medium · FRM Part 1

A portfolio has a Sharpe ratio of 0.50. If the investor adds leverage by borrowing at the risk-free rate to double their exposure to the portfolio, what happens to the Sharpe ratio of the levered position (ignoring transaction costs)?

  1. It decreases because the cost of borrowing reduces the excess return.
  2. It remains unchanged at 0.50.
  3. It doubles to 1.00.
  4. It increases because the higher return outweighs the linear increase in volatility.

Sign up free to see the explanation and track your rank →

More FRM Part 1 practice

KomFi Academy — Stop doomscrolling. Get KomFi.

Build your intelligence, anytime, anywhere.

KomFi Academy is a curated training platform with 40,000+ practice questions, 18,000+ flashcards, on-demand video lectures, podcasts, and 4K slide decks across the topics serious professionals study: GMAT, LSAT, MCAT, Investment Banking, Private Equity (LBOs & PE math), Private Credit, Quantitative Finance, Financial Accounting, Asset- Backed Securities, Volume Profile Analysis, Order Flow Trading, Market Microstructure, Volume Spread Analysis, Elliott Wave Theory, Volume-Price Analysis, and Public Offering Frameworks.

What's inside

Topics

View pricing · Read testimonials