Questions And Correct Answers 2026/2027
Question 1
An activist hedge fund acquires a 7% equity stake in a publicly traded manufacturing firm. The fund
publicly criticizes the incumbent board of directors for maintaining an inefficient capital structure,
holding excessive cash reserves, and pursuing value-destroying conglomerate acquisitions. The firm's
executive management argues that the cash buffer is necessary to fund long-term, proprietary
research and development projects that the public markets fail to value properly due to information
asymmetry. This conflict highlights the fundamental tension between maximizing short-term
shareholder value and investing in long-term corporate growth.
Analyze this scenario through the lens of agency theory. Explain the specific type of agency conflict
occurring between the shareholders and management, identify the structural mechanisms a firm can
implement to align these competing interests, and evaluate how the presence of an activist investor
alters the corporate governance dynamics.
Answer
Correct Answer: This scenario illustrates the classic Type I agency conflict, where an agent
(management) pursues goals such as empire-building, risk aversion, or job security that diverge from
the principal's (shareholders) goal of wealth maximization. To align these interests, firms use
structural governance mechanisms including performance-vested stock options, clawback provisions,
a high proportion of independent board directors, and split CEO/Chairman roles. The presence of an
activist investor acts as an external governance mechanism (the market for corporate control),
reducing information asymmetry by publicly auditing managerial decisions, forcing capital discipline,
and accelerating operational restructuring through proxy threat dynamics.
Question 2
A multinational consumer goods corporation is evaluating its dividend payout policy. For the past two
decades, the firm has maintained a strictly stable, predictable dividend growth rate. However, due to
a permanent structural shift in consumer preferences toward digital channels, the executive team
decides to slash the regular quarterly dividend by 50% to reallocate capital toward massive digital
infrastructure and e-commerce acquisitions. Management issues a comprehensive press release
explaining that the retained capital will generate a return on equity far exceeding the firm’s current
cost of capital. Despite this, the stock price plunges by 14% within minutes of the announcement.
Discuss the psychological and informational economic theories that explain this dramatic market
reaction. Your answer must specifically contrast the Signaling Hypothesis with the Clientele Effect,
explaining how investor composition influences equity market stability when long-standing corporate
distributions are disrupted.
Answer
Correct Answer: The market crash is explained by the Signaling Hypothesis and the Clientele Effect.
Under the signaling hypothesis, information asymmetry causes investors to interpret a dividend cut
as a negative signal that management foresees a permanent decline in future earnings or structural
cash flow distress, overshadowing management's positive narrative. Simultaneously, the clientele
effect dictates that the firm had attracted a specific investor base (e.g., retail investors, retirees, or
income-focused mutual funds) relying on predictable cash flows; the dividend cut triggers mass
, institutional selling as these clienteles liquidate their positions to rebalance into other income-
generating equities, creating intense downward price pressure.
Question 3
A capital budgeting committee is debating whether to utilize NPV or IRR to rank three mutually
exclusive infrastructure development projects. Project A requires a massive initial cash outlay but
generates highly certain, stable cash inflows concentrated at the very end of its 10-year life. Project B
requires a modest initial outlay and yields rapid, front-loaded cash flows over a 3-year period. Project
C features unconventional cash flows, requiring intermediate capital injections in years 2 and 4 due
to environmental remediation requirements. The committee notes that the projects exhibit wildly
different scales and timelines, and the firm’s cost of capital fluctuates over time.
Detail the structural flaws of the Internal Rate of Return (IRR) metric when applied to mutually
exclusive investments with scale disparities, timing differences, and non-normal cash flows. Explain
the underlying reinvestment rate assumptions for both metrics and justify why Net Present Value
(NPV) remains the mathematically superior decision-making tool.
Answer
Correct Answer: IRR fails in this scenario due to its implicit, unrealistic assumption that all
intermediate cash inflows are reinvested at the project's own IRR, which artificially inflates the
appeal of short-term, front-loaded projects (like Project B). In contrast, NPV assumes intermediate
cash flows are reinvested at the firm's realistic cost of capital. Furthermore, IRR suffers from the
"scale problem," failing to capture the absolute value added by large-scale investments (like Project
A), and generates multiple internal rates of return or no real IRR at all for non-normal cash flows (like
Project C) due to multiple sign changes in the cash flow stream. NPV avoids these issues by
measuring absolute wealth creation and remaining mathematically unique.
Part II: Investments & Portfolio Theory
Question 4
An institutional portfolio manager is optimizing a multi-asset fund consisting of domestic equities,
international bonds, real estate investment trusts (REITs), and commodities. The manager notes that
while individual asset classes exhibit high standalone volatility, their historical pairwise correlations
are low or negative, particularly during periods of macroeconomic stress. A junior analyst suggests
that adding an asset class with a lower expected return than the current portfolio average will
automatically reduce the portfolio's overall Sharpe ratio and should therefore be avoided.
Critique the junior analyst's assertion by utilizing the foundational tenets of Modern Portfolio Theory
(MPT). Explain how the covariance between assets determines portfolio risk, define the Efficient
Frontier, and clarify how an asset with a lower individual return can still optimize a portfolio's risk-
adjusted performance.
Answer
Correct Answer: The junior analyst's assertion is incorrect because it ignores the diversification
effects governed by covariance. Under Modern Portfolio Theory, a portfolio’s total risk is heavily
dictated by the pairwise covariances of its constituent assets rather than their standalone variances.
If an asset class has a low or negative correlation with the existing portfolio, adding it can decrease
the total portfolio variance disproportionately relative to the reduction in expected return. This shifts