Financial Markets and Institutions, 8e (Mishkin)
1) Banks face the problem of ________ in loan markets because bad credit risks are the ones
most likely to seek bank loans.
A) adverse selection
B) moral hazard
C) moral suasion
D) intentional fraud
2) If borrowers with the most risky investment projects are more likely to seek bank loans than
borrowers with the safest investment projects, banks face the problem of ________.
A) adverse credit risk
B) adverse selection
C) moral hazard
D) conflict of interest
3) Because borrowers, once they have a loan, are more likely to invest in high-risk investment
projects, banks face the
A) adverse selection problem.
B) lemon problem.
C) adverse credit risk problem.
D) moral hazard problem.
4) Banks’ attempts to solve adverse selection and moral hazard problems help explain loan
management principles such as
A) screening and monitoring of loan applicants.
B) collateral and compensating balances.
C) credit rationing.
D) all of the above.
E) only A and B of the above.
5) To be profitable, financial institutions must overcome the adverse selection and moral hazard
problems that make loan defaults ________.
A) more likely
B) certain
C) unlikely
D) impossible
6) In one sense, ________ appears surprising since it means that the bank is not ________ its
portfolio of loans and thus is exposing itself to more risk.
A) specialization in lending; diversifying
B) specialization in lending; rationing
C) credit rationing; diversifying
D) screening; rationing
7) From the standpoint of ________, specialization in lending is surprising but makes perfect
sense when one considers the ________ problem.
A) moral hazard; diversification
B) diversification; moral hazard
C) adverse selection; diversification
D) diversification; adverse selection
8) Provisions in loan contracts that proscribe borrowers from engaging in specified risky
activities are called ________.
A) proscription bonds
B) collateral clauses
C) restrictive covenants
D) liens
9) Banks attempt to screen good credit risks from bad to reduce the incidence of loan defaults.
To do this, banks
A) specialize in lending to certain industries or regions.
B) write restrictive covenants into loan contracts.
C) expend resources to acquire accurate credit histories of their potential loan customers.
D) do all of the above.
10) A bank’s commitment (for a specified future period of time) to provide a firm with loans up
to a given amount at an interest rate that is tied to a market interest rate is called
A) credit rationing.
B) a line of credit.
C) continuous dealings.
D) none of the above.
11) Lines of credit and long-term relationships between banks and their customers
A) reduce the costs of information collection.
B) make it easier for banks to screen good risks from bad.
C) enable banks to deal with moral hazard contingencies that are neither anticipated nor specified
in restrictive covenants.
D) do all of the above.
E) do only A and B of the above.
12) Compensating balances
A) are a particular form of collateral commonly required on commercial loans.
B) are a required minimum amount of funds that a borrower (i.e., a firm receiving a loan) must
keep in a checking account at the bank.
C) allow banks to monitor firms’ check payment practices, which can yield information about
their borrowers’ financial conditions.
D) are all of the above.
13) A bank that wants to monitor the check payment practices of its commercial borrowers, so
that moral hazard can be prevented, will require borrowers to
A) place a bank officer on their board of directors.
B) place a corporate officer on the bank’s board of directors.
C) keep compensating balances in a checking account at the bank.
D) do all of the above.
E) do only A and B of the above.
14) Of the following methods that banks might use to reduce moral hazard problems, the one not
legally permitted in the United States is the requirement that
A) firms keep compensating balances at the banks from which they obtain their loans.
B) firms place on their board of directors an officer from the bank.
C) loan contracts include restrictive covenants.
D) individuals provide detailed credit histories to bank loan officers.
15) When a lender refuses to make a loan, although borrowers are willing to pay the stated
interest rate or even a higher rate, it is said to engage in ________.
A) constrained lending
B) strategic refusal
C) credit rationing
D) collusive behavior
16) When a lender refuses to make a loan, even though borrowers are willing to pay the stated
interest rate or even a higher rate, it is said to engage in ________.
