BANK: HOW TO MAKE MONEY
IN ANY MARKET
PART 0: THE NAVIGATOR
● PART I: THE PRIMER
○ The "Welcome to the Big Leagues" Hook
○ The "Panic Button" Cheat Sheet
● PART II: THE ELITE TEST BANK
○ Questions 1–15: Foundational Syntax & Application (Market Mechanics, The
"Cramer" Framework, & UT Austin Fundamentals)
○ Questions 16–40: Professional Simulation (Hedge Fund Tactics, Algorithmic
Execution, & SEC AI Compliance)
○ Questions 41–66: Grandmaster Synthesis (Multi-Variable Market Crises,
FRTB/Basel IV Capital Adequacy, & Advanced Portfolio Architecture)
PART I: THE PRIMER
Mastering the 2026/2027 market architecture requires synthesizing macroeconomic theory with
ruthless quantitative execution. You are here to evolve from a theoretical academic into a lethal,
institutional-grade market practitioner capable of extracting alpha regardless of volatility
regimes.
The "Panic Button" Cheat Sheet:
● The Cramer Baseline: Allocate 50%–65% to index funds, select exactly five "hero"
stocks (including two supergrowth), and maintain structural cash to capitalize on the
$100T Great Wealth Transfer.
● FRTB Market Risk Standard: Value at Risk (VaR) is strictly obsolete; institutional capital
adequacy demands Expected Shortfall (ES) to accurately capture non-linear tail-risks.
● Basel IV Output Floor: Standardized internal risk models are universally capped at a
rigid 72.5% Risk-Weighted Asset (RWA) output floor.
● SEC 2026 AI Priority: Model explainability is heavily enforced; algorithms dictating retail
fiduciary actions must have transparent audit trails, rendering "black box" trading models
, illegal.
● The Neutral Rate Pivot: The 2026 US Federal Reserve neutral rate is projected at 3.5%;
managing duration risk around this pivot is critical during inflationary growth.
PART II: THE ELITE TEST BANK
Questions 1–15: Foundational Syntax & Application
Q1: A 24-year-old recent graduate seeks to build an investment portfolio using Jim Cramer's
2026 framework. The client has high risk tolerance but limited capital. Which initial allocation is
MOST APPROPRIATE according to this methodology? A) 100% allocation into five selected
"hero" stocks to maximize the long-term compounding effect of the Great Wealth Transfer. B)
50% in broad index funds, supplemented by five individual stocks (including two aggressive
growth equities), and a cash reserve. C) 80% in fixed-income interval funds and 20% in
alternative private credit to hedge against 2026 inflationary growth. D) Complete reliance on
automated robo-advisors utilizing predictive AI to actively trade 0DTE (zero days to expiration)
options.
● The Answer: B (50% in broad index funds, supplemented by five individual stocks
(including two aggressive growth equities), and a cash reserve.)
● Distractor Analysis:
○ A is incorrect: Cramer explicitly warns against allocating 100% to individual equities,
insisting on a foundation of index funds to mitigate catastrophic total loss.
○ C is incorrect: This is a conservative institutional private credit strategy, entirely
inappropriate for a young investor who must leverage time horizons to take
calculated risks.
○ D is incorrect: Retail 0DTE options trading violates the "buy and homework"
fundamental strategy and introduces extreme decay risk.
The Mentor's Analysis: Retail survival requires a mechanical safety net. By locking 50% to
65% of capital in index funds, the investor buys the baseline market beta. The allocation of
specific "hero" stocks injects the necessary alpha potential required to beat inflation over a
40-year horizon, while cash provides dry powder for market corrections. Professional Intuition:
Always anchor retail portfolios with beta before chasing alpha.
Q2: During a UT Austin McCombs Financial Analyst Program (FAP) stock pitch, an analyst is
evaluating a target equity using the following macroeconomic assumptions:
Metric 2026 Projection
Core Inflation 2.6% (Sticky)
Real Interest Rates Negative
Global Liquidity Near All-Time Highs
Which economic regime is the analyst PRIMARILY modeling? A) Goldilocks (Noninflationary
Growth) B) Deflationary Contraction C) Stagflation D) Inflationary Growth
● The Answer: D (Inflationary Growth)
● Distractor Analysis:
○ A is incorrect: A Goldilocks scenario requires strong demand without inflation,
contradicting the 2.6% sticky inflation metric.
○ B is incorrect: Negative real rates and high global liquidity stimulate borrowing,
opposing a deflationary contraction.
○ C is incorrect: While inflation is present, easing lending standards imply nominal
, growth is occurring, staving off stagflation.
The Mentor's Analysis: The 2026 baseline for global markets is an Inflationary Boom.
Policymakers are utilizing expansionary fiscal policy alongside inflationary supply shocks. The
elite analyst must recognize that strong nominal growth lifts equities but structurally increases
back-end yields. Professional Intuition: Sticky inflation plus liquidity equals nominal equity
expansion.
Q3: Under the 2026 SEC Examination Priorities, a wealth management firm deploys an
algorithmic tool to flag high-risk client communications. The SEC initiates an audit. What is the
firm's FIRST regulatory obligation regarding this tool? A) To prove the AI tool was developed by
a third-party vendor to transfer liability. B) To provide the source code of the underlying Large
Language Model. C) To clearly explain the logic and decision-making parameters the AI uses to
flag communications. D) To immediately halt the use of the algorithm until the audit concludes.
