专业八级-511及答案解析.doc
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1、专业八级-511 及答案解析(总分:100.01,做题时间:90 分钟)一、READING COMPREHENSIO(总题数:8,分数:100.00)As a young child, Buffett was pretty serious about making money. He used to go door-to-door and sell soda pop. He and a friend used math to develop a system for picking winners in horseracing and started selling their “Stable
2、-Boy Selections“ tip sheets until they were shut down for not having a license. Later, he also worked at his grandfather“s grocery store. At the ripe age of 11, Buffett bought his first stock. When his family moved to Washington, D.C., Buffett became a paperboy for The Washington Post and its rival
3、The Times-Herald. Buffett ran his five paper routes like an assembly line and even added magazines to round out his product offerings. While still in school, he was making $175 a month, a full-time wage for many young men. When he was 14, Buffett spent $1,200 on 40 acres of farmland in Nebraska and
4、soon began collecting rent from a tenant farmer. He and a friend also made $50 a week by placing pinball machines in barber shops. They called their venture Wilson Coin Operated Machine Co. Already a successful albeit small-time businessman, Buffett wasn“t keen on going to college but ended up at Wh
5、arton at the University of Pennsylvaniahis father encouraged him to go. After two years at Wharton, Buffett transferred to his parents“ Alma Mater, the University of Nebraska in Lincoln, for his final year of college. There Buffett took a job with the Lincoln Journal supervising 50 paper boys in six
6、 rural counties. Buffett applied to Harvard Business School but was turned down in what had to be one of the worst ad missions decisions in Harvard history. The outcome ended up profoundly affecting Buffett“s life, for he ended up attending Columbia Business School, where he studied under revered me
7、ntor Benjamin Graham, the father of securities analysis who provided the foundation for Buffett“s investment strategy. From the beginning, Buffett made his fortune from investing. He started with all the money he had made from selling pop, delivering papers, and operating pinball machines. Between 1
8、950 and 1956, he grew his $9,800 kitty to $140,000. From there, he organized investment partnerships with his family and friends, and then gradually drew in other investors through word of mouth and very attractive terms. Buffett“s goal was to top the Dow Jones Industrial Average by an average of 10
9、% a year. Over the length of the Buffett partnership between 1957 and 1969, Buffett“s investments grew at a compound annual rate of 29.5%, crushing the Dow“s return of 7.4% over the same period. Buffett“s investment strategy mirrors his lifestyle and overall philosophy. He doesn“t collect houses or
10、cars or works of art, and he disdains companies that waste money on such extravagances as limousines, private dining rooms, and high-priced real estate. He is a creature of habitsame house, same office, same city, same sodaand dislikes change. In his investments, that means holding on to “core holdi
11、ngs“ such as American Express, Coca-Cola, and The Washington Post Co. “forever“. Buffett“s view of inherited money also departs from the norm. Critical of the self-indulgence of the superrich, Buffett thinks of inheritances as “privately funded food stamps“ that keep children of the rich from leadin
12、g normal, independent lives. With his own three kids, he gave them each $10,000 a yearthe tax-deductible limitat Christmas. When he gave them a loan, they had to sign a written agreement. When his daughter, also named Susie like her mother, needed $20 to park at the airport, he made her write him a
13、check for it. As for charity, Buffett“s strict standards have made it difficult for him to give much away. He evaluates charities the same way he looks for stocks: value for money, return on invested capital. He has established the Buffett Foundation, designed to accumulate money and give it away af
14、ter his and his wife“s deathsthough the foundation has given millions to organizations involved with population control, family planning, abortion, and birth control. The argument goes that Buffett can actually give away a greater sum in the end by growing his money while he“s still alive.(分数:12.00)
15、(1).According to the passage, Buffett _.(分数:3.00)A.developed the “Stable-Boy Selections“ tip sheets with his friend at age 11B.started to make money as a child working at his grandfather“s grocery storeC.worked full time as a paperboy for two rival newspapers in Washington D.C.D.had already started
16、to run their own business with his friend at the age of 14(2).The relationship between the fourth and fifth paragraphs is that _.(分数:3.00)A.the 4th generalizes and the 5th gives an exampleB.each presents one stage of the developmentC.the 5th is the logical result of the 4thD.both illustrate Buffett“
17、s academic life(3).Buffett“s investment strategy seems to reflect all of the following EXCEPT _.(分数:3.00)A.Benjamin Graham“s investment conceptionB.Buffett“s lifestyle and overall philosophyC.Buffett“s critical view of inheritancesD.Buffett“s evaluations of philanthropy(4).Which of the following is
18、NOT true, according to the passage?(分数:3.00)A.People usually tend to think of inheritances as being normal.B.Buffett“s three kids are kept from leading normal, independent lives.C.Buffett has strict standards for using the money of his Foundation.D.The Foundation has been intended to grow before Buf
19、fett“s death.New York and London may rule the roost, but other financial hubs in America and Europe have managed to carve out useful specialist niches for themselves. Chicago, for instance, consolidated its position as the world“s derivatives center earlier this year with the merger of CME (formerly
20、 the Chicago Mercantile Exchange) and the Chicago Board of Trade (CBOT). Now known as the CME Group, the former cross-town rivals trade everything from Treasury bond futures to pork bellies. But in recent years the colorful open-outcry trading floors have gradually ceded business to electronic trans
21、actions. Houston, the largest city in Texas, is home to America“s biggest energy farms, which have spawned an active cluster of energy traders and hedge funds. And Boston, with plenty of serious wealth, has become a center for asset management and private equity. Europe has developed a diverse set o
22、f financial centers ranging from big cities to island havens such as Jersey and niche markets such as Luxembourg and Dublin. Edinburgh, an established banking centre, is now touting itself as a low-cost alternative for financial operations. Among the larger hubs, Frankfurt is an important center for
23、 banking and derivatives trading through Eurex, a German-Swiss exchange, with significantly lower costs than London. It is also home to the European Central Bank. Fifteen years ago Frankfurt aspired to become a global financial center, but these days German financial giants such as Deutsche Bank and
24、 Allianz do much more business in London than in Frankfurt. The exchange has had a difficult few years, including a couple of failed forays abroad. Switzerland“s twin financial centers, Geneva and Zurich, have done well in their specialties of private banking, wealth management and, in Zurich, insur
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- 专业 511 答案 解析 DOC
