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Question 1 of 10
1. Question
You are the operations manager at a broker-dealer. While working on Reputational Risk Measurement and Management during regulatory inspection, you receive a customer complaint. The issue is that a high-net-worth client alleges their trade orders were consistently executed at the lower end of the daily price range, contradicting the firm’s advertised ‘best-in-class’ execution algorithms. The client has shared these concerns on a professional networking platform, where the post has been shared by several industry influencers. An internal review confirms that a legacy system update 60 days ago introduced a latency lag that was not disclosed to the marketing team. To effectively manage the resulting reputational risk, which of the following actions is most appropriate?
Correct
Correct: Reputational risk is frequently a ‘risk of risks,’ meaning it is a secondary risk that arises from failures in other areas, such as operational processes or ethical conduct. In this scenario, the root cause is an operational failure (system latency) that created an ‘expectation gap’ between the firm’s marketing claims and its actual performance. Effective management requires acknowledging this gap, addressing the underlying operational issue, and communicating transparently with stakeholders to restore trust and mitigate the damage to the firm’s brand equity.
Incorrect: Focusing solely on financial settlement or non-disclosure agreements fails to address the systemic operational issue and the public perception already influenced by social media. Using Value at Risk (VaR) is incorrect because VaR is a tool for measuring market risk under normal conditions, not for quantifying the qualitative and complex nature of reputational damage. Simply updating legal disclaimers without fixing the technical latency ignores the root cause of the risk and fails to address the ethical obligation of providing the service levels promised to clients.
Takeaway: Reputational risk management involves identifying the underlying operational or ethical triggers and proactively closing the gap between stakeholder expectations and the firm’s actual performance capabilities.
Incorrect
Correct: Reputational risk is frequently a ‘risk of risks,’ meaning it is a secondary risk that arises from failures in other areas, such as operational processes or ethical conduct. In this scenario, the root cause is an operational failure (system latency) that created an ‘expectation gap’ between the firm’s marketing claims and its actual performance. Effective management requires acknowledging this gap, addressing the underlying operational issue, and communicating transparently with stakeholders to restore trust and mitigate the damage to the firm’s brand equity.
Incorrect: Focusing solely on financial settlement or non-disclosure agreements fails to address the systemic operational issue and the public perception already influenced by social media. Using Value at Risk (VaR) is incorrect because VaR is a tool for measuring market risk under normal conditions, not for quantifying the qualitative and complex nature of reputational damage. Simply updating legal disclaimers without fixing the technical latency ignores the root cause of the risk and fails to address the ethical obligation of providing the service levels promised to clients.
Takeaway: Reputational risk management involves identifying the underlying operational or ethical triggers and proactively closing the gap between stakeholder expectations and the firm’s actual performance capabilities.
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Question 2 of 10
2. Question
A whistleblower report received by a payment services provider alleges issues with Scenario and Sensitivity Analysis during internal audit remediation. The allegation claims that the risk management team, while preparing the 18-month capital adequacy forecast, incorrectly substituted sensitivity analysis for scenario analysis when evaluating the impact of a potential regional economic recession. Specifically, the report suggests that the team only adjusted the transaction volume variable by 15% while keeping all other macroeconomic factors constant, despite the audit requirement to model a comprehensive stressed market event. Which of the following best describes the primary methodological flaw in the risk management team’s approach as alleged by the whistleblower?
Correct
Correct: The primary flaw is that sensitivity analysis typically involves changing one input variable at a time to observe the impact on a dependent variable, whereas scenario analysis involves changing multiple variables simultaneously to reflect a specific set of circumstances or events. In a recession, variables such as interest rates, consumer spending, and default rates are often highly correlated and move together. By only adjusting transaction volume, the team ignored the compounding effects and interdependencies of other risk factors, which is the hallmark of a robust scenario analysis.
Incorrect: The choice regarding deterministic versus stochastic models is incorrect because both sensitivity and scenario analysis can be performed using deterministic inputs; the issue is the number of variables changed, not the underlying simulation type. The choice regarding the range of values for a single variable describes a limitation of a specific sensitivity test but does not address the fundamental failure to perform a multi-variable scenario analysis. The choice regarding back-testing refers to a model validation technique, which, while important, does not correct the conceptual error of using a single-factor sensitivity test to represent a multi-factor economic scenario.
Takeaway: Scenario analysis is distinct from sensitivity analysis because it evaluates the impact of multiple, correlated variables changing simultaneously in response to a specific event.
