Use this as your high-yield IMT Exam 1 review. Pair it with the Syllabus for coverage and Practice for speed.
IMT in one picture (process beats trivia)
flowchart TD
A["Client facts (KYC + constraints)"] --> B["Risk profile + behavioural cues"]
B --> C["Investment Policy Statement (IPS)"]
C --> D["Asset allocation (policy ranges)"]
D --> E["Implementation (securities/products)"]
E --> F["Monitor + rebalance + report"]
F --> C
Official exam snapshot (CSI)
| Item | Official value |
|---|
| Question format | Multiple-choice |
| Questions per exam | 110 |
| Exam duration | 3 Hours |
| Passing grade | 60% |
| Attempts allowed per exam | 3 |
Official exam weightings (IMT Exam 1)
| Exam topic | Weighting |
|---|
| Investment Policy and Understanding Risk Profile | 10% |
| Asset Allocation and Investment Management | 8% |
| Equity Securities | 19% |
| Debt Securities | 17% |
| Managed Products | 19% |
| International Investing and Taxation | 7% |
| Managing Your Client’s Investment Risk | 5% |
| Impediments to Wealth Accumulation | 8% |
| Portfolio Monitoring and Performance Evaluation | 7% |
CSI chapter map (official curriculum headings)
These chapter headings and topic bullets are from CSI’s official IMT Curriculum page.
- Chapter 1 - The Portfolio Management Process: Seven steps; regulatory information; client discovery; objectives/constraints; IPS; communication skills
- Chapter 2 - Understanding a Client’s Risk Profile: Behavioural finance; questionnaires/limitations; biases; personality types; bias diagnosis for allocation; robo-advisors + behavioural biases
- Chapter 3 - Asset Allocation and Investment Strategies: Asset classes; allocation process/benefits; strategic/tactical/dynamic; asset location; equity strategies
- Chapter 4 - Investment Management Today: (CSI lists this chapter title without topic bullets on the curriculum page)
- Chapter 5 - Equity Securities: Individual equities vs managed products; equity features; Canadian + U.S. equity markets
- Chapter 6 - Economic and Industry Analysis: Macro analysis; strategy links; forecasts; key metrics; industry analysis
- Chapter 7 - Company Analysis and Valuation: IFRS vs GAAP; company analysis; valuation models; resource companies; limits of accounting data
- Chapter 8 - Technical Analysis: Chart/statistical/sentiment/intermarket; technical uses; combining technical + fundamental
- Chapter 9 - Debt Securities: Reasons to invest; features; risks; debt market trading mechanics
- Chapter 10 - Valuation, Term Structure and Pricing: Valuing debt; term structure; determining bond prices
- Chapter 11 - Price Volatility and Strategies: Key concepts of bond price volatility
- Chapter 12 - Conventionally Managed Products: Mutual funds; closed-end funds; wrap; overlay; fees/turnover; taxes vs returns
- Chapter 13 - Non-Conventional Assets + Structures: Hedge funds; commodities; real estate; infrastructure; private markets; collectibles; digital assets; ways to invest
- Chapter 14 - International Investing: Theory; benchmarks; advantages/risks; vehicles; skills; model limitations
- Chapter 15 - International Taxation: Double taxation; sources of tax law; jurisdiction; source vs residence taxation
- Chapter 16 - Managing Investment Risk: Risk types; measurement; diversification; hedging with options/futures/CFDs
- Chapter 17 - Impediments to Wealth Accumulation: Taxes/inflation/fees; tax-minimization; tax-efficient investments; cost efficiency
- Chapter 18 - Monitoring + Performance Evaluation: Monitoring and performance evaluation
Sources: https://www.csi.ca/en/learning/courses/imt/curriculum and https://www.csi.ca/en/learning/courses/imt/exam-credits
Portfolio management process (exam-friendly checklist)
The “seven steps” you should be able to describe
- Establish the relationship + mandate
- Gather client facts (objectives, constraints, risk profile)
- Draft the IPS
- Build strategic asset allocation (policy + ranges)
- Implement (securities/products + trading plan)
- Monitor + rebalance + review
- Report + communicate + update IPS when facts change
IPS mini-template (what to include)
- Objectives: return/income/growth/preservation (measurable where possible)
- Constraints: time horizon, liquidity, tax, legal/regulatory, unique constraints
- Risk profile: tolerance + capacity (and how you resolve conflicts)
- Asset mix policy: target weights + allowable ranges
- Implementation: permitted instruments, rebalancing rules, benchmark choice
- Monitoring: frequency, triggers, and who approves changes
Risk profile + behavioural finance (high yield)
Three “risks” you must separate
- Risk tolerance (willingness): how the client feels about volatility/drawdowns
- Risk capacity (ability): whether the client can financially absorb losses
- Risk required: the return needed to meet goals (may exceed tolerance/capacity)
If these conflict, the safest response is usually: reset goals/constraints and re-align expectations.
