Mock Exam
Mock Exam
Mock Exam
INVESTING
SPECIMEN PAPER
Version 3: Tested from 1 October 2021
Key Information
Number of questions 100
Time allowed 2 hours 20 minutes
Target pass mark The pass mark of the exam is between 60% and 70%
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Note to candidates
The specimen exam paper should NOT be viewed as a primary
source of learning. By its nature, a specimen exam paper will only
cover proportion of the learning outcomes.
Candidates are strongly advised to develop a fundamental
understanding of the curriculum in order to demonstrate the
competence required to pass the examination.
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Question allocation across the syllabus is balanced on the guidance of psychometric and
industry specialists. The following question allocation for Version 3 of the Certificate in ESG
Investing is provided as a broad indication of the relative ‘weighting’ of different parts of the
syllabus in examinations from 1 October 2021.
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1. A majority of the research papers on the topic find that companies with long standing good
practice in terms of sustainability tend to
A. Outperform their peers in both accounting performance and stock markets returns.
C. Outperform their peers in accounting performance but underperform in stock market returns.
2. Justin runs an equity fund for a large insurance company which has signed on to the UN
Global Compact Principles and the Principles for Responsible Investment. His investment
strategy will need to
A. iii.
B. i and ii.
C. ii and iii.
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4. A Sovereign Wealth Fund selecting an investment manager with an ESG strategy is likely
to focus more on the manager’s approach to:
5. Which of these least reflects how qualitative ESG data is used in company analysis?
A. By adjusting a valuation.
6. Adjusting the Discounted Cash Flow when integrating ESG into traditional financial
analysis is:
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7. Which action would be undertaken first by an investor wanting to follow an engagement
strategy with a company in a cost-effective way?
8. Which of the following ESG factor adjustments should increase an analyst's valuation
of a company relative to its peers?
9. A private wealth manager uses a data provider to screen out companies involved with
tobacco and finds that the process eliminates nearly all consumer companies. As
consumer companies are a large percentage of the benchmark index, the manager would
prefer not to eliminate the whole sector.
What method would be the most precise to reduce the number of companies which are
screened out?
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10. What is an indirect environmental impact of a paper company cutting trees and
transporting them to its production plant?
C. Deforestation.
11. Which approach is most likely to result in an analyst aggregating data into an ESG
score?
B. Fundamental analysis.
C. Stock picking.
D. Quantitative modelling.
12. What impact will a high ESG rating have on a company's cost of capital?
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13. Which of the following sectors have the greatest risk of increased insurance costs due to
physical climate change?
14. ABC Investment Management owns a 2% stake in a large telecom company, which is in
the media, about a surge of employee suicides attributed to pressures in the workplace.
Mary, a senior analyst at ABC Investment Management, would like to engage with the
company on the issue and sees that a quarterly earnings conference call is coming up.
15. Which of the following statements is generally accepted as not true for companies which
score well on ESG metrics relative to companies scoring less well?
A. They are better able to anticipate environmental change risks and opportunities.
B. They enjoy valuation premiums due to changing investor concerns and preferences.
C. They are more disposed to longer term strategic thinking and planning.
D. They are more likely to grow rapidly and offer higher short term returns.
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16. What is the result of an analyst failing to correctly model the risks and opportunities
associated with ESG?
B. Systematic overestimation of both high ESG performers and ESG under performers.
C. Systematic underestimation of both high ESG performers and ESG under performers.
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17. Several questions are associated with the following case study. The material given in the
case study will not change.
CBT’s Annual General Meeting (AGM) is two months away. Patrick Weeze is a portfolio
manager who owns a significant number of CBT shares in his portfolio. His fund is a
concentrated portfolio with high idiosyncratic risk and, as a result, Patrick believes that a
detailed analysis of the governance of each of his portfolio holdings is paramount to its
long-term performance. He reviews the relevant documentation regarding CBT’s AGM
and notes the following:
− CBT provides information on the total amount of CEO remuneration, but no detail on the
Key Performance Indicators (KPIs) that influence variable compensation. The CEO’s total
compensation last year was GBP 1.2 million, 30% of which comprised fixed salary.
− CBT currently has 10 individuals sitting on its board, 3 of whom are independent. The
Chairman is the former CEO who stepped down last year.
− One of the resolutions to be voted at the AGM was put forward by a minority shareholder.
The investor asks the company to produce a report on how climate change may affect the
company’s strategy and financial stability in the long-term.
Patrick is discussing CBT's financial model with his financial analyst. He asks the analyst
to consider how the model may take into account the KPIs for the CEO's variable
remuneration which are not disclosed. He is presented with 4 options.
A. Increase the company's estimated costs for next year by an additional GBP 1.2 million
to account for the lack of transparency regarding the KPIs.
B. Reduce the company’s current total costs by GBP 360,000, as there are no concerns
regarding the fixed salary portion of the compensation.
C. Increase the cost of capital from 4.6% to 4.8% to reflect the increased risk stemmed
from uncertainty around alignment of interest.
D. Decrease the cost of capital from 4.6% to 4.4% to reflect the reduced level of certainty
around alignment of interest.
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18. Several questions are associated with the following case study. The material given in the
case study will not change.
CBT’s Annual General Meeting (AGM) is two months away. Patrick Weeze is a portfolio
manager who owns a significant number of CBT shares in his portfolio. His fund is a
concentrated portfolio with high idiosyncratic risk and, as a result, Patrick believes that a
detailed analysis of the governance of each of his portfolio holdings is paramount to its
long-term performance. He reviews the relevant documentation regarding CBT’s AGM
and notes the following:
− CBT provides information on the total amount of CEO remuneration, but no detail on the
Key Performance Indicators (KPIs) that influence variable compensation. The CEO’s total
compensation last year was GBP 1.2 million, 30% of which comprised fixed salary.