Incorrect
Correct: The primary flaw is that sensitivity analysis typically involves changing one input variable at a time to observe the impact on a dependent variable, whereas scenario analysis involves changing multiple variables simultaneously to reflect a specific set of circumstances or events. In a recession, variables such as interest rates, consumer spending, and default rates are often highly correlated and move together. By only adjusting transaction volume, the team ignored the compounding effects and interdependencies of other risk factors, which is the hallmark of a robust scenario analysis.
Incorrect: The choice regarding deterministic versus stochastic models is incorrect because both sensitivity and scenario analysis can be performed using deterministic inputs; the issue is the number of variables changed, not the underlying simulation type. The choice regarding the range of values for a single variable describes a limitation of a specific sensitivity test but does not address the fundamental failure to perform a multi-variable scenario analysis. The choice regarding back-testing refers to a model validation technique, which, while important, does not correct the conceptual error of using a single-factor sensitivity test to represent a multi-factor economic scenario.
Takeaway: Scenario analysis is distinct from sensitivity analysis because it evaluates the impact of multiple, correlated variables changing simultaneously in response to a specific event.
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Question 3 of 10
3. Question
The quality assurance team at a fintech lender identified a finding related to Market Risk Measurement and Management as part of business continuity. The assessment reveals that the firm’s current Value at Risk (VaR) framework, which utilizes a 5-day 95% confidence interval based on historical simulation, failed to predict the magnitude of losses during a recent 48-hour period of extreme market illiquidity. The internal audit report suggests that the model’s reliance on historical price correlations did not account for the breakdown in asset relationships during the stress event. To improve the robustness of the risk management framework, which of the following actions should the risk committee prioritize?
Correct
Correct: Value at Risk (VaR) is a statistical measure that quantifies the level of financial risk within a firm over a specific time frame, but it has significant limitations, particularly its inability to account for ‘tail risk’ or the magnitude of losses beyond the confidence interval. In periods of market stress, historical correlations often break down, and liquidity can evaporate. Stress testing and scenario analysis are essential complements to VaR because they allow risk managers to evaluate the impact of extreme, non-probabilistic events and structural shifts that historical data cannot adequately predict.
Incorrect: Adjusting VaR parameters like the confidence level or time horizon makes the metric more conservative but does not address the underlying failure to model liquidity risk or correlation breakdowns. Transitioning to a parametric VaR model is often less effective at capturing fat tails than historical simulation, as parametric models frequently assume a normal distribution. Increasing backtesting frequency is a useful monitoring control for model validation, but it does not enhance the model’s predictive capability regarding extreme market shocks or liquidity constraints.
Takeaway: VaR should be used in conjunction with stress testing and scenario analysis to provide a comprehensive view of potential losses, especially those related to liquidity and extreme market conditions where historical patterns fail.
Incorrect
Correct: Value at Risk (VaR) is a statistical measure that quantifies the level of financial risk within a firm over a specific time frame, but it has significant limitations, particularly its inability to account for ‘tail risk’ or the magnitude of losses beyond the confidence interval. In periods of market stress, historical correlations often break down, and liquidity can evaporate. Stress testing and scenario analysis are essential complements to VaR because they allow risk managers to evaluate the impact of extreme, non-probabilistic events and structural shifts that historical data cannot adequately predict.
Incorrect: Adjusting VaR parameters like the confidence level or time horizon makes the metric more conservative but does not address the underlying failure to model liquidity risk or correlation breakdowns. Transitioning to a parametric VaR model is often less effective at capturing fat tails than historical simulation, as parametric models frequently assume a normal distribution. Increasing backtesting frequency is a useful monitoring control for model validation, but it does not enhance the model’s predictive capability regarding extreme market shocks or liquidity constraints.
Takeaway: VaR should be used in conjunction with stress testing and scenario analysis to provide a comprehensive view of potential losses, especially those related to liquidity and extreme market conditions where historical patterns fail.
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Question 4 of 10
4. Question
A procedure review at a payment services provider has identified gaps in Capital Budgeting Techniques (NPV, IRR, Payback) as part of risk appetite review. The review highlights that the current project selection framework for a new 5-year digital infrastructure upgrade often results in conflicting signals between Net Present Value (NPV) and Internal Rate of Return (IRR) when evaluating mutually exclusive projects of different scales. To align with the firm’s objective of maximizing shareholder wealth while maintaining a conservative risk profile, the finance committee must determine the most appropriate decision rule when these metrics diverge.
