Self-Liquidating Inventory Loan: Rose - Chapter 17 #1
Self-Liquidating Inventory Loan: Rose - Chapter 17 #1
Self-Liquidating Inventory Loan: Rose - Chapter 17 #1
3. Working capital loans often require _____________________. These are required deposits in
the bank by the borrower whose size is dependent on the size of the credit line.
4. When the title to accounts receivables pledged in an asset-based loan is passed to the lender
and the lender takes the responsibility of collecting the accounts receivables of one of its
business customers, this is called ____________________.
factoring
Rose - Chapter 17 #4
leveraged buyout
Rose - Chapter 17 #5
Contingent liabilities
Rose - Chapter 17 #6
Term loans
Rose - Chapter 17 #7
8. A(n) _________________________________________ is a contractual promise by a bank to
lend to a customer up to a maximum amount of money at a set interest rate (or rate markup
over the rate prime or LIBOR). The only way the bank can renege on its promise is if there has
been a "material adverse change" in the borrower's financial condition.
Operating efficiency
Rose - Chapter 17 #9
syndicated loan
Rose - Chapter 17 #10
11. ______________________ refers to the protection afforded to creditors of a firm based on the
amount of the firm's earnings.
Coverage
Rose - Chapter 17 #11
12. The borrower's ______________________ position reflects his or her ability to raise cash in a
timely fashion at a reasonable cost.
liquidity
Rose - Chapter 17 #12
Profitability measures
Rose - Chapter 17 #13
Financial leverage
Rose - Chapter 17 #14
15. Wages and salaries to net sales, overhead expenses to net sales, and cost of goods sold to
net sales are all measures of ___________________________________________.
17. The ______________________ approach to pricing a loan starts with a base interest rate and
adds a risk premium for default and for time to maturity.
price leadership
Rose - Chapter 17 #17
18. The ______________________ is the interest rate charged to the bank's most creditworthy
customers on short-term working capital loans.
prime rate
Rose - Chapter 17 #18
LIBOR
Rose - Chapter 17 #19
below-prime pricing
Rose - Chapter 17 #20
21. The ______________________ is a way of pricing loans that allows a bank to take into
account the entire relationship the bank has with the customer when pricing the loan.
22. ______________________ is the average deposit balance by the customer minus the
average float adjusted for reserve requirements.
default-risk premium
Rose - Chapter 17 #23
24. The _______________________ is the risk premium that has to do with the time to maturity
on the borrowed funds.
term-risk premium
Rose - Chapter 17 #24
25. ____________________________ is the cost to the lender for borrowing adequate funds in
the cost-plus loan pricing model.
26. In the price leadership model, the amount above the prime rate is often called the
____________.
markup
Rose - Chapter 17 #26
27. A proposed loan is acceptable to the lender when the net rate of return from a customer
profitability analysis is _____________________.
positive
Rose - Chapter 17 #27
syndicated
Rose - Chapter 17 #28
29. Weak loans considered to be substandard or doubtful are also known as __________ credits.
classified
Rose - Chapter 17 #29
30. An interest rate most widely used to price large-denomination business loans extended by
banks operating in the U.S. is ________.
LIBOR
Rose - Chapter 17 #30
31. The ___________ is considered to be the most common base rate figure announced by the
majority of the largest banks that publish their loan rates regularly.
32. The advent of inflation and more volatile interest rates gave rise to a(n) ____________, tied to
changes in important money market interest rates such as the 90-day commercial paper rate.
34. _____________ provide businesses with short-term credit, lasting from a few days to about
one year. These loans come close to self-liquidating loans.
35. ____________ is a type of short-term loan, where the business lenders support installment
purchases of automobiles, home appliances, furniture, business equipment, and other durable
goods by financing the receivables that dealers take on when they write installment contracts
to cover customer purchases.
36. The apparent size bias in the financial marketplace led to the creation of the __________ in
the 1950s, to guarantee loans made to small businesses by private lending institutions.