− CBT currently has 10 individuals sitting on its board, 3 of whom are independent. The
Chairman is the former CEO who stepped down last year.
− One of the resolutions to be voted at the AGM was put forward by a minority shareholder.
The investor asks the company to produce a report on how climate change may affect the
company’s strategy and financial stability in the long-term.
− .
Patrick believes that the Chair cannot be considered as an independent member of the
board. He schedules an engagement meeting with the Chair to discuss the matter.
A. The Chair steps down and the CEO assumes the chairmanship, and one of the
independent directors becomes the lead independent director.
B. The Chair steps down and remains on the board, and one of the existing independent
directors is elected Chair.
D. The Chair steps down from the Chair role, and a newly elected independent
director is appointed Chair.
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19. Several questions are associated with the following case study. The material given in the
case study will not change.
CBT’s Annual General Meeting (AGM) is two months away. Patrick Weeze is a portfolio
manager who owns a significant number of CBT shares in his portfolio. His fund is a
concentrated portfolio with high idiosyncratic risk and, as a result, Patrick believes that a
detailed analysis of the governance of each of his portfolio holdings is paramount to its
long-term performance. He reviews the relevant documentation regarding CBT’s AGM
and notes the following:
− CBT provides information on the total amount of CEO remuneration, but no detail on the
Key Performance Indicators (KPIs) that influence variable compensation. The CEO’s total
compensation last year was GBP 1.2 million, 30% of which comprised fixed salary.
− CBT currently has 10 individuals sitting on its board, 3 of whom are independent. The
Chairman is the former CEO who stepped down last year.
− One of the resolutions to be voted at the AGM was put forward by a minority shareholder.
The investor asks the company to produce a report on how climate change may affect the
company’s strategy and financial stability in the long-term.
When Patrick attempts to set up a call with CBT's Investor Relations to discuss
governance matters, they push back suggesting that these have no relevance to the
company.
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Which argument can Patrick use to best highlight the importance of appropriate
governance to enterprises?
A. A meta study by Friede, Busch and Bassen has shown that the majority of studies
showed a positive correlation between governance and corporate financial
performance.
B. The CFA Institute's 2017 ESG survey showed that governance has the strongest
correlation with company margin growth.
C. Enron's case provides evidence that governance is simple and failures usually link to
one single factor.
D. Bernile, Bhagwat and Yonker's 2017 study concludes that board diversity adds to
governance complexity, thus destroying company value.
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20. Several questions are associated with the following case study. The material given in the
case study will not change.
CBT’s Annual General Meeting (AGM) is two months away. Patrick Weeze is a portfolio
manager who owns a significant number of CBT shares in his portfolio. His fund is a
concentrated portfolio with high idiosyncratic risk and, as a result, Patrick believes that a
detailed analysis of the governance of each of his portfolio holdings is paramount to its
long-term performance. He reviews the relevant documentation regarding CBT’s AGM
and notes the following:
− CBT provides information on the total amount of CEO remuneration, but no detail on the
Key Performance Indicators (KPIs) that influence variable compensation. The CEO’s total
compensation last year was GBP 1.2 million, 30% of which comprised fixed salary.
− CBT currently has 10 individuals sitting on its board, 3 of whom are independent. The
Chairman is the former CEO who stepped down last year.
− One of the resolutions to be voted at the AGM was put forward by a minority shareholder.
The investor asks the company to produce a report on how climate change may affect the
company’s strategy and financial stability in the long-term.
What is Patrick least likely to take into consideration when making a decision regarding
his vote on the shareholder resolution?
A. The extent to which the company and its business model is exposed to climate
change risks.
B. To what extent, the company already provides information on the topic of climate
change risk.
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21. What do corporate governance structures in France and the US have in common?
A. Chief Executive and Chairman of the Board are typically one person.
D. Two-tier boards.
C. Retrofitting a building.
D. Desalinating water.
23. Sienna reviews a large retailer faced with a sex equality law suit with a potential £4 billion
in pay out claims. How should she adjust her financial model?
A. Adjust the employee expense line to reflect £4 billion in pay out over 10 years.
B. Do nothing as the company has a good case and may not have to pay.
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24. Which of these statements best describes responsible investing?
B. ESG factors taken into account to mitigate risk with a focus on financial return.
C. Investments made in a way that captures returns while achieving an intentional effect.
D. ESG factors taking into account to mitigate risk with a focus on capturing ESG opportunities.
25. Bill is a philanthropist who is approached by four charitable organisations that each claim
to have a solution that reduces mortality by 15% in their specific area of focus if they
receive $300 million. Bill's aim is to reduce mortality rates as much as possible. Which
one of the following charities should he choose?
26. How can climate-related scenario analysis be used as an effective tool in portfolio
management?
ii. By assessing the portfolio's alignment with the Paris Agreement temperature target.
A. i
B. i and ii
C. i, ii and iii
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27. Several questions are associated with the following case study. The material given in the
case study will not change.
Daniel Stinner was asked by the head of Research at Lopse Ratings to propose a
methodology to rate sovereigns. Lopse Ratings is a well regarded rating agency, but it
has been falling behind its peers because, whilst it has integrated ESG within corporate
issuers, it has not yet integrated ESG within sovereign issuers.
After a few months of research in the industry and within Lopse, Daniel proposed the
following to the Head of Research:
E, S and G weights to a final ESG score reflect the extent that the individual factor is a
driver from a credit perspective.