Biases → what advisors do (fast mapping)
| Bias you suspect | How it shows up | High-scoring response |
|---|
| Loss aversion | panic selling after declines | re-anchor to plan; pre-commit rebalancing rules |
| Overconfidence | concentrated bets; “I’m sure” | position limits; require rationale + downside cases |
| Anchoring | stuck on purchase price | reframe: forward-looking risk/return |
| Confirmation bias | ignores contrary data | require “disconfirming evidence” checklist |
| Recency bias | extrapolates last year | zoom out; use long horizons + scenarios |
| Herding | wants what others buy | refocus on IPS; suitability + diversification |
Questionnaire limitation (the line to remember)
Risk questionnaires are inputs, not answers. Validate with: behaviour, history, constraints, and scenario questions.
Asset allocation + rebalancing (must-know)
Strategic vs tactical vs dynamic (one-liners)
- Strategic: long-term policy weights aligned to IPS
- Tactical: temporary tilts around policy based on valuation/macros
- Dynamic: systematic adjustments driven by a rules-based model
Portfolio expected return and weights
Expected portfolio return:
\[
E[R_p]=\sum_{i=1}^{n} w_i E[R_i]
\]
What it tells you: The portfolio’s expected return is the weighted average of the expected returns of its components.
Symbols (what they mean):
- \(E[R_p]\): expected return of the portfolio.
- \(w_i\): portfolio weight of asset \(i\) (fraction of portfolio value).
- \(E[R_i]\): expected return of asset \(i\).
- \(n\): number of assets.
How it’s tested (IMT):
- Compute expected return given weights and expected returns.
- Identify which exposure drives expected return (largest weight × high/low return).
Common pitfalls:
- Mixing percent and decimal returns (8 vs 0.08).
- Weights not summing to 1 (missing cash).
Portfolio weights sum to 1:
\[
\sum_{i=1}^{n} w_i = 1
\]
What it tells you: Your allocation uses 100% of the portfolio value (everything is accounted for across holdings).
Exam use: If weights don’t sum to 1, you’re missing something (often cash) or have a rounding error.
Correlation + diversification
Covariance:
\[
\sigma_{ij}=\rho_{ij}\,\sigma_i\,\sigma_j
\]
What it tells you: Covariance (how returns move together in absolute terms) equals correlation × the two volatilities.
Symbols (what they mean):
- \(\sigma_{ij}\): covariance between returns \(i\) and \(j\).
- \(\rho_{ij}\): correlation between returns \(i\) and \(j\) (from -1 to +1).
- \(\sigma_i,\sigma_j\): standard deviations (volatilities).
Exam takeaway: Correlation is unitless; covariance scales with volatility. Lower correlation usually improves diversification.
Two-asset portfolio variance:
\[
\sigma_p^2 = w_1^2\sigma_1^2 + w_2^2\sigma_2^2 + 2w_1w_2\sigma_{12}
\]
What it tells you: Portfolio variance depends on each asset’s volatility and the covariance term \(\sigma_{12}\).
How to connect it: Replace \(\sigma_{12}\) with \(\rho_{12}\sigma_1\sigma_2\) using the covariance formula above.
Interpretation (fast):
- If \(\rho_{12}\) is low/negative, the covariance term is smaller/negative → lower portfolio volatility.
- If correlation rises in stress, diversification benefits shrink.
Rule: Lower correlation → better diversification, but correlations can rise during crises.
Rebalancing quick math
- Compute current weights \(w_i = \frac{V_i}{\sum V}\).
- Compare to target weights/ranges.
- Trade to bring back to target (or within bands).
Holding period return (HPR)
\[
HPR = \frac{P_1 - P_0 + D}{P_0}
\]
What it tells you: Total return over a period = price change plus distributions, relative to the starting price.
Symbols (what they mean):
- \(P_0\): starting price.
- \(P_1\): ending price.
- \(D\): distributions received (dividends/interest).
Common pitfalls: forgetting \(D\), or dividing by \(P_1\) instead of \(P_0\).
Real return (inflation-adjusted)
\[
1+r_{real} = \frac{1+r_{nom}}{1+\pi}
\]
What it tells you: The return after inflation (purchasing-power return).
Symbols (what they mean):
- \(r_{nom}\): nominal return.
- \(\pi\): inflation rate.
Exam shortcut: for small rates, \(r_{real} \approx r_{nom}-\pi\) (approximation).
