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.

The net asset value (NAV) of a bond fund:

Cannot be determined.
Changes as interest rates change.
Is determined by the average coupon rates of the bonds in the fund.
Will not change as bonds in the fund are bought or sold.

Mortgage payments:

Can be completely deducted from income for tax purposes.
Vary from month to month on a fixed rate loan.
Represent high principal payments early in the term of the loan.
Are typically tax deductible to the extent that they represent payment of interest.

A stock certificate:

Is always issued to the individual investor.
Represents a primary claim on the firm’s assets.
Represents ownership in a corporation.
Is handwritten.

Long-term care insurance:

Is only for the very elderly.
Can help protect assets from the cost of a nursing home stay.
Is not necessary since Medicare always covers long-term care.
Is always available regardless of your past health history.

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.)

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

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

The term generally used to describe the market in which prices fully reflect all available information is:

The greater fool hypothesis.
Random walk hypothesis.
The size-effect hypothesis.
Efficient markets hypothesis.

 
   
   
Ries Financial Group - financial advisor, financial planner, Bel Air, Harford County, Maryland, investments, retirement, estate, assets, portfolio
115A North Main Street Bel Air, MD 21014
Phone: (410) 809-6704
Toll-Free: (866) 578-1783
Fax: (410) 836-0869
jennifer.snyder@stifel.com

 

 
 
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1)This web site has been prepared solely for informational purposes. It is not an offer to buy or sell any security; nor it is a solicitation of an offer to buy or sell any security.

(2)Representatives of a broker-dealer or investment advisor may only conduct business in a state if the representatives and the broker-dealer or investment advisor they represent: (a) satisfy the qualification requirements of, and are approved to do business by, the state: (b) are excluded or exempted from the state's licenser requirements.

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SIPC & NYSE.
 
Investing involves risk, including the possible loss of principal invested.
 
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