Scores range from factors that individually are adequately managed or contributing to the
sovereign’s financial capacity (5) to those which may impose a significant strain on
financial streams (1). They do not make value judgments on whether a sovereign
engages in 'good' or 'bad' ESG practices. Instead, they draw out how E, S and G factors
are influencing the credit rating decision.
Political risk, rule of law and corruption have been key drivers of rating actions in the past,
indicating that governance was already playing a role in the rating model. It should be
made explicit that these are governance-related matters, and thus considered as the ‘G’
within ESG. No other governance issue was deemed material across all types of
sovereigns. Data could be gathered from the World Bank's Governance Indicators
(WBGI) and Transparency International.
Social factors also have an important influence on sovereign ratings. Certain factors are
related to government’s accountability, while others impact the longer-term productivity,
and thus growth (plus indirectly, taxing capability) of the country. These factors are
considered as the ‘S’ within ESG. Environmental risks, the ‘E’ within ESG, were identified
as more idiosyncratic to each country based on their location and dependency.
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The weighted average of the factors within each of the E, S and G pillars provide the
score for that pillar, and the weighted average of the pillars provide the final ESG score
for the sovereign issuer.
Daniel provided examples of the rating system applied to two different sovereigns, as
detailed below.
In order to provide his boss with greater context of the ESG rating for each of the
countries, Daniel briefly describes a few characteristics of each.
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Which of the below are most likely part of the description for each company?
A. 1
B. 2
C. 3
D. 4
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28. Several questions are associated with the following case study. The material given in the
case study will not change.
Daniel Stinner was asked by the head of Research at Lopse Ratings to propose a
methodology to rate sovereigns. Lopse Ratings is a well regarded rating agency, but it
has been falling behind its peers because, whilst it has integrated ESG within corporate
issuers, it has not yet integrated ESG within sovereign issuers.
After a few months of research in the industry and within Lopse, Daniel proposed the
following to the Head of Research:
E, S and G weights assigned to a final ESG score reflect the extent that the individual
factor is a driver from a credit perspective.
Scores range from factors that are individually adequately managed or contribute to the
sovereign’s financial capacity (highest, 5) to those, which may impose a significant strain
on financial streams (lowest, 1). They do not make value judgments on whether a
sovereign engages in 'good' or 'bad' ESG practices. Instead, they draw out how E, S and
G factors are influencing the credit rating decision.
Political risk, rule of law and corruption have been key drivers of rating actions in the past,
indicating that governance already played a role in the rating model. It should be made
explicit that these are governance-related matters, and thus considered as the ‘G’ within
ESG. No other governance issue was deemed material across all types of sovereigns.
Data could be gathered from the World Bank's Governance Indicators (WBGI) and
Transparency International.
Social factors also have an important influence on sovereign ratings. Certain factors are
related to government’s accountability, while others impact the longer-term productivity,
and thus growth (plus indirectly, taxing capability) of the country. These factors are
considered as the ‘S’ within ESG. Environmental risks, the ‘E’ within ESG, were identified
as more idiosyncratic to each country based on their location and dependency.
Weighted average of the factors within each of the E, S and G pillars provide the score for
that pillar, and the weighted average of the pillars provide the final ESG score for the
sovereign issuer.
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Daniel provided examples of the rating system applied to two different sovereigns, as
detailed below.
What might be a reasonable distribution of weight among each of the E, S and G pillars?
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29. Several questions are associated with the following case study. The material given in the
case study will not change.
Daniel Stinner was asked by the head of Research at Lopse Ratings to propose a
methodology to rate sovereigns. Lopse Ratings is a well regarded rating agency, but it
has been falling behind its peers because, whilst it has integrated ESG within corporate
issuers, it has not yet integrated ESG within sovereign issuers.
After a few months of research in the industry and within Lopse, Daniel proposed the
following to the Head of Research:
E, S and G weights to a final ESG score reflect the extent that the individual factor is a
driver from a credit perspective. Scores range from factors that individually are adequately
managed or contributing to the sovereign’s financial capacity (5) to those which may
impose a significant strain on financial streams (1). They do not make value judgments on
whether a sovereign engages in 'good' or 'bad' ESG practices. Instead, they draw out how
E, S and G factors are influencing the credit rating decision.
Political risk, rule of law and corruption have been key drivers of rating actions in the past,
indicating that governance was already playing a role in the rating model. It should be
made explicit that these are governance-related matters, and thus considered as the ‘G’
within ESG. No other governance issue was deemed material across all types of
sovereigns. Data could be gathered from the World Bank's Governance Indicators
(WBGI) and Transparency International.
Social factors also have an important influence on sovereign ratings. Certain factors are
related to government’s accountability, while others impact the longer-term productivity,
and thus growth (plus indirectly, taxing capability) of the country. These factors are
considered as the ‘S’ within ESG. Environmental risks, the ‘E’ within ESG, were identified
as more idiosyncratic to each country based on their location and dependency.
Weighted average of the factors within each of the E, S and G pillars provide the score for
that pillar, and the weighted average of the pillars provide the final ESG score for the
sovereign issuer.
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Daniel provided examples of the rating system applied to two different sovereigns, as
detailed below.
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30. Several questions are associated with the following case study. The material given in the
case study will not change.
Daniel Stinner was asked by the head of Research at Lopse Ratings to propose a
methodology to rate sovereigns. Lopse Ratings is a well regarded rating agency, but it
has been falling behind its peers because, whilst it has integrated ESG within corporate
issuers, it has not yet integrated ESG within sovereign issuers.