Correct
Correct: In the context of mutually exclusive projects, NPV is the superior decision-making tool because it measures the absolute dollar impact on the firm’s value, which is the primary goal of corporate finance. IRR assumes that interim cash flows are reinvested at the project’s IRR, which is often unrealistic, whereas NPV assumes reinvestment at the firm’s cost of capital. When projects differ in scale or timing, NPV correctly identifies the project that adds the most value to the company.
Incorrect: The IRR method is flawed for mutually exclusive projects because it can favor smaller projects with high percentage returns over larger projects that generate more total wealth. The Payback Period is an inadequate primary metric because it ignores the time value of money and all cash flows occurring after the arbitrary cutoff date. The Profitability Index is a useful tool for capital rationing (when the budget is limited), but for mutually exclusive projects, it may lead to selecting a smaller project over a larger one that has a higher absolute NPV.
Takeaway: When evaluating mutually exclusive projects, the NPV method is the preferred technique as it aligns directly with shareholder wealth maximization and uses a realistic reinvestment rate assumption.
Incorrect
Correct: In the context of mutually exclusive projects, NPV is the superior decision-making tool because it measures the absolute dollar impact on the firm’s value, which is the primary goal of corporate finance. IRR assumes that interim cash flows are reinvested at the project’s IRR, which is often unrealistic, whereas NPV assumes reinvestment at the firm’s cost of capital. When projects differ in scale or timing, NPV correctly identifies the project that adds the most value to the company.
Incorrect: The IRR method is flawed for mutually exclusive projects because it can favor smaller projects with high percentage returns over larger projects that generate more total wealth. The Payback Period is an inadequate primary metric because it ignores the time value of money and all cash flows occurring after the arbitrary cutoff date. The Profitability Index is a useful tool for capital rationing (when the budget is limited), but for mutually exclusive projects, it may lead to selecting a smaller project over a larger one that has a higher absolute NPV.
Takeaway: When evaluating mutually exclusive projects, the NPV method is the preferred technique as it aligns directly with shareholder wealth maximization and uses a realistic reinvestment rate assumption.
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Question 5 of 10
5. Question
Following an on-site examination at a wealth manager, regulators raised concerns about Market Microstructure and Trading Dynamics in the context of periodic review. Their preliminary finding is that the firm’s trading desk frequently employs ‘market-not-held’ orders for large rebalancing trades without documenting the specific instructions given to the broker. The regulators are concerned that this lack of transparency prevents an accurate decomposition of the implementation shortfall, particularly regarding the trade-off between market impact and execution delay. In the context of market microstructure, which of the following statements correctly identifies the relationship between these two components when executing a large order in a fragmented market?
Correct
Correct: In market microstructure, traders face a fundamental trade-off between execution risk (delay cost) and market impact. To execute a large order quickly and reduce the risk that the market price moves unfavorably before the trade is completed (delay cost), a trader must demand liquidity more aggressively. This aggressive demand typically requires moving deeper into the limit order book, which results in a higher market impact cost as the price is pushed in the direction of the trade.
Incorrect: Reducing the participation rate (trading more slowly) actually increases delay costs because it extends the time the order is exposed to market volatility. While dark pools are designed to mitigate market impact by providing anonymity, they do not eliminate it entirely due to potential information leakage or ‘toxic’ liquidity, and they generally do not have significantly higher explicit costs than lit exchanges. Finally, for institutional trades, implicit costs like market impact and delay costs are typically much larger than explicit costs like commissions, making the trade-off between them a critical consideration for execution quality.
Takeaway: The core challenge in trade execution is balancing the trade-off between the cost of immediate liquidity (market impact) and the risk of price movement over time (delay cost).
Incorrect
Correct: In market microstructure, traders face a fundamental trade-off between execution risk (delay cost) and market impact. To execute a large order quickly and reduce the risk that the market price moves unfavorably before the trade is completed (delay cost), a trader must demand liquidity more aggressively. This aggressive demand typically requires moving deeper into the limit order book, which results in a higher market impact cost as the price is pushed in the direction of the trade.
Incorrect: Reducing the participation rate (trading more slowly) actually increases delay costs because it extends the time the order is exposed to market volatility. While dark pools are designed to mitigate market impact by providing anonymity, they do not eliminate it entirely due to potential information leakage or ‘toxic’ liquidity, and they generally do not have significantly higher explicit costs than lit exchanges. Finally, for institutional trades, implicit costs like market impact and delay costs are typically much larger than explicit costs like commissions, making the trade-off between them a critical consideration for execution quality.