37. The most risky of all business loans are __________. This is credit to finance the construction
of fixed assets designed to generate a flow or revenue in future periods. This can include
financing a new oil refinery, power plant, or other similar fixed assets.
project loans
Rose - Chapter 17 #37
38. A firm's balance sheet figures expressed as a percentage of total assets are often called
__________.
39. A third financial statement, used in addition to the income statement and balance sheet by
lenders, is the __________. It is required by FASB and is usually readily available from
borrowers.
40. Foreclosure on property pledged behind a bank loan does not subject a bank to be held liable
to clean up any environmental damage the borrower may have caused.
FALSE
Rose - Chapter 17 #40
41. A concern in the banking and commercial finance industries today is that traditional inventory
loans may be on the decline.
TRUE
Rose - Chapter 17 #41
42. Self-liquidating business loans are designed to take advantage of the normal cash cycle in a
business firm.
TRUE
Rose - Chapter 17 #42
43. An increasing portion of short-term lending in recent years has consisted of asset-based
loans.
TRUE
Rose - Chapter 17 #43
44. Working capital loans are normally secured by a business firm's plant and equipment.
FALSE
Rose - Chapter 17 #44
45. Working-capital loans, unlike most other types of business loans, usually require the customer
to keep a compensating deposit balance with the lending bank.
TRUE
Rose - Chapter 17 #45
46. Leveraged buyouts (LBOs) involve the purchase of businesses with at least 75 percent of the
cost of the purchase funded by current earnings and sales of stock.
FALSE
Rose - Chapter 17 #46
47. A project loan is granted to several companies jointly sponsoring a large project, and the
lender can recover funds from such sponsoring companies, if the project does not pay out as
planned. This is known as a project loan granted on a recourse basis.
TRUE
Rose - Chapter 17 #47
48. Term loans normally are secured by accounts receivable and inventory.
FALSE
Rose - Chapter 17 #48
49. Term loans look primarily to the flow of future earnings of the borrowing business firm to
amortize and retire its loan.
TRUE
Rose - Chapter 17 #49
50. Under recent EPA guidelines, if a lender forecloses on environmentally damaged property, the
lender must post that property for sale within 12 months after securing marketable title.
TRUE
Rose - Chapter 17 #50
51. To avoid environmental liability under recent EPA guidelines, a lender must hold a deed of
trust, lien, or mortgage.
TRUE
Rose - Chapter 17 #51
52. Under current federal laws, a lender is required to make an environmental site assessment of
the borrower's property in order to avoid environmental liability.
FALSE
Rose - Chapter 17 #52
53. Floor planning agreements typically include a loan-loss reserve, built up from interest earned
as borrowers repay their installment loans.
TRUE
Rose - Chapter 17 #53
54. If a bank's agent visits a dealer using floor planning and finds any inventory items sold for
which the bank providing finance has not received payment, the loan will be immediately
foreclosed upon.
FALSE
Rose - Chapter 17 #54
55. When a bank examines a borrower's operating efficiency, it is looking at the protection
afforded to creditors from the borrower's earnings.
FALSE
Rose - Chapter 17 #55
56. The firm's coverage ratios measure how carefully the firm's management monitor and control
its expenses.
FALSE
Rose - Chapter 17 #56
57. Liquidity indicators measure a business firm's ability to raise cash in a timely fashion at a
reasonable cost.
TRUE
Rose - Chapter 17 #57
58. The ultimate standard of performance in a market-oriented economy is how much net income
remains after all expenses (except stockholder dividends) have been charged against
revenues.
TRUE
Rose - Chapter 17 #58
59. The business loan pricing method that relies upon banks knowing their costs, is the price
leadership model.
FALSE
Rose - Chapter 17 #59
60. The price leadership model for long-term loan pricing includes a markup for default risk, but
not for term risk.
FALSE
Rose - Chapter 17 #60
61. The sum of the default-risk premium plus the term-risk premium on a business loan is one of
the elements of the cost-plus loan pricing method.
FALSE
Rose - Chapter 17 #61
62. In order to control the risk exposure on their business loans most banks use both price and
credit rationing to regulate the size and composition of their loan portfolios.
