TEST BANK:
CORPORATE
FINANCE
(2026/2027
STANDARDS)
PART 0: THE NAVIGATOR
● PART I: THE PRIMER (Rules of Engagement & The "Panic Button" Cheat Sheet)
● PART II: THE ELITE TEST BANK
○ Questions 1–15: Foundational Syntax & Application: Testing the "Hard Deck"
definitions (Law of One Price, Time Value of Money, CAPM, Cost of Capital).
○ Questions 16–40: Professional Simulation: Field execution covering 2026
Capital Budgeting, WACC vs. APV, Tax Regimes, and Payout Policy.
○ Questions 41–66: Grandmaster Synthesis: High-stakes, multi-variable scenarios
encompassing M&A, Real Options, SEC Disclosures, and OECD Pillar Two global
structuring.
PART I: THE PRIMER
Mastering modern corporate finance requires abandoning rote memorization in favor of the
unified valuation mindset, where every single managerial decision is ruthlessly quantified by its
impact on free cash flows and the cost of capital. In the 2026/2027 macro-environment,
professionals who cannot dynamically adjust for expiring tax regimes, algorithmic market
efficiencies, and global minimum tax frameworks will be entirely obsolete.
, ● The "Panic Button" Cheat Sheet:
○ The Law of One Price: Equivalent investment opportunities trading in competitive
markets must have the exact same price; any deviation is an immediate arbitrage
trigger.
○ The APV Imperative: Use WACC for constant debt-to-equity ratios; you MUST use
Adjusted Present Value (APV) when debt levels fluctuate (e.g., LBOs).
○ 2026 TCJA Depreciation: Bonus depreciation is strictly phased down to 20% in
2026 and 0% in 2027; adjust your Free Cash Flow (FCF) tax shields accordingly.
○ Pillar Two Sovereignty: The OECD Global Minimum Tax is 15%; US Multinational
Enterprises (MNEs) utilize the "Side-by-Side" (SbS) safe harbor to avoid UTPR/IIR,
but local QDMTTs still apply.
PART II: THE ELITE TEST BANK
Q1: A practitioner observes that a corporate bond is trading at $1,050 in London but an identical
synthetic portfolio of risk-free cash flows trades at $1,020 in New York. Assuming zero
transaction costs, what is the MOST APPROPRIATE INITIAL action? A) Buy the bond in
London and wait for the price to converge with New York. B) Adjust the firm's internal discount
rate to reflect segmented market pricing. C) Simultaneously buy the synthetic portfolio in New
York and short the bond in London. D) Execute a one-sided buy order in New York to capitalize
on undervalued assets.
● The Answer: C (Simultaneously buy the synthetic portfolio in New York and short the
bond in London.)
● Distractor Analysis:
○ A is incorrect: Waiting introduces directional market risk. Arbitrage must be
instantaneous to guarantee a risk-free profit.
○ B is incorrect: Internal discount rates are irrelevant to external arbitrage
opportunities in integrated capital markets.
○ D is incorrect: A one-sided trade is speculation, not arbitrage. It exposes the firm to
market volatility.
The Mentor's Analysis: The Law of One Price is the absolute foundation of corporate finance.
When equivalent cash flows trade at different prices, the market has handed you free capital.
Professional Intuition: Never take directional risk when structural arbitrage exists. Lock the
spread instantly.
Q2: A CEO announces a massive investment in employee amenities that generates a negative
Net Present Value (NPV). Activist shareholders accuse the CEO of destroying value. The CEO
counters that this fulfills 2026 ESG mandates. Under traditional agency theory, how is this BEST
classified? A) A direct agency cost representing managerial entrenchment. B) An indirect
agency cost representing lost opportunity. C) A reduction in the firm's cost of debt due to
improved ESG scoring. D) A violation of the Law of One Price.
● The Answer: A (A direct agency cost representing managerial entrenchment.)
● Distractor Analysis:
○ B is incorrect: Indirect costs refer to profitable opportunities a manager avoids due
to risk aversion, not active negative-NPV spending.
○ C is incorrect: While ESG can occasionally lower debt costs, spending capital on
negative-NPV projects without quantifiable financial offsets is a textbook agency
conflict.
, ○ D is incorrect: The Law of One Price applies to asset pricing, not corporate
spending decisions.
The Mentor's Analysis: The modern agency problem has mutated. Managers frequently use
"Stakeholder Capitalism" as a shield to justify empire-building or personal preference spending.
Professional Intuition: If a project cannot be quantified into a positive NPV—even when
factoring in long-term regulatory goodwill—it is a direct extraction of shareholder wealth.
Q3: When calculating Free Cash Flow (FCF) for a foundational valuation model, an analyst uses
EBITDA instead of EBIT. What is the IMMEDIATE mathematical consequence of this error? A)
The model will double-count the tax shield provided by interest expenses. B) The model will
overstate FCF by failing to account for the depreciation tax shield. C) The model will understate
FCF by ignoring capital expenditures. D) The model will improperly calculate taxes by applying
the tax rate to pre-depreciation income.
● The Answer: D (The model will improperly calculate taxes by applying the tax rate to
pre-depreciation income.)
● Distractor Analysis:
○ A is incorrect: EBITDA does not include interest, so it does not double-count the
interest tax shield.
○ B is incorrect: Depreciation is a non-cash expense, but ignoring it before taxes
distorts the actual cash tax outflow.
○ C is incorrect: Capital expenditures are subtracted later in the FCF formula,
independent of the EBIT/EBITDA starting point.
The Mentor's Analysis: EBITDA is a proxy for operating cash flow, but it is fatal for tax
calculations. Taxes are paid on EBIT, not EBITDA. Professional Intuition: Always deduct
depreciation to find taxable income, calculate the real cash taxes, and then add depreciation
back.
Q4: A commercial bank offers your firm a short-term loan at an Annual Percentage Rate (APR)
of 8%, compounded daily. You need to calculate the actual annual cost of this debt for your
WACC. Which formula provides the MOST ACCURATE input? A) The APR divided by 365. B)
The Effective Annual Rate (EAR). C) The continuous compounding derivative of the APR. D)
The nominal rate minus the expected inflation rate.
● The Answer: B (The Effective Annual Rate (EAR).)
● Distractor Analysis:
○ A is incorrect: This only gives the daily periodic rate.
○ C is incorrect: Daily compounding is discrete, not continuous.
○ D is incorrect: The Fisher equation calculates real rates, not the true compounding
cost of debt.
The Mentor's Analysis: APR is a regulatory quotation, not a financial reality. Because of
intra-year compounding, the actual cash leaving your firm is always higher than the APR.
Professional Intuition: Never use APR in a DCF model. Always convert to EAR to capture the
true cost of capital.
Q5: You are evaluating two mutually exclusive manufacturing projects. Project A has an NPV of
$4 million and an IRR of 15%. Project B has an NPV of $5 million and an IRR of 12%. The firm's
cost of capital is 10%. Which project must the firm FIRST accept? A) Project A, because a
higher IRR indicates superior capital efficiency. B) Project B, because it generates a higher
absolute increase in firm value. C) Project A, because it provides a larger margin of safety
against interest rate spikes. D) Neither, because mutually exclusive projects require the
Equivalent Annual Annuity (EAA) method.
● The Answer: B (Project B, because it generates a higher absolute increase in firm value.)