Takeaway: The core challenge in trade execution is balancing the trade-off between the cost of immediate liquidity (market impact) and the risk of price movement over time (delay cost).
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Question 6 of 10
6. Question
An escalation from the front office at a broker-dealer concerns Black-Litterman Model during client suitability. The team reports that a senior portfolio manager is attempting to incorporate a high-conviction tactical view on Emerging Markets that significantly deviates from the global market-cap weights. During a review of the Q3 investment strategy, the compliance officer noted that the resulting weights seem more intuitive and less concentrated than those produced by a standard Mean-Variance Optimization (MVO) process. The team is specifically analyzing the internal mechanics of the model to justify the final allocation to the investment committee. Which of the following best describes the mechanism within the Black-Litterman model that leads to these more stable and diversified asset allocations compared to traditional MVO?
Correct
Correct: The Black-Litterman model addresses the ‘estimation error’ and ‘input sensitivity’ problems of Mean-Variance Optimization by starting with the market equilibrium. It uses reverse optimization to derive the implied expected returns from the market-cap weights. These implied returns serve as a neutral prior, which is then combined with the investor’s subjective views using a Bayesian framework. The final expected returns are a weighted average of the market equilibrium and the investor’s views, where the weights depend on the uncertainty (confidence) assigned to each view. This process typically results in portfolios that are more diversified and less sensitive to small changes in inputs than standard MVO.
Incorrect: Shrinkage estimators are a statistical technique used to improve the reliability of the covariance matrix but are not the core mechanism of the Black-Litterman model’s return estimation. Risk parity is an alternative asset allocation strategy that ignores expected returns entirely to focus on risk contributions, which is fundamentally different from the Black-Litterman approach of blending equilibrium and subjective returns. Resampled efficiency is a simulation-based method to address MVO sensitivity by averaging many possible efficient frontiers, but it does not incorporate the market equilibrium or Bayesian integration of subjective views that defines the Black-Litterman model.
Takeaway: The Black-Litterman model achieves stable, intuitive portfolios by using market equilibrium as a prior and adjusting it through a Bayesian framework based on the investor’s unique views and confidence levels.
Incorrect
Correct: The Black-Litterman model addresses the ‘estimation error’ and ‘input sensitivity’ problems of Mean-Variance Optimization by starting with the market equilibrium. It uses reverse optimization to derive the implied expected returns from the market-cap weights. These implied returns serve as a neutral prior, which is then combined with the investor’s subjective views using a Bayesian framework. The final expected returns are a weighted average of the market equilibrium and the investor’s views, where the weights depend on the uncertainty (confidence) assigned to each view. This process typically results in portfolios that are more diversified and less sensitive to small changes in inputs than standard MVO.
Incorrect: Shrinkage estimators are a statistical technique used to improve the reliability of the covariance matrix but are not the core mechanism of the Black-Litterman model’s return estimation. Risk parity is an alternative asset allocation strategy that ignores expected returns entirely to focus on risk contributions, which is fundamentally different from the Black-Litterman approach of blending equilibrium and subjective returns. Resampled efficiency is a simulation-based method to address MVO sensitivity by averaging many possible efficient frontiers, but it does not incorporate the market equilibrium or Bayesian integration of subjective views that defines the Black-Litterman model.
Takeaway: The Black-Litterman model achieves stable, intuitive portfolios by using market equilibrium as a prior and adjusting it through a Bayesian framework based on the investor’s unique views and confidence levels.
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Question 7 of 10
7. Question
Senior management at a fund administrator requests your input on Market Makers and Specialists as part of conflicts of interest. Their briefing note explains that a primary concern involves the dual role of certain entities acting as both brokers for client orders and market makers for the same securities. During a recent internal audit of the 2023 trading cycle, a compliance alert flagged several instances where the firm’s proprietary trading desk executed trades in a security just moments before a large institutional client order was processed. The firm operates under a best execution policy, but the proximity of these trades has raised questions about the priority of client interests versus the market maker’s obligation to provide liquidity. In the context of market microstructure and professional standards, which of the following best describes the primary obligation of a specialist or market maker when managing their own inventory alongside client orders?