After a few months of research in the industry and within Lopse, Daniel proposed the
following to the Head of Research:
E, S and G weights to a final ESG score reflect the extent that the individual factor is a
driver from a credit perspective. Scores range from factors that individually are adequately
managed or contributing to the sovereign’s financial capacity (5) to those which may
impose a significant strain on financial streams (1). They do not make value judgments on
whether a sovereign engages in 'good' or 'bad' ESG practices. Instead, they draw out how
E, S and G factors are influencing the credit rating decision.
Political risk, rule of law and corruption have been key drivers of rating actions in the past,
indicating that governance was already playing a role in the rating model. It should be
made explicit that these are governance-related matters, and thus considered as the ‘G’
within ESG. No other governance issue was deemed material across all types of
sovereigns. Data could be gathered from the World Bank's Governance Indicators
(WBGI) and Transparency International.
Social factors also have an important influence on sovereign ratings. Certain factors are
related to government’s accountability, while others impact the longer-term productivity,
and thus growth (plus indirectly, taxing capability) of the country. These factors are
considered as the ‘S’ within ESG. Environmental risks, the ‘E’ within ESG, were identified
as more idiosyncratic to each country based on their location and dependency.
Weighted average of the factors within each of the E, S and G pillars provide the score for
that pillar, and the weighted average of the pillars provide the final ESG score for the
sovereign issuer.
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Daniel provided examples of the rating system applied to two different sovereigns, as
detailed below.
How might Country A improve its score for Climate Resilience in the short to medium-term?
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31. Several questions are associated with the following case study. The material given in the
case study will not change.
Daniel Stinner was asked by the head of Research at Lopse Ratings to propose a
methodology to rate sovereigns. Lopse Ratings is a well regarded rating agency, but it
has been falling behind its peers because, whilst it has integrated ESG within corporate
issuers, it has not yet integrated ESG within sovereign issuers.
After a few months of research in the industry and within Lopse, Daniel proposed the
following to the Head of Research:
E, S and G weights to a final ESG score reflect the extent that the individual factor is a
driver from a credit perspective. Scores range from factors that individually are adequately
managed or contributing to the sovereign’s financial capacity (5) to those which may
impose a significant strain on financial streams (1). They do not make value judgments on
whether a sovereign engages in 'good' or 'bad' ESG practices. Instead, they draw out how
E, S and G factors are influencing the credit rating decision.
Political risk, rule of law and corruption have been key drivers of rating actions in the past,
indicating that governance was already playing a role in the rating model. It should be
made explicit that these are governance-related matters, and thus considered as the ‘G’
within ESG. No other governance issue was deemed material across all types of
sovereigns. Data could be gathered from the World Bank's Governance Indicators
(WBGI) and Transparency International.
Social factors also have an important influence on sovereign ratings. Certain factors are
related to government’s accountability, while others impact the longer-term productivity,
and thus growth (plus indirectly, taxing capability) of the country. These factors are
considered as the ‘S’ within ESG. Environmental risks, the ‘E’ within ESG, were identified
as more idiosyncratic to each country based on their location and dependency.
Weighted average of the factors within each of the E, S and G pillars provide the score for
that pillar, and the weighted average of the pillars provide the final ESG score for the
sovereign issuer.
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Daniel provided examples of the rating system applied to two different sovereigns, as
detailed below.
What might explain the different trends Country A and Country B are experiencing with
regards to demographics?
A. In developed markets, such as Country A, the ratio between the active and inactive part
of the workforce drops.
B. In developed markets, such as Country B, the ratio between the active and inactive part
of the workforce rises.
C. In developing markets, such as Country B, the ratio between the active and inactive
part of the workforce drops.
D. In developing markets, such as Country A, the ratio between the active and inactive
part of the workforce drops.
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32. A company which produces bottled water and pledges to use 50% recycled plastics is
using
33. Which comment on the data included in ESG integration databases is most accurate?
C. Data outputs will correlate with data from other ESG databases.
34. Alex is a corporate bond analyst at AVX Investment Management and is responsible for a
£4 billion portfolio of utility bonds with a range of credit ratings and ESG scores. He has
been directed to engage with all the utility companies, whose bonds TBD holds, on their
plans to reduce carbon emissions.
Using the PRI’s guide for ESG engagement, Alex should start with the
A. Largest holdings with high credit ratings.
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35. Several questions are associated with the following case study. The material given in the
case study will not change.
TTN, unlike most of its peers, owns the manufacturing plants which supply parts for its
phones. 80% of TTN’s manufacturing personnel are contractors, while the industry
average is 40%. Two years ago, TTN was subject to a non-governmental organisation
(NGO) campaign requesting that it offered contractors working conditions and pay similar
to that of employees. TTN agreed to most of the NGO’s requests.
A. TTN is most likely to benefit from increased demand from offshoring as globalisation
increases.
B. Costs will decrease as manufacturing jobs are cut due to increased automation.
D. Increase in social media will naturally lead to increased advertisement sale by TTN.
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36. Several questions are associated with the following case study. The material given in the
case study will not change.
TTN, unlike most of its peers, owns the manufacturing plants which supply parts for its
phones. 80% of TTN’s manufacturing personnel are contractors, while the industry
average is 40%. Two years ago, TTN was subject to a non-governmental organisation
(NGO) campaign requesting that it offered contractors working conditions and pay similar
to that of employees. TTN agreed to most of the NGO’s requests.
Which of the following company-specific characteristics, describe how Lemon's risks to labour
rights are impacted?
A. Its risks are lower than industry average because a lower percentage of its work force
is directly employed.
C. Risks are reduced because older individuals have less concerns about corporate
social responsibility than the younger generation.
D. Insourcing its manufacturing enables retention of greater control of its supply chain and
thus, risks.