Arithmetic vs geometric
- Arithmetic mean: average of periodic returns (one-period expectation)
- Geometric mean: compound growth rate (long-term wealth growth)
Beta and CAPM intuition
\[
\beta_i = \frac{\text{Cov}(R_i, R_m)}{\text{Var}(R_m)}
\]
What it tells you: \(\beta\) measures sensitivity to the market (systematic risk).
Interpretation:
- \(\beta\approx 1\): moves like the market.
- \(\beta>1\): amplifies market moves.
- \(0<\beta<1\): less sensitive than the market.
\[
E[R_i] = R_f + \beta_i\,(E[R_m]-R_f)
\]
What it tells you: A “required/expected” return given market exposure (CAPM).
Symbols (what they mean):
- \(R_f\): risk-free rate.
- \(E[R_m]-R_f\): market risk premium.
- \(\beta_i\): market sensitivity.
Exam use: Compare required returns for different betas; higher beta → higher required return (all else equal).
Sharpe ratio (risk-adjusted return)
\[
Sharpe = \frac{E[R_p]-R_f}{\sigma_p}
\]
What it tells you: Excess return per unit of total volatility (risk-adjusted performance).
Common pitfalls: comparing Sharpe ratios using different horizons (monthly vs annual) or mixing gross vs net returns.
Tracking error: \(\sigma_{active}\) (volatility of active return).
\[
IR = \frac{E[R_p - R_b]}{\sigma_{active}}
\]
What it tells you: Active return per unit of active risk (tracking error).
Interpretation: Higher IR suggests more consistent active value-add relative to risk taken.
Time-weighted vs money-weighted returns (know the difference)
Time-weighted return (TWR)
Multiply subperiod returns (insensitive to external cash flows):
\[
TWR = \prod_{k=1}^{m} (1+r_k) - 1
\]
What it tells you: The investment performance independent of external cash flows (manager skill measure).
How it’s tested: Break returns into subperiods between deposits/withdrawals and chain-link them.
Money-weighted return (MWR / IRR)
Solve for \(r\) such that:
\[
0 = \sum_{t=0}^{n} \frac{CF_t}{(1+r)^t}
\]
What it tells you: The investor’s realized return accounting for the timing and size of cash flows.
Exam cue: If the question emphasizes contributions/withdrawals and “investor experience,” choose money-weighted/IRR.
Rule: If cash flows are large/timed poorly, MWR can differ materially from TWR.
Equities (what gets tested)
Top-down → bottom-up (fast structure)
- Macro regime (growth/inflation/rates)
- Industry structure (competition, cyclicality, regulation)
- Company fundamentals (quality, profitability, leverage, cash flow)
- Valuation (what you pay matters)
Common ratios (interpretation, not memorization)
| Ratio | What it’s saying |
|---|
| P/E | how much you pay per unit earnings |
| P/B | market value relative to book equity |
| ROE | profitability relative to equity |
| Debt/Equity | leverage and financial risk |
| Margin | pricing power + cost control |
Gordon growth (dividend discount):
\[
P_0 = \frac{D_1}{r-g}
\]
DCF skeleton:
\[
V_0 = \sum_{t=1}^{n} \frac{CF_t}{(1+r)^t} + \frac{TV_n}{(1+r)^n}
\]
Technical analysis (don’t overpromise)
Use it for: trend/risk controls/entry-exit framing. Avoid “certainty” language.
Fixed income (must-know)
Bond price (PV of cash flows)
\[
P = \sum_{t=1}^{n} \frac{C}{(1+y)^t} + \frac{F}{(1+y)^n}
\]
Duration approximation (price sensitivity)
\[
\frac{\Delta P}{P} \approx -D_{mod}\,\Delta y
\]
Convexity adjustment:
\[
\frac{\Delta P}{P} \approx -D_{mod}\,\Delta y + \frac{1}{2}Cvx(\Delta y)^2
\]
Ladder vs barbell vs bullet (when you see it)
- Ladder: smooth cash flows; reduces reinvestment timing risk
- Barbell: more convexity; sensitive to curve changes
- Bullet: concentrates around a target maturity (liability matching)
Managed products (quick due diligence checklist)
When a question asks “what should you consider?”, the safe answer is often:
- mandate/objective fit
- risks (market/credit/liquidity/leverage)
- fees + turnover (net return matters)
- liquidity/structure (open-end vs closed-end)
- performance consistency + benchmark relevance
Alternatives (exam-level framing)
Alternatives are usually tested via structure + liquidity + risk.
| Alternative | Why investors use it | Main risks to name |
|---|
| Hedge funds | diversification/absolute return | leverage, liquidity gates, model risk |
| Commodities | inflation sensitivity | roll yield, volatility, drawdowns |
| Real estate | income + inflation sensitivity | valuation, leverage, liquidity |
| Private markets | illiquidity premium | lockups, opaque valuation, J-curve |
| Digital assets | speculative exposure | custody, extreme volatility, governance |
International investing + taxation (keep it simple)
Currency risk decision
- Unhedged: keep currency exposure (adds volatility)
- Hedged: reduce currency volatility (costs + hedge mismatch)
Tax basics (exam-safe language)
- Cross-border investing can create withholding taxes and double taxation issues.