Correct
Correct: According to professional standards and market integrity rules, market makers and specialists must ensure that client interests take precedence over the firm’s proprietary interests. Using knowledge of a pending large client order to trade for the firm’s own account (front-running) is a violation of ethical standards. While market makers provide liquidity, they cannot do so at the expense of client order priority or by exploiting information asymmetry regarding client intentions.
Incorrect: The suggestion that trading ahead is acceptable if the price is within the spread is incorrect, as the timing of the trade still constitutes front-running. While specialists are tasked with maintaining a fair and orderly market, this responsibility does not negate their duty to prioritize client orders or allow them to bypass fiduciary obligations. Disclosing profit margins on every spread is not a standard regulatory requirement, nor does it resolve the conflict of interest regarding order execution priority.
Takeaway: Market participants must strictly prioritize client order execution over proprietary trading to maintain market integrity and manage inherent conflicts of interest.
Incorrect
Correct: According to professional standards and market integrity rules, market makers and specialists must ensure that client interests take precedence over the firm’s proprietary interests. Using knowledge of a pending large client order to trade for the firm’s own account (front-running) is a violation of ethical standards. While market makers provide liquidity, they cannot do so at the expense of client order priority or by exploiting information asymmetry regarding client intentions.
Incorrect: The suggestion that trading ahead is acceptable if the price is within the spread is incorrect, as the timing of the trade still constitutes front-running. While specialists are tasked with maintaining a fair and orderly market, this responsibility does not negate their duty to prioritize client orders or allow them to bypass fiduciary obligations. Disclosing profit margins on every spread is not a standard regulatory requirement, nor does it resolve the conflict of interest regarding order execution priority.
Takeaway: Market participants must strictly prioritize client order execution over proprietary trading to maintain market integrity and manage inherent conflicts of interest.
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Question 8 of 10
8. Question
The board of directors at a wealth manager has asked for a recommendation regarding Discounted Cash Flow (DCF) Analysis as part of complaints handling. The background paper states that several high-net-worth clients have questioned the consistency of terminal value assumptions used in recent equity research reports. Specifically, the complaints highlight that the implied perpetual growth rates in the terminal year often exceed the long-term nominal growth rate of the economy. To address these concerns and maintain the integrity of the firm’s valuation process, the investment committee must establish a standardized guideline for terminal value estimation. Which of the following considerations is most appropriate when selecting a perpetual growth rate for the terminal value in a multi-stage DCF model?
Correct
Correct: In a DCF model, the terminal value represents the value of the firm beyond the explicit forecast period. For a company to be in a ‘steady state,’ it cannot grow faster than the overall economy indefinitely, as it would eventually become larger than the entire economy. Therefore, the perpetual growth rate is typically capped at the long-term nominal GDP growth rate to maintain theoretical consistency and realism in the valuation.
Incorrect: Using historical growth rates is flawed because past performance does not guarantee future steady-state growth, especially as companies mature and face competitive pressures. While the exit multiple method is a valid alternative, it is not the only acceptable method and still involves subjective assumptions regarding which multiple is appropriate for the future. Competitive advantages justify higher growth during the explicit forecast period, but the terminal phase assumes a transition to a stable, long-term growth rate that aligns with broader economic constraints.
Takeaway: The perpetual growth rate in a DCF terminal value calculation must be theoretically consistent with long-term macroeconomic growth constraints.
Incorrect
Correct: In a DCF model, the terminal value represents the value of the firm beyond the explicit forecast period. For a company to be in a ‘steady state,’ it cannot grow faster than the overall economy indefinitely, as it would eventually become larger than the entire economy. Therefore, the perpetual growth rate is typically capped at the long-term nominal GDP growth rate to maintain theoretical consistency and realism in the valuation.
Incorrect: Using historical growth rates is flawed because past performance does not guarantee future steady-state growth, especially as companies mature and face competitive pressures. While the exit multiple method is a valid alternative, it is not the only acceptable method and still involves subjective assumptions regarding which multiple is appropriate for the future. Competitive advantages justify higher growth during the explicit forecast period, but the terminal phase assumes a transition to a stable, long-term growth rate that aligns with broader economic constraints.
Takeaway: The perpetual growth rate in a DCF terminal value calculation must be theoretically consistent with long-term macroeconomic growth constraints.
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Question 9 of 10
9. Question
When a problem arises concerning Code of Ethics, what should be the immediate priority? Sarah, a senior portfolio manager at an international investment firm, discovers that a colleague has been selectively disclosing material nonpublic information about an upcoming merger to a small group of preferred clients. In evaluating her next steps under the CFA Institute Code of Ethics and Standards of Professional Conduct, which of the following best describes the priority Sarah must maintain?
