Financial IQ Test  
What is your financial IQ? Take this 8-question quiz to find out! If you don’t like the results, try again. You will be asked a different set of questions.
     


A prudent investor:

Does not have to consider the tax effect of long-term gains.
Evaluates his/her investments on an after-tax basis.
Studiously avoids income-shifting among funds.
Knows that a drop in the dividend payout signals a stronger firm.

Since the mid-1920s inflation in the United States has averaged:

About 3 percent.
About 7 percent.
About 10 percent.
About 12 percent

Of the following, the safest type of investment is:

Under the mattress.
An FDIC-insured CD.
An international growth mutual fund.
An Internet stock.

Buying on margin::

Precludes the advantage of using leverage.
Is not affected by limits on borrowing established by ERISA.
Minimizes losses if the price of a security declines.
Is possible by borrowing from a broker.

Junk bonds:

Are bonds issued by junk yards.
Are sometimes called "high yield bonds."
Are less risky than government bonds.
Are not actually bonds.

If a mutual fund manager increases his/her cash position, it can be said:

The manager is anticipating a bear market.
The manager is anticipating a bull market.
The manager is trying to reduce the fund’s taxable gains.
The manager is aggressive.

The January Effect:

Is the influence on the market of the mutual funds’ performance reported in December.
Is another name for the Superbowl anomaly believed to affect stock prices.
Is the result of several studies regarding inexplicably higher returns during January.
Supports the predictabilityof cyclical prices determined by chaos theory.
(Portfolio Construction, Management and Protection by Robert A. Strong, p. 182.)

Beta is commonly used as a relative measure of risk. It measures:

Standard deviation of a stock’s price.
The expected total returns of a diversified portfolio.
The unsystematic risk component of an investment.
The risk of a security or portfolio relative to the overall market.

 
   
   
Marathon Financial Strategies
1792 Bristol Farms Court, Suite 101 Grayson, Gwinnett County, GA 30017
Phone: 770 985-0650

mark@marathon-forthelongrun.com

 

Mark DiGiovanni, CFP, is currently licensed in the following states only, and can therefore offer services to residents of these states only.  Licensing in additional states can be obtained as necessary.  Currently licensed states are Georgia, Alabama, Tennessee, Delaware, Minnesota, Massachusetts and New York.   

Securities and advisory services offered through The Strategic Financial Alliance (SFA), member FINRA/SIPC,  Mark DiGiovanni of Marathon Financial Strategies is a registered representative and investment advisor representative of SFA, which is otherwise unaffiliated with Marathon Financial Strategies. Supervising Office (678) 954-4000