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37. Several questions are associated with the following case study. The material given in the
case study will not change.
TTN, unlike most of its peers, owns the manufacturing plants which supply parts for its
phones. 80% of TTN’s manufacturing personnel are contractors, while the industry
average is 40%. Two years ago, TTN was subject to a non-governmental organisation
(NGO) campaign requesting that it offered contractors working conditions and pay similar
to that of employees. TTN agreed to most of the NGO’s requests.
How might a portfolio manager interpret the financial implications of TTN agreeing to offer
contractors the same working conditions as employees?
A. Cost increases in the short and long-term, and lower share price volatility due to
reduced risk of labour disruption
C. Only employees’ salary and working conditions impact the company, hence costs
and risks remain the same.
D. The cost of capital is increased in the financial model as a result of providing greater labour
rights to contractors.
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38. Several questions are associated with the following case study. The material given in the
case study will not change.
TTN, unlike most of its peers, owns the manufacturing plants which supply parts for its
phones. 80% of TTN’s manufacturing personnel are contractors, while the industry
average is 40%. Two years ago, TTN was subject to a non-governmental organisation
(NGO) campaign requesting that it offered contractors working conditions and pay similar
to that of employees. TTN agreed to most of the NGO’s requests.
Lemon publicises on its website and in its annual report that it regularly performs audits
across its operations to ensure compliance with the International Labour Organisation
(ILO)’s International Labour Standards.
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39. Exclusionary screening is historically most common in which of these regions?
A. Europe.
B. United States.
C. Asia.
D. Canada.
40. The Bangladesh Investor Initiative is intended to address which social factor?
A. Forced labour.
B. Freedom of association.
D. Living wage.
41. How have companies not benefitted from changes in family structures?
D. Women often enter the workforce at lower pay rates than men.
42. Which form of risk will not be lowered by the integration of ESG into a firm's investment
process?
A. Market risk.
C. Investment risk.
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43. Why do most corporate governance codes require audits?
44. What name is given to a company's failure to manage ESG risk which is manageable?
A. Sustainability decomposition.
B. Management exposure.
C. Sustainability gap.
D. Management gap.
45. Which of these ESG service providers does not produce company-level ESG ratings?
B. Inrate.
C. Thomson Reuters.
D. MSCI.
46. What should be included in the process for directors to be made accountable to
shareholders?
C. Review of the accounts by the Board at the Annual General Meeting (AGM).
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47. Which of these ESG issues included in a materiality map would be best described as a
Social factor?
A. Resource management.
C. Executive remuneration.
49. An ongoing situation for a company which has negative ESG implications is called a:
A. Chronic case.
B. Controversy case.
C. Current case.
D. Catastrophic case.
50. Given that an analyst is able to judge the materiality of an ESG factor, which of the
following is true?
A. It will then be possible to assess the level of impact of the ESG factor.
B. Other analysts with the same data will make the same materiality judgement.
C. The interaction of the ESG factor with financial performance will still be uncertain.
CFA Institute 35
51. Several questions are associated with the following case study. The material given in the
case study will not change.
J Justin Deyzak is conducting a review of the food industry and came comes across two
companies which are interesting investment opportunities. Because he is aware that
agricultural companies can be highly exposed to climate risk, he investigates Company
A and Company B’s business models in order to assess those risks. Below is the
summary of his findings.
Company A
Company A’s main products are premium cookies and cakes, which it sells retail in niche
markets across the Middle East. It has a franchise model in which it maintains the design
and recipe of its product in-house, while outsourcing raw material and production to
partners. Suppliers for the key raw material, flour, are based in Yemen and Libya, which
have been plagued with water scarcity in the past few years.
Company B
Company B is based in Mexico and produces chocolate paste. To ensure the standard of
quality required by its clients, the company owns all of the farms that supply the cocoa.
The company has been growing through acquiring farmland acquisitions. It identifies
locations where water sources and soil are of high quality but poor farming techniques
have led to inefficiencies. It purchases the land and then works with the farmers to help
them transition to more sustainable and productive farming methods.
Which of the following below best describes how Justin should assess the physical risk of
the companies under review?
A. Company A has high physical risk because its key input is harvested in areas of
water scarcity.
B. Company B has no physical risk because the soil on purchased land is of high quality.
C. Company B has high physical risk because farming techniques may result in physical
harm to workers.
D. Company A and B have similar physical risks as a result of being classified as part of
the food industry.
CFA Institute 36
52. Several questions are associated with the following case study. The material given in the
case study will not change.
J Justin Deyzak is conducting a review of the food industry and came comes across two
companies which are interesting investment opportunities. Because he is aware that
agricultural companies can be highly exposed to climate risk, he investigates Company
A and Company B’s business models in order to assess those risks. Below is the
summary of his findings.
Company A
Company A’s main products are premium cookies and cakes, which it sells retail in niche
markets across the Middle East. It has a franchise model in which it maintains the design
and recipe of its product in-house, while outsourcing raw material and production to
partners. Suppliers for the key raw material, flour, are based in Yemen and Libya, which
have been plagued with water scarcity in the past few years.
Company B
Company B is based in Mexico and produces chocolate paste. To ensure the standard of
quality required by its clients, the company owns all of the farms that supply the cocoa.
The company has been growing through acquiring farmland acquisitions. It identifies
locations where water sources and soil are of high quality but poor farming techniques
have led to inefficiencies. It purchases the land and then works with the farmers to help
them transition to more sustainable and productive farming methods.
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Which of the following statements is true regarding transition risk?
D. Justin does not need to review regulation on deforestation in the three countries as
these would not impact transition risk.
