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Diploma in Regulated Financial Planning · 2025/2026

R02 Cheat Sheet

Investment Principles & Risk — All 9 Learning Outcomes

2025/2026 Syllabus 100 MCQs · 2 hours 72 standard · 28 multiple response All 9 Learning Outcomes
LO1 Asset Classes LO2 Macro-Economics LO3 Investment Theories LO4 Time Value of Money LO5 Risk Types LO6 Investment Products & Tax LO7 Advice Process LO8 Investment Planning LO9 Performance Key Figures
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10 exam-style R02 questions. See your score instantly, then use the cheat sheet to fill the gaps.

Question 1 of 10
LO1Characteristics, inherent risks, behaviour & correlation of asset classes17 standard / 11 multiple response

Asset class risk/return spectrum (lowest → highest risk)

CashGiltsInvestment grade bondsCommercial propertyHigh-yield bondsUK equitiesGlobal equitiesEmerging markets / alternatives

Equities — key ratios

RatioFormulaWhat it tells you
Price/Earnings (P/E)Share price ÷ EPSHow much investors pay per £1 of earnings. High P/E = high growth expectations.
Dividend yield(Dividend per share ÷ Share price) × 100Income return as % of current price
Running yield(Annual coupon ÷ Clean price) × 100Income return from a bond at current price
Redemption yieldRunning yield ± annual capital gain/loss to maturityTotal return if bond held to maturity
Simplified redemption yield: Annual capital change = (Redemption value − Clean price) ÷ Years to maturity. Example: Clean price £97, coupon £5, 5 years. Capital gain/yr = £0.60. Redemption yield ≈ 5.60/98.50 = 5.69%

Fixed-interest securities

Conventional gilts

  • UK Government — near-zero default risk
  • Fixed coupon; fixed redemption value (£100 nominal)
  • Price and yield move inversely
  • Clean price excludes accrued interest

Index-linked gilts

  • Both coupon AND redemption value linked to RPI
  • Protect against inflation risk
  • Lower running yield than conventional gilts

Corporate bonds

  • Issued by companies; carry credit/default risk
  • Investment grade = BBB− and above
  • Credit spread = extra yield over gilts of same maturity
Exam trap: The nominal (par) value of a gilt at redemption is always £100 regardless of what you paid.

Correlation

Correlation valueMeaningDiversification benefit
+1.0Assets move perfectly togetherNone
0No linear relationshipGood
−1.0Assets move in perfect oppositionMaximum

Stamp Duty & PTM Levy

TaxRateKey rule
SDRT0.5% of purchase priceElectronic purchase via CREST. AIM shares — exempt.
Stamp Duty0.5% (rounded up to nearest £5)Paper stock transfer form. Transactions over £1,000.
PTM Levy£1.00 flatCREST transactions over £10,000 only.

LO2Macro-economic environment & its impact on asset classes6 standard format

Inflation types

  • CPI = official UK measure; excludes housing costs
  • RPI = includes mortgage interest; used for index-linking
  • Disinflation = inflation slowing (still positive)
  • Deflation = falling price level
  • Stagflation = high inflation + stagnant growth

Policy types

  • Monetary policy = Bank of England: base rate, QE
  • Fiscal policy = Government: taxation, spending
  • Expansionary = lower rates / more spending
  • Contractionary = higher rates / less spending

Yield curve shapes

  • Normal (upward) = most common; economic growth expected
  • Flat = uncertainty / transition
  • Inverted = historically a reliable recession predictor

Interest rates and asset class impacts

If interest rates RISE →If interest rates FALL →
Existing bond prices fallExisting bond prices rise
Sterling may appreciateSterling may depreciate
Equity valuations come under pressureEquity valuations tend to rise
Cash deposits become more attractiveCash returns fall; investors seek yield elsewhere

LO3Merits & limitations of the main investment theories7 standard format

Efficient Market Hypothesis (EMH)

FormWhat prices reflectImplication
Weak formAll historical price dataTechnical analysis cannot consistently beat market
Semi-strong formAll publicly available informationFundamental analysis cannot consistently beat market
Strong formAll information — including insider informationNo one can consistently beat market

CAPM

CAPM formula: Expected return = Risk-free rate + β × (Market return − Risk-free rate)

Example: Risk-free rate 2%, market return 8%, beta 1.3 → Expected return = 2% + 1.3 × 6% = 9.8%

Beta (β)

  • β = 1: moves with market
  • β > 1: more volatile than market
  • β < 1: less volatile than market

Alpha (α)

  • Excess return above CAPM-predicted return
  • Positive α = manager has added value
  • Alpha ≠ simply return minus benchmark

Modern Portfolio Theory

  • Diversification reduces risk without proportionally reducing return
  • Systematic risk cannot be diversified away
  • Non-systematic risk can be diversified away

