Contemporary Financial Management 13th Edition Moyer Test Bank 1
Contemporary Financial Management 13th Edition Moyer Test Bank 1
Contemporary Financial Management 13th Edition Moyer Test Bank 1
ANSWER: d
ANSWER: a
3. Original issue deep discount bonds have decreased in popularity over the last several years due to:
a. changes in tax laws
b. issuance by brokerage firms of lower risk substitutes
c. increased interest in equity securities
© 2015 Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved. May not be scanned, copied or duplicated, or posted to a publicly accessible website, in whole or in part.
Chapter 6: Fixed-Income Securities: Characteristics and Valuation
d. changes in tax laws and issuance by brokerage firms of lower risk substitutes
ANSWER: d
ANSWER: a
5. If a firm could sell a mortgage bond at an 8% interest rate, it could sell an otherwise identical debenture at
a. a rate less than 8%
b. 8%
c. a rate greater than 8%
d. cannot be determined
ANSWER: c
© 2015 Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved. May not be scanned, copied or duplicated, or posted to a publicly accessible website, in whole or in part.
Chapter 6: Fixed-Income Securities: Characteristics and Valuation
6. When the market for an asset is in equilibrium, the expected rate of return on the asset is equal to the:
a. risk-free rate
b. marginal investor's required rate of return
c. historical cost of capital
d. perpetual capitalization rate
ANSWER: b
7. The the investor's required rate of return on a bond, the will be the value of the bond to the
investor.
a. lower, higher
b. higher, higher
c. lower, lower
d. higher, lower
ANSWER: a
8. The yield-to-maturity of a bond with a finite maturity date is a function of all of the following variables
except:
a. the current price
b. the required rate of return on the bond
c. the uniform annual interest payments
d. the maturity value
ANSWER: b
9. The value of a perpetual bond is equal to the annual interest payment divided by the:
a. risk-free rate
b. required rate of return
c. bank interest rate
d. after-tax historical cost of capital
ANSWER: b
ANSWER: c
© 2015 Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved. May not be scanned, copied or duplicated, or posted to a publicly accessible website, in whole or in part.
Chapter 6: Fixed-Income Securities: Characteristics and Valuation
11. Rank in ascending order (lowest to highest) the relative risk associated with holding the preferred stock, common
stock and bonds of a firm:
a. preferred stock, bonds, common stock
b. bonds, common stock, preferred stock
c. common stock, preferred stock, bonds
d. bonds, preferred stock, common stock
ANSWER: d
12. Potential sellers of an asset can be represented as a schedule showing the prices at which they are willing
to sell given quantities of the asset.
a. supply, maximum
b. demand, maximum
c. supply, minimum
d. supply, average
ANSWER: c
ANSWER: b
ANSWER: b
ANSWER: a
© 2015 Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved. May not be scanned, copied or duplicated, or posted to a publicly accessible website, in whole or in part.
Chapter 6: Fixed-Income Securities: Characteristics and Valuation
16. The indenture is a contract between the issuer and lenders that does all the following except:
a. specifies the manner in which the principal must be repaid
b. details the nature of the debt issue
c. gives management's expectations about return of the proceeds
d. lists any restrictive covenants
ANSWER: c
ANSWER: d
ANSWER: b
ANSWER: a
ANSWER: b
© 2015 Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved. May not be scanned, copied or duplicated, or posted to a publicly accessible website, in whole or in part.
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King of the Gipsies, Headstone of Peter Standley, 261
Kingston Down, Discovery on, 36
—— Lacy, 208, 219
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—— —— Round Barrows, 22
Knut the Dane, 8, 244
Macaulay, 275
Mai-dun (Maiden Castle), 30, 32, 34, 155
Malmesbury, William of, 91
Manor House at Trent, 11
Marblers, Company of, 195
March, Dr. Colley, 193
Margaret, Lady, foundress of Christ’s and St. John’s Colleges, 123, 124
—— Wife of Henry VI., 9
Marnhull, 287
—— Church, Monument in, 59
Martinstown, 23, 25
Martyn Family, 258
Maud, Wars of Stephen and, 8
Maumbury Ring, 148, 285
Maurice, Prince, 10
Mayo’s Barrow, 24
Melbury Sampford, 12
—— —— Effigy of William Brounyng, 59
Melcombe Regis, 208
—— —— Priory, 173
Melplash, 232
Memorial Brasses, Description of—
Beaminster, Bere Regis, Bryanston, Bridport, 64
Caundle Purse, Compton Valence, Chesilborne, Corfe Mullen, Crichel Moor, Crichel
Long, Cranborne, Dorchester St. Peter, Evershot, Fleet Old Church, 65
Holme Priory, Knowle, Litton Cheney, Lytchett Matravers, Langton, Melbury
Sampford, 66
Milton Abbey, Milborne St. Andrew, Moreton, Owermoigne, Piddlehinton, Piddletown,
Pimperne, Puncknowle, 67
Rampisham, Shaftesbury St. Peter, Shapwick, Sturminster Marshall, Swanage, als.