CFA Institute 38
53. Several questions are associated with the following case study. The material given in the
case study will not change.
J Justin Deyzak is conducting a review of the food industry and came comes across two
companies which are interesting investment opportunities. Because he is aware that
agricultural companies can be highly exposed to climate risk, he investigates Company
A and Company B’s business models in order to assess those risks. Below is the
summary of his findings.
Company A
Company A’s main products are premium cookies and cakes, which it sells retail in niche
markets across the Middle East. It has a franchise model in which it maintains the design
and recipe of its product in-house, while outsourcing raw material and production to
partners. Suppliers for the key raw material, flour, are based in Yemen and Libya, which
have been plagued with water scarcity in the past few years.
Company B
Company B is based in Mexico and produces chocolate paste. To ensure the standard of
quality required by its clients, the company owns all of the farms that supply the cocoa.
The company has been growing through acquiring farmland acquisitions. It identifies
locations where water sources and soil are of high quality but poor farming techniques
have led to inefficiencies. It purchases the land and then works with the farmers to help
them transition to more sustainable and productive farming methods.
Justin would like to estimate the carbon footprint of each of the companies.
D. Emissions saved by the CEO of Company B flying on a commercial plane rather than
on a private jet.
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54. Several questions are associated with the following case study. The material given in the
case study will not change.
J Justin Deyzak is conducting a review of the food industry and came comes across two
companies which are interesting investment opportunities. Because he is aware that
agricultural companies can be highly exposed to climate risk, he investigates Company
A and Company B’s business models in order to assess those risks. Below is the
summary of his findings.
Company A
Company A’s main products are premium cookies and cakes, which it sells retail in niche
markets across the Middle East. It has a franchise model in which it maintains the design
and recipe of its product in-house, while outsourcing raw material and production to
partners. Suppliers for the key raw material, flour, are based in Yemen and Libya, which
have been plagued with water scarcity in the past few years.
Company B
Company B is based in Mexico and produces chocolate paste. To ensure the standard of
quality required by its clients, the company owns all of the farms that supply the cocoa.
The company has been growing through acquiring farmland acquisitions. It identifies
locations where water sources and soil are of high quality but poor farming techniques
have led to inefficiencies. It purchases the land and then works with the farmers to help
them transition to more sustainable and productive farming methods.
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In what way is Justin least likely to conduct scenario testing to refine his assessment of
the companies’ climate risk?
A. Justin could impose a shadow carbon tax in his financial model to quantify any
potential impact on the companies' margins.
B. Justin could obtain information on how a 2.1 degree Celsius change would impact
agricultural output in the countries to which both companies are exposed and include
that in the financial model.
C. Justin could quantify the short-term impact of extreme weather events on both
companies' preparedness for physical disruptions in his financial model
D. Justin could incorporate the impact of climate change and risk purely on the socio-
economic conditions of workers in the affected regions.
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55. Natasha completes a review of a large UK based oil company and assigns it an improving
ESG score because she is impressed by the steps it is taking to meet the Paris Agreement.
Nevertheless, she is concerned about the industry’s long-term outlook and potential for
stranded assets.
A. Adjust her discounted cash flow (DCF) model to reflect a lower cost of capital due to positive
ESG steps taken and assign a low price earnings ratio to reflect stranded assets in later
years.
B. Adjust her discounted cash flow (DCF) model in later years to reflect write offs for
stranded assets.
C. None, no action is required as the oil price is the only real variable that matters.
D. Adjust her discounted cash flow (DCF) model to reflect a higher cost of capital and
adjust book value down to reflect an impairment charge made against stranded
assets.
56. A credit portfolio manager is considering buying a Turkish phone company which he
believes has strong credit quality as reflected in single-A credit ratings assigned by two
credit rating agencies. Simultaneously, the emerging markets team is closely monitoring
election results in Turkey which has led to bond market volatility.
Why would the portfolio manager decide not to buy the phone company bonds?
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57. What are the advantages of using mapping techniques when comparing two portfolios for
ESG risk?
58. An analyst valuing a company against its peers is most likely to make which of the
following adjustments to the price-to-earnings ratio (P/E) to integrate strong ESG
characteristics?
59. What are the three parts of the Triple Bottom Line?
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60. Which of these Investment approaches would be most suitable for an investor
who wants to ensure that his/her personal, social and moral views direct the
investment decisions?
A. Ethical investing.
B. Thematic investing.
C. Impact investing.
D. Responsible investing.
61. Jane is an equity analyst at AVX Asset Management and covers a large public oil
company which she needs to assign an environmental score to. The company says it is
addressing carbon emissions, but refuses to disclose exactly what measures it is taking.
C. Suggest that AVX uses collective action to encourage the company to improve its
disclosure.
D. Take the company’s word for it and assign a high environmental score.
62. The physical impacts of climate change are most likely to be identified as a key ESG
driver for which form of institutional investor?
C. A pension fund.
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63. Several questions are associated with the following case study. The material given in the
case study will not change.
Food service operators are seeing one of the most important and growing trends in the
past decade – the “gourmetisation” of fast food into a new category of food service called
fast casual. One of the strongest restaurant concepts fast casual restaurants do not offer
a full table service; however, they do advertise higher quality food in comparison to fast
food restaurants. As a result, fast casual restaurants are perceived as an intermediate
option between fast food and casual dining, and usually priced accordingly. Fast casual is
now the fastest growing category in the food service industry.
The industry relies heavily on human capital for food preparation and customer services.
These jobs are usually low paid and require long hours. A large percentage of food
preparation and customer services jobs are filled by immigrants and young adults,
respectively.