Correct
Correct: The CFA Institute Code of Ethics explicitly states that members and candidates must place the integrity of the investment profession and the interests of clients above their own personal interests, the interests of their employer, or the interests of their colleagues. In the scenario described, the selective disclosure of material nonpublic information undermines market integrity and treats clients unfairly, violating the core principles of the Code.
Incorrect: Protecting the firm’s reputation through private resolution is incorrect because ethical duties to the profession and clients supersede the firm’s desire for secrecy regarding misconduct. Prioritizing profitability targets or preferred clients is a violation of the duty of loyalty to all clients and the integrity of the markets. Following a supervisor’s instructions is incorrect if those instructions conflict with the Code and Standards, as members must maintain independence and objectivity.
Takeaway: The fundamental requirement of the CFA Institute Code of Ethics is to prioritize the interests of the investment profession and clients over personal or corporate interests.
Incorrect
Correct: The CFA Institute Code of Ethics explicitly states that members and candidates must place the integrity of the investment profession and the interests of clients above their own personal interests, the interests of their employer, or the interests of their colleagues. In the scenario described, the selective disclosure of material nonpublic information undermines market integrity and treats clients unfairly, violating the core principles of the Code.
Incorrect: Protecting the firm’s reputation through private resolution is incorrect because ethical duties to the profession and clients supersede the firm’s desire for secrecy regarding misconduct. Prioritizing profitability targets or preferred clients is a violation of the duty of loyalty to all clients and the integrity of the markets. Following a supervisor’s instructions is incorrect if those instructions conflict with the Code and Standards, as members must maintain independence and objectivity.
Takeaway: The fundamental requirement of the CFA Institute Code of Ethics is to prioritize the interests of the investment profession and clients over personal or corporate interests.
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Question 10 of 10
10. Question
Following a thematic review of Market Microstructure and Trading Dynamics as part of transaction monitoring, a listed company received feedback indicating that its algorithmic execution of large equity blocks during the 2023 fiscal year consistently suffered from high adverse selection costs. The internal audit team observed that when the firm’s buy-side desk utilized aggressive limit orders in fragmented markets, the market price tended to move upward immediately following the trade, suggesting that liquidity providers were adjusting their quotes in response to perceived information leakage. In the context of market microstructure theory, which component of the bid-ask spread is specifically intended to protect a market maker from the risk of trading with such informed participants?
Correct
Correct: The adverse selection component of the bid-ask spread is a theoretical cost that liquidity providers (market makers) charge to protect themselves against ‘informed’ traders. If a market maker trades with someone who has better information about the asset’s true value, the market maker will likely suffer a loss as the price moves in the direction of the informed trader’s order. To offset these expected losses, the market maker must earn a spread from all traders, effectively using the spread from uninformed traders to subsidize the losses to informed ones.
Incorrect: The inventory holding component relates to the risk and cost of carrying a position on the balance sheet, such as the risk that the price will move before the position can be closed. The order processing component refers to the actual operational costs of executing a trade, such as exchange fees, clearing, and administrative overhead. The market impact component is an outcome of a trade (the change in price caused by the trade itself) rather than a fundamental component of the bid-ask spread designed to mitigate information asymmetry risk.
Takeaway: The adverse selection component of the bid-ask spread specifically addresses the risk of information asymmetry between liquidity providers and informed market participants.
Incorrect
Correct: The adverse selection component of the bid-ask spread is a theoretical cost that liquidity providers (market makers) charge to protect themselves against ‘informed’ traders. If a market maker trades with someone who has better information about the asset’s true value, the market maker will likely suffer a loss as the price moves in the direction of the informed trader’s order. To offset these expected losses, the market maker must earn a spread from all traders, effectively using the spread from uninformed traders to subsidize the losses to informed ones.
Incorrect: The inventory holding component relates to the risk and cost of carrying a position on the balance sheet, such as the risk that the price will move before the position can be closed. The order processing component refers to the actual operational costs of executing a trade, such as exchange fees, clearing, and administrative overhead. The market impact component is an outcome of a trade (the change in price caused by the trade itself) rather than a fundamental component of the bid-ask spread designed to mitigate information asymmetry risk.
Takeaway: The adverse selection component of the bid-ask spread specifically addresses the risk of information asymmetry between liquidity providers and informed market participants.