General Finance
General Finance 2
Accounting
Economics
Investing
100

What does beta measure?

Measures a stock’s sensitivity to overall market movements (systematic risk).

100

Which statement links the Income Statement and Balance Sheet?

Cash Flow Statement 

100

What is the difference between Cash vs accrual accounting?

Cash records when money moves; accrual records when revenue/expenses are earned/incurred.

100

What is hawkish vs dovish?

Hawkish favors tighter policy; dovish favors looser policy.

100

What is the difference betweeen Systematic vs unsystematic risk?

Systematic affects all markets; unsystematic is company-specific.

200

Name a financial ratio

BONUS (+100): What does the ratio do?

*If you get the bonus wrong, you must do 10 pushups

EPS = net income / number of shares

P/E = stock price / EPS

PEG = PE / earnings growth rate

EV/EBITDA = enterprise value / EBITDA

D/E = total liabilities / total shareholder's equity

ROE = net income / shareholder's equity

P/B = market price per share / book value per share

Interest coverage ratio = EBIT / interest expense

Debt service coverage ratio = net operating income / debt service

Gross Margin Ratio = (TR - COGS) / TR

ROA = net income / total assets

Current ratio = current assets / current liabilities

Quick ratio = current assets - inv - prepaid ex) / current liabilities

Cash ratio = cash currently available / current liabilities

And many others...

200

What happens to FCF when CapEx increases?

Free Cash Flow decreases.

200

What are 2 major line items on each of the financial statements?

Income Statement: Revenue; Cost of Goods Sold; SG&A (Selling, General & Administrative Expenses); Operating Income; Pretax Income; Net Income

Balance Sheet: Cash; Accounts Receivable; Inventory; Plants, Property & Equipment (PP&E); Accounts Payable; Accrued Expenses; Debt; Shareholders’ Equity.

Cash Flow: Net Income; Depreciation & Amortization; Stock-Based Compensation; Changes in Operating Assets & Liabilities; Cash Flow From Operations; Capital Expenditures; Cash Flow From Investing; Sale/Purchase of Securities; Dividends Issued; Cash Flow From Financing; Total Cash Flow, Cash at end of the year


200

What is the Phillips Curve?

Economic model showing the inverse relationship between inflation and unemployment. Usually, low unemployment means high inflation and vice versa.

200

Why do institutions prefer index funds?

Low fees, diversification, consistent returns.

300

What does Operating Leverage mean?

The degree to which fixed costs magnify changes in operating income as revenue changes.

300

What is a DCF, and what's it for?

Discounted cash flow (DCF) is a valuation method that estimates the value of an investment using its expected future cash flows

300

How does a change from LIFO to FIFO affect the financial statements during inflation?

  • Higher inventory

  • Higher net income

  • Higher taxes

  • Lower COGS

300

What causes a yield curve inversion?

Expectations of economic slowdown or rate cuts.
300

What does ROI measure and how do you calculate it

ROI measures the return of an investment by comparing gains/losses to the cost basis.

The formula: (profit-cost)/cost or net income/cost

400

What is the difference between operating leverage and financial leverage?

Operating leverage comes from fixed operating costs; financial leverage comes from debt financing.

400

How do bonds and interest rates work in relation to each other?

Bond prices and interest rates have an inverse relationship. When interest rates rise, newly issued bonds offer higher yields, making existing lower-yielding bonds less attractive, which decreases their prices.

400

Why does EBITDA overstate cash flow?

Ignores CapEx, working capital changes, and taxes.

400

How often does CPI Data come out? What does CPI measure?

Monthly 

It measures inflation through increases in day-to-day expenses. (basket of G&S)

400

What is the average annual return of the S&P500

BONUS (+200):What is the investment strategy where you invest fixed amounts of money into the market at recurring intervals ?

The S&P500 returns about 10% annually on average

Dollar Cost Averaging (Relevant Right Now)

500

How do you calculate WACC? What is it used for?

Cost of Equity * (% Equity) + Cost of Debt * (% Debt) * (1 – Tax Rate) + Cost of Preferred * (% Preferred).

Used as the discount rate for valuing a company or its investment oppportunities.

Weight of Equity * Cost of Equity + Weight of debt * Cost of debt * (1-tax)

500

What happens in each statement when Inventory goes up by $10, assuming you pay for it with cash?

No changes to the Income Statement.

Cash Flow from operations -10, (and net change in cash)

Balance Sheet: Inventory +10, Cash -10

On the Cash Flow Statement, Inventory is an asset so that decreases your Cash Flow from Operations – it goes down by $10, as does the Net Change in Cash at the bottom. On the Balance Sheet under Assets, Inventory is up by $10 but Cash is down by $10, so the changes cancel out and Assets still equals Liabilities & Shareholders’ Equity.

500

What’s the formula for Enterprise Value?

Equity Value + Net Debt (Easy) 

Market capitalization + Preferred stock + Outstanding debt + Minority interest – Cash and cash equivalents.


500

Why does the Fed prefer PCE (personal consumption expenditures) to CPI (Consumer Price Index)?

PCE adjusts for substitution and has broader coverage.

500

What are 4 of the Financial Markets?

Stocks Market

Bond Market

Money Market

Forex Market

Derivative Market

Commodities Markets

Cryptocurrency Markets