Below is information from two German companies in the fast casual restaurant sub-
sector, which may or may not be material.
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Which of the two companies would an analyst most probably prioritise further analysis to
ensure interests between shareholders and company executives are well aligned?
A. Company A because the risks associated with the CEO’s pay are correlated with
company profits.
C. Company B because a Board with more than 12 members is at risk of being inefficient
in decision-making.
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64. Several questions are associated with the following case study. The material given in the
case study will not change.
Food service operators are seeing one of the most important and growing trends in the
past decade – the “gourmetisation” of fast food into a new category of food service called
fast casual. One of the strongest restaurant concepts fast casual restaurants do not offer
a full table service; however, they do advertise higher quality food in comparison to fast
food restaurants. As a result, fast casual restaurants are perceived as an intermediate
option between fast food and casual dining, and usually priced accordingly. Fast casual is
now the fastest growing category in the food service industry.
The industry relies heavily on human capital for food preparation and customer services.
These jobs are usually low paid and require long hours. A large percentage of food
preparation and customer services jobs are filled by immigrants and young adults,
respectively.
Below is information from two German companies in the fast casual restaurant sub-
sector, which may or may not be material.
CFA Institute 47
What conclusions might be made with regards to Company A’s working conditions in
comparison to Company B’s?
A. Company A has more employees and thus its risk associated with working conditions
is higher.
B. Company A has better working conditions as it conducts more supply chain audits per
year.
C. Company B probably has better working conditions based on its lower employee
turnover and injury rate.
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65. Several questions are associated with the following case study. The material given in the
case study will not change.
Food service operators are seeing one of the most important and growing trends in the
past decade – the “gourmetisation” of fast food into a new category of food service called
fast casual. One of the strongest restaurant concepts fast casual restaurants do not offer
a full table service; however, they do advertise higher quality food in comparison to fast
food restaurants. As a result, fast casual restaurants are perceived as an intermediate
option between fast food and casual dining, and usually priced accordingly. Fast casual is
now the fastest growing category in the food service industry.
The industry relies heavily on human capital for food preparation and customer services.
These jobs are usually low paid and require long hours. A large percentage of food
preparation and customer services jobs are filled by immigrants and young adults,
respectively.
Below is information from two German companies in the fast casual restaurant sub-
sector, which may or may not be material.
CFA Institute 49
Regulators are discussing a ban on single-use plastic. How might this impact Company A
and Company B financially?
A. Company A’s cost of capital would increase more than Company B’s because of its
higher use of single-use plastic.
B. Company A’s costs would increase by .6 multiplied by the difference between the price
of the single-use plastic and its alternative.
C. Company B’s costs would reduce by .5 multiplied by the average cost of the single-
use plastic used in its stores.
D. Company B’s costs would increase by .5 multiplied by the average cost of the
alternative to single-use plastic.
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66. Several questions are associated with the following case study. The material given in the
case study will not change.
Food service operators are seeing one of the most important and growing trends in the
past decade – the “gourmetisation” of fast food into a new category of food service called
fast casual. One of the strongest restaurant concepts fast casual restaurants do not offer
a full table service; however, they do advertise higher quality food in comparison to fast
food restaurants. As a result, fast casual restaurants are perceived as an intermediate
option between fast food and casual dining, and usually priced accordingly. Fast casual is
now the fastest growing category in the food service industry.
The industry relies heavily on human capital for food preparation and customer services.
These jobs are usually low paid and require long hours. A large percentage of food
preparation and customer services jobs are filled by immigrants and young adults,
respectively.
Below is information from two German companies in the fast casual restaurant sub-
sector, which may or may not be material.
CFA Institute 51
Based on known information, which company is expected to have less of a challenge in
managing its food supply chain risk?
A. Company A because it has more audits in absolute terms and a higher percentage of
internationally sourced produce.
B. Company B because it has more audits per unit of revenue and a higher percentage
of locally sourced produce.
C. Company B because it has smaller revenue and thus lower reputational risk.
D. Company A and B have similar challenges because of the number of audits per unit of
profit are alike.
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67. Several questions are associated with the following case study. The material given in the
case study will not change.
Food service operators are seeing one of the most important and growing trends in the
past decade – the “gourmetisation” of fast food into a new category of food service called
fast casual. One of the strongest restaurant concepts fast casual restaurants do not offer
a full table service; however, they do advertise higher quality food in comparison to fast
food restaurants. As a result, fast casual restaurants are perceived as an intermediate
option between fast food and casual dining, and usually priced accordingly. Fast casual is
now the fastest growing category in the food service industry.
The industry relies heavily on human capital for food preparation and customer services.
These jobs are usually low paid and require long hours. A large percentage of food
preparation and customer services jobs are filled by immigrants and young adults,
respectively.
Below is information from two German companies in the fast casual restaurant sub-
sector, which may or may not be material.
CFA Institute 53
New restaurant regulation will limit the amount of food that can go to waste (as a
percentage of food purchased).
A. Company A because it wastes 4.8 tonnes of food more than Company B per year.
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68. Which best describes stewardship of assets over which someone acts as the guardian?
A. The preserving and enhancing of the long-term value of assets over time.
B. The reconciling of the assets with records produced by third party holders of the
assets.
C. The putting in place of a material measure to physically protect the assets from theft.
D. The participating at the annual general meeting on behalf of the asset owner.
69. Which of the following challenges can auditors face in preventing fraud in company
accounts?
ii. Auditors rely to a great degree on the accuracy of a company’s internal accounting
system.
iii. Audits are based on samples and not all figures are reviewed.
iv. Only segments of a company’s business that are deemed material are reviewed.