TRUE
Rose - Chapter 17 #62
63. In a period of rising interest rates, the times-prime method causes the customer's loan rate to
rise faster than the prime-plus method.
TRUE
Rose - Chapter 17 #63
64. If interest rates fall, a customer's loan rate will decline more rapidly under the times-prime
method than under the prime-plus method of business loan pricing.
TRUE
Rose - Chapter 17 #64
65. Banks attempting to compete with the growing commercial paper market developed the cost-
plus business loan pricing method.
FALSE
Rose - Chapter 17 #65
66. The loan-pricing method, that takes the whole customer relationship into account when pricing
each loan request, is known as the cost-benefit loan pricing method.
FALSE
Rose - Chapter 17 #66
67. The loan-pricing technique known as CPA, can be used to identify the most profitable types of
bank customers, loans, and also the most successful loan officers.
TRUE
Rose - Chapter 17 #67
68. The basic strength of the cost-plus loan pricing method is that it considers the competition
from other lenders.
FALSE
Rose - Chapter 17 #68
69. The basic weakness of the cost-plus loan pricing method is that it gives little regard to the
competition from other lenders while setting the loan price.
TRUE
Rose - Chapter 17 #69
70. The basic strength of the below-prime market pricing model is that it allows the bank to lend at
low money market interest rates plus a small margin to cover risk exposure and provide a
profit margin.
TRUE
Rose - Chapter 17 #70
71. The basic strength of the below-prime market pricing model is that there are narrow margins or
markups on loans.
TRUE
Rose - Chapter 17 #71
FALSE
Rose - Chapter 17 #72
FALSE
Rose - Chapter 17 #73
74. According to the textbook, small business lending by banks is on the decline.
TRUE
Rose - Chapter 17 #74
75. The amount of business lending tends to rise during periods of expansion.
TRUE
Rose - Chapter 17 #75
76. The amount of business lending tends to fall during recessionary periods.
TRUE
Rose - Chapter 17 #76
A. self-
liquidatin
g.
B. working capital loan.
C. interim construction loan.
D. asset-based loan.
E. None of the options is correct.
A. working
capital
loans.
B. term loans.
C. interim construction financing.
D. durable goods loan.
E. None of the options is correct.
A. working
capital
loan.
B. project loan.
C. bullet loan.
D. interim construction loan.
E. None of the options is correct.
A. interim
constructio
n.
B. project loan.
C. working-capital loan.
D. revolving credit line.
E. None of the options is correct.
A. factor
ing
B. floor planning
C. project loan
D. revolving line of credit
E. None of the options is correct.
A. the
borrower's
cash flow.
B. assets pledged as collateral.
C. goodwill of the borrower.
D. the borrower's net worth.
E. None of the options is correct.
A. Profita
bility
B. Coverage
C. Operating efficiency
D. Liquidity
E. All are categories of ratios that bankers will look for.
A. lender
protection
program.
B. environmental risk assessment program.
C. lender liability security program.
D. environmental pollution control program.
E. None of the options is correct.
Rose - Chapter 17 #85
A. fixed
assets.
B. accounts receivable.
C. inventories.
D. personal property.
E. None of the options is correct.
A. Customer's
control over
expenses
B. Customer's liquidity
C. Customer's operating efficiency
D. Customer's profitability
E. None of the options is correct.
A. Asset-Based
Financing
B. Working capital loan
C. Security dealer financing
D. Revolving credit financing
E. None of the options is correct.
A. Interim
Construction
Financing
B. Working capital loan
C. Security dealer financing
D. Revolving credit financing
E. None of the options is correct.
Rose - Chapter 17 #92
A. Self-liquidating
inventory loan
B. Working capital loan
C. Security dealer financing
D. Revolving credit financing
E. None of the options is correct.
A. Self-liquidating
inventory loan
B. Working capital loan
C. Security dealer financing
D. Revolving credit financing
E. None of the options is correct.
A. an
LBO.
