tezakhiago
New member
- Jun 18, 2026
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For question B, I determined the correct required return in dollars ($9.603M) and the correct dollar amount of the portfolio ($97M), but then I deducted the incoming cash flow of $2 million from the required return because it will reduce the amount the portfolio has to generate. So my final required return was different from the guideline because I factored in the outside contribution where they did not.
For C, I figured out the liquidity need will be $6.767 million, and made a note that this amount includes the $2 million contribution. The guideline answer says the liquidity is $4.676 because they deduce the $2 million earlier. Both answers are saying the same thing basically, but my final number is different from the guideline.
Can anyone spot any holes in my logic, and if the CFA will still give full marks if your answer makes sense?
Furthermore, part D, why will the return objective not increase? Why is the foundation ignoring the incoming $2 million to meet it’s spending and inflation requirements, when it then counts on it for liquidity needs? To me it seems like the foundation is setting a return requirement to meet all of it’s spending/inflation needs WITHOUT factoring in the previously guaranteed contributions, then turning around and using those contributions to help meet it’s obligations. It seems like generating a return requirement this way will INCREASE the real value of the portfolio over time, not PRESERVE it as stated in the vignette…
For C, I figured out the liquidity need will be $6.767 million, and made a note that this amount includes the $2 million contribution. The guideline answer says the liquidity is $4.676 because they deduce the $2 million earlier. Both answers are saying the same thing basically, but my final number is different from the guideline.
Can anyone spot any holes in my logic, and if the CFA will still give full marks if your answer makes sense?
Furthermore, part D, why will the return objective not increase? Why is the foundation ignoring the incoming $2 million to meet it’s spending and inflation requirements, when it then counts on it for liquidity needs? To me it seems like the foundation is setting a return requirement to meet all of it’s spending/inflation needs WITHOUT factoring in the previously guaranteed contributions, then turning around and using those contributions to help meet it’s obligations. It seems like generating a return requirement this way will INCREASE the real value of the portfolio over time, not PRESERVE it as stated in the vignette…