company leadership of the company's resources on a product that fails to gain appeal in the marketplace, results in failure of the company.
General Motors Corporation filed bankruptcy in 2009 largely due to over-leverage related to GMAC financing in the mortgage securities market and immeasurable liabilities associated with financial commitments at the time. GM suffered from the effects of points #3 and #4, from the list above.
Enron Corporation filed for bankruptcy protection in 2001 due to the reasons identified in point #5, from the list above.
The DeLorean car company failed and filed bankruptcy largely due to point #6 above, although elements associated with point #5 also existed.
Since Eastman Kodak developed the digital camera concept in 1975 and had plenty of cash and operational strength from traditional photographic film manufacturing and sales, which point above can be attributed largely to Eastman Kodak's failure?
A | #2 |
B | #3 |
C | #5 |
Question 3 |
A | #2 |
B | #1 |
C | #3 |
Question 4 |
Let's say that your father owned a significant number of Eastman Kodak (EK) shares because he worked for the company all his life and used every spare dime he had to buy EK shares. He was convinced that investing in Eastman Kodak was the best idea for his money because he had worked for the company at a time when it was the market leader for its products and it was growing well. He was right! When he passed-away he gave you and your brothers and sisters an equal, significant number of shares - representing for each of you a sizeable fortune.
Your father's passion for the company and hugely successful investment influenced your life and your opinion of Eastman Kodak as a company - significantly.
It's the end of the 1990's and you are noticing that even when the stock market has been good, that your Eastman Kodak shares were not going up in value. In fact they were gradually losing value during a time when stocks of other companies were strong. You begin to think about what your father would do and how he would think about you selling your shares.
You know that your father was a wise man with his money - and careful, and you purpose to be the same. In fact you come to the point in your mind - from talking with an excellent advisor (1 - 2 inexpensive meetings got this done) and making your own assessments - that you think selling your shares will be the wisest thing that you could do, if they don't pick-up in value soon. You also carefully and quietly share your assessments about Eastman Kodak's business and comments from your advisor with your brothers and sisters - and they see that they should begin making plans for themselves too. This is the exact opposite of what others who you know who own shares from their parents who worked at the company are thinking. But that doesn't stop you from being ready with a plan to take action.
The new century and "Y2K" comes and goes and the stock is still floundering at the $60/share area, what do you do? Please select from the best answers below.
Use the SMC Monthly Chart of EK that you have open on a separate browser tab to help you with this answer.
A | Wait for clear signs of a recession and then decide to sell. |
B | Tell your broker who is holding all your shares to put a stop in at $55/share. If the shares break through $55/share to the south, you want to begin selling the shares and have them sold within two days. |
C | Give the company another 18 months to see if they are going to be successful in launching another mass-market digital camera. |
Question 5 |
The shares however never get back above $20/share - let alone $30/share - and continue to drop hard with the financial crisis that is gripping the nation. By the end of 2008 the shares have dropped below $10/share and you remember back to 2000 and the hard decision that you had to make. You are glad that you did and remember how free and objective you became toward your EK inheritance once you had decided to ..... ? Please select the best answer from your choices below that will finish this last sentence.
A | Hold and wait to see how the new management was going to launch new products that they promised were going to be great. |
B | Get professional advice, take a close look at the stock chart, and SET A STOP that would automatically trigger the sale of your shares. |
C | Ask your other friends what they were going to do with their shares and follow their advice. |
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Question 1 |
A | A "tech stock" that moves higher, independent of the overall national economic environment. |
B | A stock that "pedals" steadily higher in value, as increasing earnings lifts the share price. |
C | A stock that represents companies that have business models that support products and divisions that are independent from each other, like a wheel hub and spoke configuration. |
D | A stock whose share price is strongly related to economic cycle periods of expansion, peak, recession, and recovery. |
Question 2 |
A | A company focused on the retail sales of "small caps" |
B | A company with a market capitalization greater than $2 billion |
C | A company with a market capitalization between $300 million and $2 billion |
Question 3 |
A | Companies in the S&P 500 are expected to get "forced out" or compressed out of the S&P 500 index of companies. |
B | Sales of companies in the S&P 500 are expected to have lower sales, even though earnings are increasing. |
C | The price / earnings multiple of companies in the S&P 500 is expected to decrease (compress), as earnings growth kicks in at the expected rate of 20%. |
Question 4 |
A | Interest rates are high and offering high yields in alternative investments than stocks. |
B | Tech stocks are expected to continue running higher in share price, independent of real earnings. |
C | There is very little stimulus helping the market. |
D | Interest rates are low, resulting in very low bond yields. |
Question 5 |
A | Interest rates are high and offering high yields in alternative investments than stocks. |
B | Tech stocks are expected to continue running higher in share price, independent of real earnings. |
C | There is very little stimulus helping the market. |
D | Interest rates are low, resulting in very low bond yields. |
Question 6 |
A | Focus on Gross Domestic Product sensitive areas of the stock market that have done poorly over the last decade. |
B | Keep riding high-flying tech stocks higher as their earning increase. |
C | Sell stocks and buy low yielding Treasury Bonds |
Question 7 |
A | Investing in companies that understand, measure, and disclose the importance of environmental, social, and governance issues to their business. |
B | Investing in companies focused on excellence, science, and earnings growth. |
C | Investing that emphasized shareholder value as a single focus. |
Question 8 |
A | False - Tech stocks and information age companies have led the recovery. |
B | True - Value and cyclical stocks have led the recovery |
Question 9 |
A | When fund and money managers have strayed away from tech and high growth stocks, and considered rising interest rates and inflation, they've been "smacked down". They don't want to get "burned" at the stove by letting go of past leading investments and invest in stocks that will perform better in a political transition. |
B | Getting burned investing in leading, high growth tech stocks. |
Question 10 |
A | Interest rates rising meaningfully. |
B | 10 Year Treasury Bond yield decreasing. |
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