B. a revolving line of credit.
C. a working capital loan.
D. a syndicated loan.
E. None of the options is correct.
A. Expense
control
measures
B. Operating efficiency measures
C. Coverage measures
D. Liquidity measures
E. Leverage measures
A. Expense
control
measures
B. Operating efficiency measures
C. Coverage measures
D. Liquidity measures
E. Leverage measures
A. Profitability
measure
B. Market indicator
C. Contingent liability
D. Marketability of the product or service
E. None of the options is correct.
Rose - Chapter 17 #99
A. Liquidity
measure
B. Market indicator
C. Contingent liability
D. Marketability of the product or service
E. None of the options is correct.
A. times-prime
pricing
method.
B. market-based pricing method.
C. cost-plus loan pricing method.
D. prime-plus pricing method.
E. customer profitability analysis.
A. cost-plus loan
pricing method.
B. price leadership model.
C. below-prime rate pricing model.
D. customer profitability analysis.
E. None of the options is correct.
A. price
leadership
model.
B. below-prime pricing model.
C. cost-plus loan pricing method.
D. customer profitability analysis.
E. None of the options is correct.
A. It considers the
competition from other
lenders.
B. It allows the bank to compete more aggressively with th
C. It considers the marginal cost of raising loanable funds.
D. It takes the whole customer relationship into account.
E. None of the options is correct.
A. It considers the
competition from other
lenders.
B. It allows the bank to compete more aggressively with th
C. It considers the cost of loanable funds and the operatin
D. It takes the whole customer relationship into account.
E. None of the options is correct.
Rose - Chapter 17 #109
A. It considers the
competition from other
lenders.
B. It allows the bank to compete more aggressively with th
C. It considers the cost of loanable funds and the operatin
D. It takes the whole customer relationship into account.
E. None of the options is correct.
A. It considers the
competition from other
lenders.
B. It allows the bank to compete more aggressively with th
C. It considers the cost of loanable funds and the operatin
D. It takes the whole customer relationship into account.
E. None of the options is correct.
A. $450,
000
B. $480,000
C. $510,000
D. $560,000
E. None of the options is correct.
A. The cost-plus
loan pricing
method
B. The price leadership model
C. The below-prime rate pricing model
D. Customer profitability analysis
E. None of the options is correct.
A. $332,
500
B. $665,000
C. $300,000
D. $320,000
E. None of the options is correct.
A. 10.00
percent
B. 8.20 percent
C. 10.25 percent
D. 13.75 percent
E. None of the options is correct.
A. $359,
100
B. $396,900
C. $378,000
D. $399,000
E. $438,900
A. working
capital
loans.
B. asset-backed loans.
C. syndicated loans.
D. construction loans.
E. inventory loans.
A. declin
ing.
B. rising.
C. relatively constant.
D. one with no pattern.
E. one with an unknown pattern.
A. commerci
al loans.