Behavioural finance biases

BiasWhat it meansInvestment impact
OverconfidenceOverestimating own abilityExcessive trading, under-diversification
AnchoringOver-relying on the first piece of informationRefusing to accept a stock has fundamentally changed
Recency biasExtrapolating recent trends into the futureChasing recent winners; panic selling after falls
Disposition effectSelling winners too early; holding losers too longPoor portfolio outcomes
Loss aversionPain of loss felt more acutely than equivalent gainOverly conservative; avoiding necessary risk
Home biasOver-weighting domestic investmentsLack of geographic diversification

LO4Time value of money3 standard format

Future Value (compounding)

FV = PV × (1 + r)ⁿ

£5,000 at 4% for 3 years = £5,000 × 1.04³ = £5,624.32

Present Value (discounting)

PV = FV ÷ (1 + r)ⁿ

£14,000 in 4 years at 5% = £14,000 ÷ 1.05⁴ = £11,517.83

AER formula: AER = (1 + r/n)ⁿ − 1
6% compounded quarterly: AER = (1.015)⁴ − 1 = 6.14%
Real return (Fisher equation): Real return = (1 + nominal) ÷ (1 + inflation) − 1
Nominal 7%, inflation 2%: = (1.07 ÷ 1.02) − 1 = 4.90%

LO5Nature & impact of the main types of risk on investment performance5 standard format

Systematic risk (market risk)

  • Affects the whole market — cannot be diversified away
  • Measured by beta
  • Examples: recessions, interest rate changes, political events

Non-systematic risk (specific risk)

  • Affects specific companies or sectors — CAN be diversified away
  • At ~15–20 well-diversified holdings, most specific risk is eliminated
  • Examples: fraud, product recall, management failure
Risk typeDescriptionMost relevant to
Credit / default riskIssuer fails to pay coupon or principalCorporate bonds, especially high-yield
Interest rate / duration riskBond prices fall when rates rise. Higher duration = greater sensitivity.Fixed-income portfolios
Inflation riskReturns fail to keep pace with inflationCash, fixed income
Liquidity riskCannot sell investment at fair value quicklyDirect property, small-caps, hedge funds
Currency riskExchange rate movements reduce sterling value of overseas returnsInternational equities, overseas bonds
Reinvestment riskCoupon payments reinvested at lower rates if rates fallHigh-coupon bonds
Counterparty riskThe other party to a contract defaultsDerivatives, structured products
Gearing riskBorrowing amplifies losses as well as gainsInvestment trusts; leveraged investors
Gearing loss calculation: Investor has £8,000 own capital + borrows £2,000 = £10,000 invested. Shares fall 10% → loss = £1,000. After repaying loan, investor has £7,000. Loss on own capital = £1,000/£8,000 = 12.5% (not 10% — gearing amplifies the loss).

LO6Characteristics, risks & tax of investment products15 standard / 7 multiple response

Collective investment structures compared

FeatureUnit trustOEICInvestment trustETF
Open/closed endedOpen-endedOpen-endedClosed-endedOpen-ended (typically)
PricingDual (bid/offer)Single priceMarket priceReal-time on exchange
Discount/premium to NAV?NoNoYesVery small
Gearing permitted?NoNoYesSome
Investment trust discount: "A significant discount to NAV" is a characteristic of investment trusts only — not unit trusts or OEICs.

Investment bonds — onshore vs offshore

FeatureOnshore bondOffshore bond
Tax within fundTax paid at ~20% within fundGross roll-up — minimal tax within fund
5% withdrawal allowanceYes — deferred until surrenderYes — same rule
Basic-rate taxpayer on surrenderNo further liability (20% deemed paid)20% tax payable (no credit)
Higher-rate taxpayer20% additional (40%−20% credit)40% liability (no credit)
Assignment as gift — chargeable event?YesNo

EIS, SEIS and VCT

FeatureEISSEISVCT
IT relief30% (max £1m)50% (max £200,000)30% (max £200,000)
Min holding for IT relief3 years3 years5 years
CGT on disposalExempt after 3 yearsExempt after 3 yearsExempt
CGT deferralYesNoNo
DividendsTaxableTaxableTax-free
IHT Business ReliefAfter 2 yearsAfter 2 yearsNo

Offshore funds — reporting vs non-reporting

Fund typeGains on disposal taxed asRate
Reporting fundCapital gain (CGT)18% / 24%
Non-reporting fundIncome (offshore income gain)Up to 45%
Non-reporting offshore fund gains = taxed as income, not CGT. Higher-rate taxpayer pays 40%/45% vs 24% on a reporting fund.

FSCS protection limits

Type of claimProtection limit
Bank/building society deposits£85,000 per person per authorised institution
Temporary high balances£1,000,000 for up to 6 months
Investment business£85,000
Insurance (long-term)100% of the claim
NS&I products100% — backed by HM Treasury

LO7Applying the investment advice process11 standard format
Attitude to risk ≠ capacity for loss. A client may feel brave (high attitude to risk) but have very little financial buffer (low capacity for loss). The adviser must use the lower of the two.