Swanwich, 68
Swyre, Tincleton, Tarrant Crawford, Thorncombe, Upwey, West Stafford, Wimborne
Minster, 69
Woolland, Yetminster, 70
Bere Regis, 70
Caundle Purse, 70
Edward the Martyr, King, 68
Evershot, 71
Fleet, 71
Joan de St. Omar, 63
Litton Cheney, retroscript brass, 63
Milton Abbey, Sir John Tregonwell, 67, 71
Moreton, unusual inscription, 72
Oke Brass at Shapwick, 63
Piddletown, 72
St. Peter’s Church, Dorchester, 63
Strangwayes, Sir Gyles, 66
Stratton, 63
Thorncombe, 73
Wimborne Minster, King Ethelred effigy, 69, 73
Wraxall, 74
Yetminster, 74
Middleton, Abbot William de, 96, 98, 101, 102
Miles, G.F. W., 143
Milton Abbey, 44, 57, 94, 158
—— Grammar School, 113
—— Market Cross, 111
—— Old Town of, 109, 110
—— Town of, in America, 116
—— John, 100
—— Lord, 100, 109, 112-115
Mohun Family, 264
Monasteries, Dissolution of the, 10
Monastic Barns—
Liscombe, 45
Tarrant Crawford, 45
Monastic Ruins at—
Abbotsbury, 44
Bindon, 44
Cerne, 44
Shaftesbury, 44
Money, Kimmeridge Coal, 191
Monkton-up-Wimborne, 117
Monmouth, Duke of, 143, 148, 224, 225
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—— —— Landing at Lyme Regis of, 169
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Monmouth’s Close, field near Horton called, 15
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Monumental Effigies, 57-60
Monuments in Piddletown Church, 258
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Morton, Cardinal, 60
Motcombe, Village of, 276
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Newfoundland, Intimate connection between Poole and, 226
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Studland, 49
Worth Matravers, 49
Norman Conquest, 233
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Owners of Athelhampton, First, 262
FOOTNOTES:
[1] One of these was the Rev. Mr. Bravel, Rector of Compton Abbas.
[2] Proceedings of the Dorset Nat. Hist. and Antiquarian Field Club, vol.
v., p. 99.
[3] The Dynasts, part i., p. 179.
[4] Excavations in Cranborne Chase, by Lieut.-General Pitt-Rivers, F.R.S.,
vol. ii., p. 62.
[5] Excavations in Cranborne Chase, by Lieut.-General Pitt-Rivers, vol.
iv., pp. 62-100.
[6] Excavations in Cranborne Chase, by Lieut.-General Pitt-Rivers, vol.
iv., p. 144.
[7] Jour. of the Anthropolog. Inst., vol. xxxii., p. 373.
[8] Guide to Antiquities of Bronze Age in Brit. Mus., by C. H. Read, F.S.A.,
p. 45.
[9] Proceedings Dorset Nat. Hist. and Antiquarian Field Club, vol. xxvi.,
p. 18.
[10] British Barrows, by Greenwell and Rolleston, p. 81.
[11] Celtic Tumuli of Dorset, by Charles Warne, F.S.A., p. 37.
[12] Ibid., p. 18.
[13] Proceedings of Dorset Nat. Hist. and Antiquarian Field Club, vol.
xxvi., p. 15.
[14] Ibid., p. 10.
[15] Pronounced U-ern or You-ern.
[16] “The Levelled Churchyard,” in Poems of the Past and Present.
[17] The heads of religious houses, being landowners, suffered financially,
as other landowners did, from the great increase in wages that farm labourers
were able to demand, because so many labourers having died, the supply fell
far short of the demand.
[18] Showing the horned head dress and gown, the whole almost identical
in outline and size with the Alyanora Pollard effigy, 1430, at Bishop’s
Nympton, Devon.