B. retail loans.
C. real estate loans.
D. credit card loans.
E. None of the options is correct.
A. Self-liquidating
inventory loan
B. Asset-based financing
C. Interim construction financing
D. Security dealer financing
E. Retailer and equipment financing
A. Self-liquidating
inventory loan
B. Working capital loan
C. Interim construction financing
D. Security dealer financing
E. Retailer and equipment financing
A. Self-liquidating
inventory loan
B. Working capital loan
C. Interim construction financing
D. Security dealer financing
E. Retailer and equipment financing
A. Self-liquidating
inventory loan
B. Working capital loan
C. Interim construction financing
D. Security dealer financing
E. Retailer and equipment financing
A. Term
business
loan
B. Revolving credit financing
C. Long-term project loan
D. Leveraged buyout
E. Syndicated loan
Rose - Chapter 17 #127
A. Term
business
loan
B. Revolving credit financing
C. Long-term project loan
D. Leveraged buyout
E. Syndicated loan
A. Term
business
loan
B. Revolving credit financing
C. Long-term project loan
D. Leveraged buyout
E. Syndicated loan
A. Term
business
loan
B. Revolving credit financing
C. Long-term project loan
D. Leveraged buyout
E. Syndicated loan
A. Wages and
salaries/Net
sales
B. Accounts receivables/(Annual credit sales/360)
C. Net income after taxes/Net sales
D. Income before interest and taxes/Interest payments
E. (Current assets - Inventory)/Current liabilities
A. Wages and
salaries/Net
sales
B. Accounts receivables/(Annual credit sales/360)
C. Net income after taxes/Net sales
D. Income before interest and taxes/Interest payments
E. (Current assets - Inventory)/Current liabilities
A. Wages and
salaries/Net
sales
B. Accounts receivables/(Annual credit sales/360)
C. Net income after taxes/Net sales
D. Income before interest and taxes/Interest payments
E. (Current assets - Inventory)/Current liabilities
A. Wages and
salaries/Net
sales
B. Accounts receivables/(Annual credit sales/360)
C. Net income after taxes/Net sales
D. Income before interest and taxes/Interest payments
E. (Current assets - Inventory)/Current liabilities
A. Selling and
administrative
expenses/Net sales
B. Net sales/Total assets
C. Current assets - Current liabilities
D. Net income/Total assets
E. Long-term debt/(Long-term debt + Net worth)
A. Selling and
administrative
expenses/Net sales
B. Net sales/Total assets
C. Current assets - Current liabilities
D. Net income/Total assets
E. Long-term debt/(Long-term debt + Net worth)
139. A bank feels that a firm has expenses that are too
high. What ratio are they most likely to examine to
address this concern?
A. Selling and
administrative
expenses/Net sales
B. Net sales/Total assets
C. Current assets - Current liabilities
D. Net income/Total assets
E. Long-term debt/(Long-term debt + Net worth)
A. Selling and
administrative
expenses/Net sales
B. Net sales/Total assets
C. Current assets - Current liabilities
D. Net income/Total assets
E. Long-term debt/(Long-term debt + Net worth)
A. Selling and
administrative
expenses/Net sales
B. Net sales/Total assets
C. Current assets - Current liabilities
D. Net income/Total assets
E. Long term debt/(Long term debt + Net worth)
A. 10.00
percent
B. 22.22 percent
C. 44.44 percent
D. 50.00 percent
E. None of the options is correct.
A. 18
days
B. 45 days
C. 72 days
D. 162 days
E. None of the options is correct.
A. $9,0
00
B. $4,500
C. $4,000
D. $2,000
E. None of the options is correct.
A. 22.50
percent
B. 44.44 percent
C. 50.00 percent
D. 88.89 percent
E. None of the options is correct.
A. 1.00
×
B. 2.00 ×
C. 0.33 ×
D. 3.00 ×
E. 1.50 ×
A. Standard
and Poors
B. Moody's
C. Dun and Bradstreet
D. Morgan Stanley
E. None of the options is correct.
A. $4,0
00
B. $15,000
C. $6,000
D. $8,000
E. None of the options is correct.
A. Statement of
cash flows
B. Pro forma statement
C. Balance sheet
D. Income statement
E. None of the options is correct.
A. 8.5
percen
t
B. 9.0 percent
C. 12.0 percent
D. 9.5 percent
E. None of the options is correct.
A. 8.5
percen
t
B. 9 percent
C. 12 percent
D. 9.5 percent
E. None of the options is correct.
A. Asset-based
financing
B. Retailer and equipment financing
C. Syndicated loans
D. Term business loans
E. Revolving credit financing
A. Facto
ring
B. Retailer and equipment financing
C. Syndicated loans
D. Term business loans
E. Revolving credit financing
A. asset-based
financing.
B. retailer credit financing.
C. operating capital credit financing.
D. credit card receivables financing.
E. revolving credit financing.
A. recourse
basis.
B. resort basis.
C. nonrecourse basis.
D. sponsorship basis.
E. leverage basis.
A. Environment
al liabilities
B. Limiting regulations
C. Unfunded pension liabilities
D. Litigation or pending lawsuits against firms
E. Underfunded pension liabilities