Behavioral Finance
General Principles
Insurance
Investment Planning
Income Tax
100

The tendency of investors to become attached to a specific price as the fair value of a holding

Anchoring

100

<= 28% of gross income

<= 36% of gross income

<= 20% of net income

Housing Expenses (PITI)

Total Monthly Debt

Consumer Debt

100

A condition where there is a possibility of loss (a situation where an exposure to loss exists)

Risk

100

Diversifiable Risk

examples: business risk, financial risk

Unsystematic Risk

100

April 15th

June 15th

September 15th

January 15th

Dates for Paying Estimated Taxes

200

The feeling that because you own an asset, it is more valuable and special since it is yours. In reality, you might not even purchase the asset if you didn't already own it.

Endowment Bias

200
When the Fed buys securities (open market operation) what type of policy is this?

expansionary/easy money policy

200

The cause of a possible loss, the event insured against perils like windstorm, fire and theft

Peril

200

Types of systematic risk

PRIME

P - purchase power risk

R - reinvestment rate risk

I - interest rate risk 

M - market risk

E - exchange rate risk

200

Failure to File Penalty

Penalty is 5% of the tax due per month, up to a maximum of 25%

300

The challenge of reconciling two opposing beliefs

Cognitive Dissonance

300

2 consecutive quarters of economic decline (negative GDP)

6 consecutive quarters of economic decline (negative GDP)

Recession

Depression

300

A condition that may create or increase the chance of loss arising from a given peril

Hazard

300

FDIC Insured Amounts (per bank/per type of account)

Individual - $250k

Joint - $250k

Trust (per beneficiary) - $250k

IRA/Keogh - $250k

300

Failure to Pay Penalty

.5% per month, max of 25% paid

400

Investors tend to diversify evenly across whatever options are presented to them

Diversification Errors

400

Uniform Investments Advisor Law Exam

Series 65

400

Name of Insurance Rating Services (2 of them)

A.M. Best (grade A++ to F)

Standard & Poor (AAA to CCC)

400

Type of bond

-non-marketable, nontransferable, cannot be used for collateral

-sold at face value

-interest rate based on the 10-yr treasury note yields

-fixed interest rate that is in effect at the time of purchase

-subject to federal taxation when redeemed (unless used as education bonds)

-not subject to state or local taxes

EE Bonds

400

How to avoid federal withholding tax underpayment penalty?

pay 90% of estimated tax payment

pay 100% of last year's tax payment (110% if AGI > $150,000)

500

An individual erroneously believes that the onset of a certain random event is likely to happen following an event or a series of events

Gambler's Fallacy

500

What comes after a trough in the business cycle

Expansion/Recovery

500

Sections of Homeowners Policy

A, B, C, D, E, F

A - dwelling and attached structures

B - structures separated from the dwelling (detached structures)

C - contents & personal property 

D - loss of use

E - liability

F - medical payments

500

Corporate and Municipal Bond Risks (DRIP)

D - default risk

R - reinvestment rate risk

I - interest rate risk

P - purchase power risk

500

Adjustments/Deductions for Adjusted Gross Income

IRA Contributions

Self-employment tax

Self-employment health insurance

Keogh or SEP

Alimony paid (pre-2019 divorce)