[19] Extract from the Stratton Churchwardens’ Account, 1753, April 26th
—“Two brasses not wey’d at 7d. p. pound sopos’d to wey 12 pound they
wey’d but 9 lbs. 0.5.3.” There are no brasses at Stratton now.
[20] According to tradition, a Knight of Malta.
[21] This James Russell was the father of John Russell of Berwick, K.G.,
created Baron Russell of Cheneys, 1538-9, and Earl of Bedford, 1550.
[22] A coffin chalice and paten have, within recent years, been discovered
at Milton Abbey and Abbotsbury.
[23] One of these Norman fragments was sent in 1904, as a relic, to the
parish church of Milton, near Boston, Massachusetts. The American town of
Milton, incorporated in 1662, was named after Milton, in Dorset, and the
crest on its corporate seal is a reproduction of the west front of Milton Abbey
(see illustration at the end of this chapter).
[24] It is curious that the first Abbot and the last Abbot of Milton should
have become bishops, while none of the intervening abbots were raised to the
episcopate. It is true that in 1261 William de Taunton, Abbot of Milton, was
elected to the bishopric of Winchester, but he desisted from his right. A
Milton monk, however, in 1292, filled the See of Salisbury (Nicholas
Longspée); and Thomas Jan, a native of Milton, became Bishop of Norwich
in 1499.
[25] In the thirteenth century seal of the Abbey “the Church of Midelton”
is also represented with three spires.
[26] See Dorset Nat. Hist. and Antiquarian Field Club’s Proceedings, vol.
xxvi., 201 ff.
[27] This inscription is discussed in the Dorset Nat. Hist. and Antiquarian
Field Club’s Proceedings, vol. xxv., 191 ff. It announces an indulgence to
those passers-by who pray for the soul of the deceased abbot (possibly
William de Stokes, who died in 1256).
[28] A full description of these brasses appeared in The Antiquary for
March, 1904.
[29] A full account of this incident and of the bequest appears in Heath and
Prideaux’s Some Dorset Manor Houses, pp. 199, 200.
[30] In connection with the glass in the windows of Milton Abbey, it may
be of interest to add the tradition that John Milton “planned” his Il Penseroso
at Milton, and that the following lines in the poem are supposed to have been
suggested to him by the Abbey Church:
[31] A full description of this glass (temp. Henry VII.) appeared in The
Antiquary for May, 1907.
[32] A full description of these burial relics appeared in The Antiquary for
July, 1905.
[33] It is possible that Athelstan found a Celtic sanctuary at Milton
dedicated to these two Celtic bishops, and retained the dedications for his
new minster in order to conciliate the vanquished race. Such a graceful act
would be quite in keeping with the King’s imperial maxim: “Gloriosus regem
facere quam regem esse.”
[34] This thirteenth century inscription is discussed in the Dorset Nat. Hist.
and Antiquarian Field Club’s Proceedings, vol. xxv., 187 ff. One wonders if
this indulgence was granted by Robert Kilwarby, Archbishop of Canterbury,
on the occasion of his visit to Milton Abbey in 1277. The indulgence was
offered, presumably, to those who would contribute to the fabric fund of the
chapel.
[35] A full account of Liscombe appeared in the Dorset Nat. Hist. and
Antiquarian Field Club’s Proceedings, vol. xxvi., 1 ff.
[36] The loneliness of Holworth has also been remarked upon by Thomas
Hardy in his smuggling story, “The Distracted Preacher” (Wessex Tales).
Such a lonely spot, with its under-cliff sheltered by “White Nose”—the great
white promontory jutting like an enormous Wellington nose into the sea—
naturally attracted smugglers, who, as tradition says, hid their goods in the
tower of the neighbouring parish church of Owermoigne. In this church there
is an interesting inscription recording the will of “Adam Jones of Holworth,
in the parish of Abbotsmilton” (sic), 1653.
[37] See Mary Craven’s Famous Beauties of Two Reigns, pp. 141-151.
[38] See Old Milton, and Dorset Nat. Hist. and Antiquarian Field Club’s
Proceedings, vol. xxv., 1 ff.
[39] Zanchy Harvyn, grocer, of “Abby Milton,” was the second tradesman
in Dorset to issue a “token” (1651).
[40] See Milton Abbey Marriage Registers, in Phillimore’s “Dorset” series.
But during the years 1657-8 the banns of some of the more zealous church-
people were published in the church.