● The Answer: C (To clearly explain the logic and decision-making parameters the AI uses
to flag communications.)
● Distractor Analysis:
○ A is incorrect: Vendor risk is treated as inherent risk; outsourcing does not absolve
the firm of fiduciary liability.
○ B is incorrect: The SEC requires explainability of the output logic, not proprietary
foundational source code of the LLM.
○ D is incorrect: Halting the tool breaks compliance surveillance continuity, creating a
breach of regulatory protocol.
The Mentor's Analysis: The SEC’s 2026 mandate targets "explainability" over pure
technological capability. If a compliance officer cannot articulate exactly why a machine learning
model flagged a specific communication, the firm is utilizing an illegal "black box". Professional
Intuition: If you cannot explain the algorithm's math, you cannot legally deploy it.
Q4: A commercial bank transitions its risk modeling to comply with Basel IV standards. The
bank's proprietary internal model calculates a highly optimized, low capital requirement for credit
risk. What is the ABSOLUTE output floor the bank must apply relative to the standardized
approach? A) 50.0% B) 63.2% C) 72.5% D) 80.0%
● The Answer: C (72.5%)
● Distractor Analysis:
○ A is incorrect: 50% represents legacy estimations prior to the finalization of the
Basel frameworks.
○ B is incorrect: 63.2% refers to the estimated average market risk capital increase
for Group 1 Banks under FRTB.
○ D is incorrect: 80% is an arbitrary distractor; the finalized global standard is firmly
72.5%.
The Mentor's Analysis: Basel IV exists to eliminate the gaming of internal risk models. By
instituting a hard 72.5% Risk-Weighted Asset (RWA) output floor, regulators ensure that no
matter how sophisticated a bank's internal quantitative model is, it cannot hold less than 72.5%
of the capital dictated by the standardized baseline. Professional Intuition: Internal efficiency
can never override the global standardized capital floor.
Q5: An institutional portfolio manager in 2026 is analyzing the Fundamental Review of the
Trading Book (FRTB) standards. To accurately measure market tail-risk capital requirements,
which metric MUST the manager utilize? A) Value at Risk (VaR) B) Expected Shortfall (ES) C)
The Kelly Criterion D) Net Present Value (NPV)
● The Answer: B (Expected Shortfall (ES))
● Distractor Analysis:
, ○ A is incorrect: VaR is explicitly phased out for market risk capital under FRTB
because it fails to quantify the magnitude of losses beyond the confidence
threshold.
○ C is incorrect: The Kelly Criterion is a position-sizing formula for optimal geometric
growth, not a regulatory capital metric.
○ D is incorrect: NPV assesses cash flow profitability, not systemic market risk.
The Mentor's Analysis: Value at Risk answers: "What is the worst expected loss under normal
conditions?" Expected Shortfall answers: "If the worst happens, exactly how much will we lose?"
Regulators mandate ES because it captures extreme tail-risks that systemic shocks—like
liquidity freezes—create. Professional Intuition: VaR stops at the cliff; Expected Shortfall
measures the fall.
Q6: A McCombs FAP analyst is tasked with identifying beneficiaries of the $100 trillion Great
Wealth Transfer. According to the Cramer macroeconomic thesis, which sector/firm profile is the
MOST DIRECT beneficiary of these asset flows? A) Vanguard's algorithmic 0DTE options
desks. B) Private Credit direct lending originators. C) Retail wealth management and brokerage
platforms like Charles Schwab and Morgan Stanley. D) Early-stage venture capital firms focused
on seed-level AI hardware.
● The Answer: C (Retail wealth management and brokerage platforms like Charles
Schwab and Morgan Stanley.)
● Distractor Analysis:
○ A is incorrect: Vanguard avoids high-risk 0DTE options, focusing on high-quality
fixed income.
○ B is incorrect: Private Credit primarily serves institutional and High-Net-Worth
borrowing needs, not the direct retail inheritance pipeline.
○ D is incorrect: Seed-level VC does not scale to absorb the broad retail wealth
transfer.
The Mentor's Analysis: The Great Wealth Transfer involves liquid assets moving from aging
demographics into the control of younger beneficiaries. Firms with established retail
infrastructure, trading platforms, and advisory networks operate as the primary repositories for
this "wall of money". Professional Intuition: Follow the plumbing; brokers capture the AUM fee
regardless of market direction.
Q7: An equity long/short (ELS) hedge fund manager is operating in a 2026 market
characterized by persistent tariff-related disruptions and rapid AI sector rotation. What is the
PRIMARY mechanism this manager uses to generate alpha in this specific environment? A)
Taking long-only positions in the S&P 500 to capture passive market beta. B) Exploiting
pronounced sector dispersion by going long on AI winners and shorting fundamentally weak
laggards. C) Utilizing the Abilene Paradox to force consensus trades across the portfolio. D)
Hedging exclusively with physical commodities to avoid equity exposure entirely.
● The Answer: B (Exploiting pronounced sector dispersion by going long on AI winners
and shorting fundamentally weak laggards.)
● Distractor Analysis:
○ A is incorrect: Long-only beta strategies fail to capitalize on the inefficiencies and
sector dispersion that define ELS strategies.
○ C is incorrect: The Abilene Paradox is a management failure of communication, not
a trading strategy.
○ D is incorrect: While commodities offer diversification, an ELS fund generates its
core alpha through stock-specific inefficiencies.
The Mentor's Analysis: High dispersion means the gap between the best and worst performing