Investment management styles

StyleApproach
Active managementManager uses judgement to outperform benchmark. Higher charges. Potential to add alpha.
Passive / index trackingReplicates a market index. Lower charges. Tracks the market.
ValueBuys undervalued securities with low P/E ratios
GrowthInvests in companies with above-average earnings growth expectations
MomentumInvests in securities with strong recent price performance
ContrarianBuys assets currently out of favour, betting on sentiment reversal
Pound cost averaging: Investing a fixed amount at regular intervals. Does NOT guarantee a lower average price. Primary benefit: reduces risk of poor market timing.

Ethical investment

ApproachDescription
Negative screeningExcluding companies in specific sectors (armaments, tobacco). "Dark green" = strict exclusions.
Positive screeningActively seeking companies with strong ESG performance
ESG integrationIncorporating environmental, social and governance factors into mainstream analysis
Engagement / stewardshipUsing shareholder voting rights to influence company behaviour

LO8Principles of investment planning8 standard format

Strategic asset allocation (SAA)

The long-term target allocation, based on the client's objectives, risk profile and time horizon. Represents the benchmark position.

Tactical asset allocation (TAA)

Short-term deviations from the strategic allocation to exploit market opportunities. Returns to SAA when opportunity passes.

Rebalancing: If a portfolio drifts from its target allocation (e.g. equities rise from 60% to 72%), sell equities and buy bonds to restore the 60% target. Applies in both accumulation and decumulation phases.
Core-satellite approach: Low-cost passive fund forms the stable core. Active, specialist or higher-risk funds form satellites — balancing cost efficiency with targeted outperformance potential.

Fettered fund of funds

  • Invests only within the same fund group
  • Potentially lower charges
  • Limited manager diversity

Unfettered fund of funds

  • Can invest across any fund group
  • Greater manager and style diversity
  • Potentially higher charges (dual layer of fees)
OCF vs PTR: OCF = annual running cost as % of assets. Does NOT include dealing/transaction costs. PTR captures transaction activity. A fund can have low OCF but high PTR — they are independent.

LO9Analysing the performance of investments10 multiple response

Risk-adjusted performance measures

MeasureFormulaRisk measure usedBest used when
Sharpe ratio(Portfolio return − Risk-free rate) ÷ Standard deviationTotal riskComparing portfolios with different total risk levels
Treynor ratio(Portfolio return − Risk-free rate) ÷ BetaSystematic riskComparing well-diversified portfolios
Information ratio(Portfolio return − Benchmark return) ÷ Tracking errorActive riskEvaluating active management skill
Jensen's alphaActual return − CAPM expected returnSystematic riskMeasuring manager value-add vs market risk taken
Higher is better for all four measures. Only the information ratio does NOT need the risk-free rate. Sharpe uses standard deviation (total volatility). Treynor uses beta (systematic risk only).

Sharpe ratio example

Portfolio return: 12%
Risk-free rate: 2%
Standard deviation: 8%

Sharpe = (12% − 2%) ÷ 8% = 1.25

Information ratio example

Portfolio return: 9%
Benchmark return: 7%
Tracking error: 4%

IR = 2% ÷ 4% = 0.50

TWR vs MWR

MeasureWhat it capturesBest used for
Time-weighted return (TWR)Performance of the fund itself — unaffected by timing of cash flowsComparing fund managers
Money-weighted return (MWR)The actual return experienced by the specific investorMeasuring what a specific client actually achieved

FIGURESKey figures & tax tables 2025/2026Provided in exam

Income tax & CGT 2025/2026

£12,570
Personal Allowance
20%
Basic rate (£0–£37,700)
40%
Higher rate (£37,701–£125,140)
45%
Additional rate (£125,141+)
£3,000
CGT annual exemption (individuals)
18%
CGT — basic rate
24%
CGT — higher/additional rate
14%
BADR rate from Apr 2025

ISA limits 2025/2026

£20,000
Adult ISA annual limit
£9,000
Junior ISA annual limit
£4,000
Lifetime ISA max annual contribution
25%
LISA government bonus (max £1,000/yr)

Common R02 exam traps

Trap questionCorrect answer
Does a significant discount to NAV indicate an investment trust or unit trust?Investment trust only
Non-reporting offshore fund — how are gains taxed?As income at marginal rate (NOT CGT)
Alpha vs. excess return over benchmark?Alpha ≠ simple outperformance. Alpha is outperformance adjusted for the level of market risk taken (via CAPM)
Does the OCF include dealing/transaction costs?No — OCF excludes dealing costs
Sharpe ratio uses beta or standard deviation?Standard deviation. Treynor uses beta.
VCT dividends — taxable?Tax-free — one of the key VCT benefits (unlike EIS)
Information ratio — does it require the risk-free rate?No — only benchmark return and tracking error needed
PTM levy rate on a £12,000 CREST transaction?£1.00 flat
Currency-hedged share class — does it remove currency risk?Reduces — does not guarantee full elimination

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