[41] See Alfred Pope’s The Old Stone Crosses of Dorset, pp. 69-71.
[42] See Milton Abbey and its School, chap. ii.
[43] See Broadley and Bartelot’s The Three Dorset Captains at Trafalgar,
p. 124.
[44] During Hutchins’ residence at Milton, the Lord of the Manor (Mr.
Jacob Bancks, M.P.) employed him to make some antiquarian researches
concerning Sir John Tregonwell; and while making these researches Hutchins
conceived the idea of writing a book on the antiquities of Dorset. He began to
collect materials, and at Milton laid the plan of his monumental history. His
wife, Ann Stephens, is described in the Melcombe Bingham marriage
registers as belonging to the parish of Milton.
[45] This fight between squire and people recalls Thomas Hardy’s allusion,
in The Woodlanders, to “Middleton Abbey” as being a place where one might
gain strength, “particularly strength of mind.”
[46] A full account of these “ruins” appeared in the Dorset Nat. Hist. and
Antiquarian Field Club’s Proceedings, vol. xxvi., 195 ff.
[47] “The Abbot at incredible expense is now restoring the monastery most
gloriously.”
[48] Engraved in Oliver’s Monasticon Diocesis Exoniensis.
[49] The writer has used, among other books, the Guides of Savage and
Young, Mrs. Frampton’s Journal, and his brother Mr. H. J. Moule’s Old
Dorset and Dorchester Antiquities.
[50] One part of that house is the oldest piece of inhabited building in the
borough.
[51] Spring, 1907.
[52] On the site of this chapel Mr. Ellis dug up some beautiful pieces of
fourteenth-century Gothic work.
[53] This bridge was finished in 1824, at a cost of £20,000.
[54] “The Problem of Lynchets,” Dorset Nat. Hist. and Antiquarian Field
Club’s Proceedings, vol. xxiv.
[55] Jude the Obscure, p. 249.
[56] This prophecy is thought to have been fulfilled when the son of
Edmund Tudor, a Welshman, ascended the throne as Henry VII.
[57] This dedication is curious. St. Rumbold was the son of a
Northumbrian King, and of a daughter of Penda, King of Mercia, born at
Sutton, in Northamptonshire; he died when three days old, but not before he
had repeated the Lord’s Prayer and the Apostles’ Creed in Latin. This fact
gained canonization for him.
[58] This has given the colloquial name of “the Rock” to Shaftesbury.
Those who live in the town are spoken of as coming from the Rock; those
who dwell in the villages below it are spoken of as “Side off” the Rock.
[59] The Abbey of Alcester was founded in 1140 by Ralf Boteler, and a
document exists by which one William le Boteler, of Wem, grants to the
Abbey 100 shillings per annum, derived from land in the parish of St. James,
Shaftesbury, to pay for masses for his own soul and that of the King (7th year
of Henry IV.). This is only a confirmation of a previous gift.
[60] Jude the Obscure, p. 313.
[61] Of the poet “George Turberville, gentleman,” not much is known. He
was born at Winterborne Whitchurch, probably before 1530, and died after
1594. Besides a book on falconry and numerous translations, he wrote a good
many occasional poems, though none of great length.
Sir Walter Ralegh, a Devonshire man, was connected with Sherborne, for it
was here that he and his wife, Elizabeth Throgmorton, settled, and in January,
1591-2, had obtained a ninety-nine years’ lease of the castle and park. Here
he busied himself with building and “repairing the castle, erecting a
magnificent mansion close at hand, and laying out the grounds with the
greatest refinement and taste.” The castle now occupied by the Digby family
is in part the lodge built by Sir Walter, and over the central doorway appear
his arms, and the date, 1594. Before his conviction he settled his estate on his
son, but by a flaw in the deed James I. took it from him, and granted it to his
favourite, Carr, Earl of Somerset. It is said that Lady Ralegh asked the King
on her knees to spare her son’s heritage, but that the King’s only answer was,
“I maun hae the lond; I maun hae it for Carr.” On Sir Walter’s journey to the
Tower, he passed in full view of Sherborne, and said, motioning with his
hands towards the woodlands and the castle, “All this was once mine, but has
passed away.”
[62] About 1727 one Prior, of Godmanston, a labouring man, declared to a
company, in the presence of Mr. Hutchins, that he was Mr. Prior’s cousin, and
remembered going to Wimborne to visit him, and afterwards heard that he
became a great man.—Hutchins’ Dorset.