A. ii and iii.
C. i, ii and iii.
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70. The correlation between ESG performance and corporate financial performance is most
commonly observed to be
A. Negative.
B. Close to zero.
C. Positive.
D. Highly variable.
71. Which of the following is not an escalation measure that can be used across all asset
classes?
72. Sharon is the Chief Investment Officer of BCM, a boutique asset manager that primarily
invests in UK equities. BCM has a small stake in RTC media company which has not
been efficient in removing terrorist-related content circulated on its social networking
website.
Since BCM’s resources are limited, Sharon decides to join the Investor Forum, which will
allow her to
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73. A large US tobacco company has resisted engagement attempts by an investor forum to
influence it to encourage people to quit smoking. The investor forum has now put an item
on the upcoming AGM agenda proposing a new set of board members.
A. May seek a ruling from the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) to have the
item removed from the agenda.
74. The CFA Institute and CFA UK define ESG integration as the
B. Exclusion of securities from client portfolios, which fall below specified minimum
standards.
C. Prioritisation of ESG factors ahead of all other client considerations during the
investment process.
75. Which approach to ESG investing would require the most intensive use of resources by
an investment manager?
A. Negative screening.
B. Active ownership.
C. Best-in-class.
D. Thematic investing.
76. How should ESG portfolio management remuneration alignment be designed into the mandate?
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77. Caroline runs a portfolio, which screens out securities with low ESG scores from the
benchmark index. She then reweights the portfolio with the remaining securities according
to their market capitalisations. To address tracking error, she runs a portfolio optimisation
programme.
B. Yes, but the portfolio is now overweight securities that correlate with omitted
securities.
C. Yes, the removal of a small portion of securities from the benchmark will not impact
relative performance in the long run.
D. Yes, this strategy generally outperforms its benchmark when the excluded securities
underperform.
78. Chang Ying runs an equity portfolio using ESG integration techniques which looks at E, S,
and G independently. To reduce the downside tail risk of the portfolio whilst preserving
the largest investable universe possible she could avoid:
79. Green bond funds would best be described as which form of investing?
A. Exclusionary investing.
C. Best-in-class investing.
D. Thematic investing.
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80. Which of the following ESG index providers specifically considers governance?
A. Bloomberg.
B. FTSE Russell.
C. MSCI.
D. Thomson Reuters.
81. Which of these factors will be greater for an investor who is passively exposed to an ESG
index than for an investor with actively managed investments?
82. What should be the first stage of a portfolio management process, which employs ESG
integration?
83. Which of the following indices would provide a benchmark for an ESG real estate
investor?
A. FTSE4Good.
B. MSCI ESG.
C. GRESB.
D. S&P ESG.
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84. Which of the following will result in more effective engagement by investors?
85. A pension fund which excludes high carbon emissions companies from a global portfolio would
like to measure its ESG performance against the Morgan Stanley Capital International (MSCI)
World index.
A. Stock selections.
B. Reported returns.
C. Investor’s beliefs.
D. Excluded companies.
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87. Which of the following is correct regarding voting by ESG fund managers?
B. Active ownership models give less weight to Intergenerational issues than traditional
models.
C. All assets within a portfolio may fall in value due to physical environmental damage.
D. Companies with higher pollution levels relative to their peers, generally report higher short
term profits.
89. Impact investment offerings of small to medium size are generally most appropriate for:
C. Pension funds.
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90. Norms based screening is most popular in which region?
A. Canada.
B. Europe.
C. Japan.
D. USA.
91. Reporting attribution of returns resulting from ESG integration is likely to be most accurate
when:
92. Mario runs an ESG scored portfolio, which has an E score lower than its benchmark.
What can he expect the client to focus more on, when reviewing the performance of the
fund?
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93. What is the best way a company’s Board can prevent excessive executive remuneration
and keep executives accountable to shareholders?
94. How are agency, alignment and executive pay interrelated in corporate governance?
95. The transition to a low carbon economy is expected to open up significant investment
requirements.
What would likely have the most financial risk for investors?
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96. Which of these is not a common use for ESG data sets?
97. What positive effect can the globalisation of economies have on business models?
98. What are the three ESG engagement dynamics highlighted by the PRI as creating value?
99. Which of the following factors will be higher for alternative investments than for other
financial investments?
A. Correlated returns.
B. Liquidity premium.
C. Reporting obligations.
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100. Which comment about a typical quantitative approach to ESG analysis is correct?
A. Factors such as value and growth are integrated alongside ESG factors.
C. The research stage will only include internal proprietary ESG data.
D. The ESG dataset tends to be smaller than that used by a fundamental adviser.
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Answers
1 A 51 A
2 A 52 C
3 D 53 D
4 A 54 D
5 D 55 D
6 B 56 C
7 A 57 D
8 A 58 A
9 C 59 B
10 B 60 A
11 D 61 C
12 A 62 D
13 D 63 D
14 C 64 C
15 D 65 B
16 A 66 B
17 C 67 D
18 D 68 A
19 A 69 D
20 D 70 C
21 A 71 B
22 C 72 C
23 D 73 A
24 B 74 A
25 C 75 B
26 C 76 A
27 A 77 B
28 D 78 D
29 B 79 D
30 A 80 D
31 A 81 D
32 A 82 C
33 D 83 C
34 B 84 B
35 C 85 B
36 D 86 C
37 A 87 A
38 A 88 A
39 A 89 A
40 C 90 B
41 B 91 D
42 A 92 B
43 C 93 C
44 D 94 D
45 A 95 A
46 C 96 D
47 D 97 C
48 D 98 C
49 B 99 D
50 C 100 A
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