A) specialized lending
B) strategic refusal
C) diversified lending
D) coercive behavior
E) none of the above
17) Credit rationing occurs when a bank
A) refuses to make a loan of any amount to a borrower, even when she is willing to pay a higher
interest rate.
B) restricts the amount of a loan to less than the borrower would like.
C) does either A or B of the above.
D) does neither A nor B of the above.
18) Because larger loans create greater incentives for borrowers to engage in undesirable
activities that make it less likely they will repay the loans, banks
A) ration credit, granting borrowers smaller loans than they have requested.
B) ration credit, charging higher interest rates to borrowers who want large loans than to those
who want small loans.
C) ration credit, charging higher fees as a percentage of the loan to borrowers who want large
loans than to those who want small loans.
D) do none of the above.
19) When banks offer borrowers smaller loans than they have requested, banks are said to
________.
A) shave credit
B) discount the loan
C) raze credit
D) ration credit
20) Which of the following are not generally rate-sensitive assets?
A) Securities with a maturity of less than one year
B) Variable-rate mortgages
C) Fixed-rate mortgages
D) All of the above are rate-sensitive assets
E) None of the above are rate-sensitive assets
21) Liabilities that are partially, but not fully, rate-sensitive include ________.
A) checkable deposits
B) federal funds
C) non-negotiable CDs
D) fixed-rate mortgages
E) money market deposit accounts
22) If a bank has more rate-sensitive liabilities than rate-sensitive assets, then a(n) ________ in
interest rates will ________ bank profits.
A) increase; increase
B) increase; reduce
C) decline; reduce
D) decline; not affect
23) If a bank has more rate-sensitive assets than rate-sensitive liabilities, then a(n) ________ in
interest rates will ________ bank profits.
A) increase; increase
B) increase; reduce
C) decline; increase
D) decline; not affect
24) If a bank has ________ rate-sensitive assets than rate-sensitive liabilities, then a(n) ________
in interest rates will increase bank profits.
A) more; decline
B) more; increase
C) less; increase
D) both A and C
25) The difference between rate-sensitive liabilities and rate-sensitive assets is known as the
________.
A) duration
B) interest-sensitivity index
C) interest-rate risk index
D) gap
26) Referring to Table 23.1, First National Bank has a gap of ________.
A) -30
B) +30
C) 60
D) 0
27) Referring to Table 23.1, if interest rates rise by 5 percentage points, then bank profits
(measured using gap analysis) will
A) decline by $0.5 million.
B) decline by $1.5 million.
C) decline by $2.5 million.
D) increase by $1.5 million.
28) Refer to Table 23.1. Assuming that the average duration of its assets is five years, while the
average duration of its liabilities is three years, a rise in interest rates from 5% to 10% will cause
the net worth of First National to ________ by ________ of the total original asset value.
A) increase; 11%
B) decline; 11%
C) increase; 10%
D) decline; 5%
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First National Bank
Table 23.2
29) Referring to Table 23.2, First National Bank has a gap of ________.
A) -10
B) 10
C) 20
D) 0
30) Referring to Table 23.2, if interest rates rise by 5 percentage points, then bank profits
(measured using gap analysis) will
A) decline by $0.5 million.
B) decline by $1.5 million.
C) decline by $2.5 million.
D) increase by $2.0 million.
31) Refer to Table 23.2. Assuming that the average duration of the bank’s assets is four years,
while the average duration of its liabilities is three years, a rise in interest rates from 5 percent to
10 percent will cause the net worth of First National to ________ by ________ of the total
original asset value.
A) decline; 5%
B) decline; 1.3%
C) decline; 6.2%
D) increase; 5%
32) If First State Bank has a gap equal to a positive $20 million, then a 5 percentage point drop
in interest rates will cause profits to
A) increase by $10 million.
B) increase by $1.0 million.
C) decline by $10 million.
D) decline by $1.0 million.