[63] Longman’s Magazine, October, 1884.
[64] The collection of books to which the History of the World belongs was
given to the town in 1686, many years after Prior had left Wimborne. See the
Contemporary Review, May, 1890.
[65] It is probable that Prior’s parents were Nonconformists. We are told
that before a dissenting chapel was built in the town the people met for
worship in a barn in the neighbouring hamlet of Cowgrove. To this Prior
seems to allude in his epistle to Fleetwood Shepherd:
At pure Barn of loud Non-con
Where with my granam I have gone.
[66] He wrote occasional verse, and when Young addressed his third satire
to Dodington, he received verses from Dodington in return.
[67] Christopher Pitt (d. 1748) was rector of Pimperne, not far from
Eastbury. He translated the Æneid.
[68] At Eastbury he slept on a bed encanopied with peacocks’ feathers, “in
the style of Mrs. Montague.”—Cumberland’s Memoirs.
[69] This was pulled down in 1835, and rebuilt.
[70] Hutchins writes that “the house where Oliver lived seemed to accord
with Fielding’s description,” and an old woman who remembered Oliver said
“that he dearly loved a bit of good victuals and a drop of drink.”—History of
Dorset.
[71] William Crowe (1745-1829). In 1782, on the presentation of New
College, he was admitted to the rectory of Stoke Abbot, in Dorset, which he
exchanged for Alton Barnes, in Wiltshire, in 1787. Lewesdon Hill lies near
his Dorset benefice. The first edition of Lewesdon Hill was published
anonymously in 1788.
[72] Thomas Fuller was presented to the rectory of Broadwindsor by his
uncle, Bishop Davenant. He was ousted at the Rebellion; but he returned to it
at the Restoration, and held the living until his death in 1661.
[73] At Racedown, Wordsworth finished Guilt and Sorrow, composed the
tragedy called The Borderers, and some personal satires which he never
published. Lastly, he wrote The Ruined Cottage, now incorporated in the first
book of The Excursion.
[74] In Wordsworth’s own account, “Towards the close of the first book
stand the lines that were first written, beginning, ‘Nine tedious years,’ and
ending, ‘Last human tenant of these ruined walls.’ These were composed in
1795 at Racedown; and for several passages describing the employment and
demeanour of Margaret during her affliction, I am indebted to obs”
[75] From an unpublished letter to Wrangham, The Athenæum, 8th
December, 1894, quoted in The Early Life of Wordsworth (1770-1798), by
Emile Legouis.
[76] It was noteworthy how he would eschew all the evil in newspapers; no
theft or murder could ever be read to him.—Life of William Barnes, Leader
Scott.
[77] William Barnes (1801-1886) was born at Rushay, in the hamlet of
Bagber. He was the grandson of John Barnes, yeoman farmer, of Gillingham,
and the son of John Barnes, tenant farmer, in the Vale of Blackmore. (A direct
ancestor, John Barnes, was head-borough of Gillingham in 1604.) In 1835 he
settled at Dorchester, and kept a school. In 1847 he was ordained, and lived at
Whitcombe, Dorset. In 1862 he became Rector of Came, where he died.
[78] Thomas Hardy was born at Higher Bockhampton, near Dorchester, on
June 2nd, 1840. In his seventeenth year he was articled to a Mr. Hicks, an
ecclesiastical architect of Dorchester, to whom the restoration of many of the
old South Dorset churches was entrusted. In 1862 he went to London, and
became an assistant to Sir Arthur Blomfield, R.A. In 1874 he married Miss
Emma Lavinia Gifford, niece of Dr. Gifford, Archdeacon of London, and
formerly headmaster of King Edward’s School, Birmingham. Before taking
up their residence at Dorchester, Mr. and Mrs. Hardy lived at Riverside,
Sturminster Newton—the “Stourcastle” of the novels—and then at
Wimborne, and finally settled at “Max Gate,” Dorchester, in 1885.
[79] It is noteworthy that sometimes the name of a village or town appears
in the name of some character living in it, as, for instance, Jude Fawley lives
in “Marygreen,” which we may identify with the village of Fawley, in Hants.;
and the name of the schoolmaster of “Leddenton” (really the Dorset town of
Gillingham) is Gillingham.
[80] Wareham is called Southerton in the earlier editions of The Return of
the Native.
[81] C. G. Harper’s The Hardy Country.
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