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.
     


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 financial pyramid implies that:

An investment near the top of the pyramid has a higher potential return, but also carries higher risk.
Egyptian pharoahs were astute investors.
Eating nutritious meals from the "food pyramid" will make you a better investor.
"Pyramid" or "Ponzi" schemes are good investments.

Determining total return typically utilizes the:

Inflation-adjusted annual performance of all mutual-funds.
Annual capital gain plus dividend payout of a stock or fund.
Math skills learned in college-level calculus courses.
Dividend yield on the Dow Jones Industrial Average.

If a mutual fund manager increases his/her cash position, it can be said:

The manager is anticipating a bear market.
The manager is anticipating a bull market.
The manager is trying to reduce the fund’s taxable gains.
The manager is aggressive.

The P/E ratio:

Is the same for all firms in a given industry.
Does not change over time.
Is typically higher for firms whose earnings are expected to grow rapidly.
Is the same as the dividend yield.

A 35-year old individual with 4 young children and a spouse who doesn’t work should probably consider purchasing which of the following types of insurance:

Long-term care insurance.
Disability insurance.
Life insurance.
(b) and (c).

The astute investor is aware that:

Investment risk is limited to the fortunes of the specific security purchased.
Computers make investment decisions scientific and eliminate much of the risk.
Actual outcome of any investment may differ from the expected outcome.
When trading on-line, brokerage commissions are always negotiable.

Beta is commonly used as a relative measure of risk. It measures:

Standard deviation of a stock’s price.
The expected total returns of a diversified portfolio.
The unsystematic risk component of an investment.
The risk of a security or portfolio relative to the overall market.

 
   
   
Brereton & Richards; SagePoint Financial, Retirement Income Analysis, Planning for Retirement
Brereton & Richards
SagePoint Financial
14646 N Kierland Blvd. Suite 230
Scottsdale, AZ 85254
Phone: 602-567-8239
602-567-8240
Fax: 602-567-8216
Cbrereton@sagepnt.com Grichards@sagepnt.com

Christopher Brereton and Grahame Richards offer securities and investment advisory services offered through SagePoint Financial, Inc., member FINRA/SIPC and a registered investment advisor.  Brereton and Richards (B&R) is not affiliated with SagePoint Financial or registered as a broker-dealer or investment advisor.