- Treaties and tax credits may reduce double taxation, but you should verify current rules using official sources or firm guidance.
Impediments to wealth accumulation (what to say)
- Taxes + fees + inflation compound silently.
- Behavioural errors (panic selling, chasing) can dominate outcomes.
- “Small” fee differences matter over long horizons.
Monitoring checklist
- drift vs policy ranges
- concentration and liquidity
- credit quality/duration (fixed income)
- fees/turnover/tax drag
- performance vs benchmark (and why)
- changes in client objectives/constraints
Best answer pattern
If unsure, the safest move is: re-check IPS → verify constraints → rebalance/adjust within policy → document → communicate clearly.
Glossary (high-yield IMT terms)
- Active management: deviating from a benchmark to seek excess return.
- Alpha: return above what a risk model/benchmark would predict.
- Asset allocation: choosing weights across asset classes.
- Asset class: group of securities with similar risk/return drivers.
- Asset location: placing assets in accounts to optimize after-tax outcome.
- Benchmark: reference portfolio used to evaluate performance.
- Beta: sensitivity to market movements.
- Business cycle: expansion/peak/contraction/trough pattern in economic activity.
- Capital preservation: objective to limit loss of principal.
- Compounding: earning returns on prior returns over time.
- Constraint: limit affecting portfolio choices (liquidity, tax, legal, unique).
- Correlation (\(\rho\)): co-movement measure between returns.
- Covariance: scale-dependent co-movement between returns.
- Credit spread: yield difference between risky and risk-free debt.
- Currency risk: variability due to exchange rate changes.
- Discount rate: rate used to convert future cash flows to present value.
- Diversification: spreading exposure to reduce unsystematic risk.
- Drawdown: peak-to-trough decline in portfolio value.
- Duration: interest-rate sensitivity measure for bonds.
- Efficient frontier: set of portfolios with highest return for given risk (concept).
- Expected return: probability-weighted average return.
- Fee drag: reduction in wealth due to ongoing fees.
- Fundamental analysis: valuing a security using economic/financial data.
- Geometric mean: compound growth rate over multiple periods.
- Growth investing: style emphasizing high expected growth.
- Hedge: position intended to reduce risk exposure.
- Holding period return (HPR): total return over a period.
- Home bias: preference for domestic assets beyond what diversification suggests.
- Immunization: matching duration to liabilities to reduce rate risk (concept).
- Index: rules-based measure of a market segment.
- Inflation risk: loss of purchasing power.
- Information ratio: active return per unit active risk.
- IPS (Investment Policy Statement): document defining objectives, constraints, and rules.
- IRR / Money-weighted return: return that equates PV of cash flows to zero.
- Liquidity: ability to trade without large price impact.
- Market risk: risk driven by broad market movements.
- Modified duration: duration used for price sensitivity approximation.
- Momentum: tendency for winners/losers to continue short-term (concept).
- Policy range: allowed deviation bands around target weights.
- Portfolio drift: movement away from target weights due to market moves.
- Present value (PV): value today of future cash flows discounted.
- Real return: return after inflation.
- Rebalancing: trading to restore weights to targets/ranges.
- Reinvestment risk: risk that cash flows reinvest at lower yields.
- Risk capacity: financial ability to bear loss.
- Risk tolerance: willingness to bear volatility.
- Robo-advisor: algorithm-driven portfolio service with automated allocation/rebalancing.
- Sharpe ratio: excess return per unit total risk.
- Style drift: manager deviates from stated style/mandate.
- Suitability: recommendation must fit client objectives/constraints and risk profile.
- Technical analysis: price/volume-based analysis approach.
- Term structure: relationship between yields and maturities.
- Time-weighted return: return measure that neutralizes external cash flows.
- Tracking error: volatility of active return relative to benchmark.
- Turnover: rate at which holdings change (trading frequency).
- Value investing: style emphasizing low price relative to fundamentals.
- Volatility (\(\sigma\)): dispersion of returns; commonly standard deviation.
Sources: https://www.csi.ca/en/learning/courses/imt/curriculum and https://www.csi.ca/en/learning/courses/imt/exam-credits