STREET PREP 2026/2027 FULL ANSWERS
VERIFIED SOLUTIONS COMPLETE STUDY GUIDE
GRADED A+
• This study guide contains 200 fully verified multiple-choice questions built on the
complete Wall Street Prep Transaction Comps curriculum — work through each
question independently before checking the answer, then study the EXPERT
RATIONALE closely to build conceptual mastery, not just answer recognition.
• Each question follows strict exam format with 5 vertically arranged options (A–E), a
clearly bolded correct answer, and a detailed EXPERT RATIONALE below it —
covering every tested topic from deal multiples and LTM calculations to control
premiums, purchase price allocation, deal structure, and screening criteria.
━━━━━ SECTION 1: FUNDAMENTALS OF TRANSACTION COMPS ━━━━━━━
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Q1. What is the primary purpose of transaction comparable analysis?
A. To calculate a company's intrinsic value using discounted future cash flows
B. To assess a company's short-term liquidity using working capital ratios
C. To value a company based on multiples paid in similar past M&A transactions
D. To determine the cost of equity using the Capital Asset Pricing Model
E. To analyze the company's historical dividend payment history
Correct Answer: C. To value a company based on multiples paid in similar
past M&A transactions
, EXPERT RATIONALE: Transaction comps (precedent transactions) derive
valuation multiples from historical M&A deals involving comparable companies,
giving a market-based estimate of what acquirers have been willing to pay —
including a control premium embedded in the deal price.
Q2. Transaction comps typically yield HIGHER valuations than trading comps
because:
A. They use forward-looking earnings estimates rather than historical data
B. They include a control premium paid by the acquirer to gain full ownership
C. They apply a liquidity discount to the target's equity value
D. They rely on book value rather than market value of assets
E. They exclude projected synergies from the purchase price entirely
Correct Answer: B. They include a control premium paid by the acquirer to
gain full ownership
EXPERT RATIONALE: In M&A deals, acquirers pay a premium above the target's
standalone market value to gain control of the company. This control premium is
embedded in all transaction multiples, making them consistently higher than
trading comps multiples derived from public market prices.
Q3. Which of the following best describes a "precedent transaction"?
A. A company's most recent quarterly earnings release filed with the SEC
,B. A prior M&A deal involving a comparable company used as a valuation
benchmark
C. A regulatory filing submitted before a merger receives final approval
D. A forward earnings estimate published by equity research analysts
E. A stock repurchase program announced by the target company
Correct Answer: B. A prior M&A deal involving a comparable company used
as a valuation benchmark
EXPERT RATIONALE: Precedent transactions are historical M&A deals selected
and analyzed to benchmark valuation multiples. Analysts choose transactions
involving companies similar to the subject in industry, size, geography, and
business model to derive a relevant multiple range.
Q4. In transaction comps, the "purchase price" used to calculate deal
multiples refers to:
A. Only the equity consideration paid directly to shareholders
B. The target's book value of equity as reported on the balance sheet
C. The total enterprise value implied by the deal, including assumed net debt
D. The target's market capitalization the day before announcement
E. The net present value of projected synergies expected post-merger
, Correct Answer: C. The total enterprise value implied by the deal, including
assumed net debt
EXPERT RATIONALE: The implied transaction enterprise value includes the offer
price for equity plus assumed debt and other obligations (preferred stock, minority
interest), minus cash. This is the true economic cost of the acquisition and the
correct basis for calculating EV-based multiples.
Q5. Which of the following is NOT a typical use of transaction comps in
investment banking?
A. Valuing a target company in an M&A sell-side advisory engagement
B. Supporting a board of directors' fairness opinion for a proposed deal
C. Establishing a price reference in a competitive M&A auction process
D. Projecting a company's future free cash flow growth rate for a DCF
E. Benchmarking deal multiples in a pitch book for a potential seller
Correct Answer: D. Projecting a company's future free cash flow growth
rate for a DCF
EXPERT RATIONALE: FCF growth rate projections are an input to the DCF
model, not a function of transaction comps. Transaction comps are specifically used
for market-based valuation benchmarking, fairness opinion support, and M&A deal
pricing — not for projecting standalone financial performance.
Q6. The main distinction between transaction comps and trading comps is:
A. Transaction comps use EBITDA while trading comps exclusively use EBIT