Course Descriptions
Accounting I (ACCT 610)
Acct 610 is an introduction to the
foundations of financial and managerial accounting. The course
covers topics that are essential for preparing, reading,
understanding, interpreting, and using financial statements that
are prepared in accordance with generally accepted accounting
principles. The course also covers uses of accounting
information for making managerial decisions.
Managerial Economics (MFE 600)
This is a course in applied
microeconomics. Theories of consumer and firm behavior will be
developed and applied to business decisions regarding allocation
of scarce resources and pricing of commodities. The objectives
are to demonstrate how the free market economy functions and how
modern managers may use microeconomic tools to manage resources
efficiently. The topics to be discussed are: The goals of a
firm, supply and demand, demand elasticity, demand estimation,,
forecasting, the theory of production and cost, the estimation
of production and cost functions, market structure and output
and pricing decisions, break-even analysis, special pricing
practices, capital budgeting, time and uncertainty, and profit
maximization under uncertainty.
Quantitative Analysis for
Financial Markets (MFE 500)
Basic tools necessary for understanding how
economic theory is applied to financial markets. Financial
economic theory is expressed in the language of mathematics and
is applied to the real world using statistics. This course
offers a blend of mathematics and statistics designed especially
for the financial market practitioner. Major topics include
solving systems of equations, optimization, probability theory
and hypothesis testing.
Accounting II (ACCT 611)
This course provides students a solid
foundation in the Environment of Financial Reporting including
the following: objectives of financial reporting, qualitative
characteristics of accounting information, proficiency with
introduction to SEC reporting requirements, audit opinions, and
standard setting at the US and international levels. Other
topics are cash flow statements, inventories,
depreciation/asset impairment, issues in revenue recognition,
bonds, leases, pensions, deferred Taxes, consolidation
processes, foreign currency translation, stock based
compensation, hedging, and financial instruments having
characteristics of both debt and equity.
Seminar in Investment (FIN
623)
Principles and theory of evaluation,
analysis, and determination of investment media. The decision
making process in the management of individual and institutional
securities portfolios. Model building and other criteria
applicable to selection, risk-return tradeoffs revision, and
evaluation of portfolio performance will be included.
Financial Management I
(FIN 620)
The role and responsibilities of today's
financial manager with special emphasis on advanced tools and
techniques for solving complex financial problems. Topics of
special interest in budgeting, funds analysis, and allocation
will be discussed.
Seminar in Money & Capital Market
(FIN 650)
The role of financial institutions in
today's economy will be studied. Specifically, market
characteristics, efficiency, regulations, and international
integration of markets are included. In addition, the roles of
institutions and the financial system will be examined.
Financial Management II
(FIN 621)
This course involves the application of
financial theory and analysis techniques to the major financial
decisions facing managers. Topics include financing current
operations, capital structure, cost of capital, dividend policy,
and investment decisions.
Statistics & Econometrics: Theory
and Applications (MFE 639)
In this course students will first study
the basic statistical concepts such as probability, various
probability distributions, and hypothesis testing. Then they
will study the classical linear regression model. Problems with
the classical model such as heterscedasticity, serial
correlation, and simultaneous equation bias will be studied.
Applications to the study of financial markets make up the next
portion of the course.
Topics include empirical models of
financial markets such as the capital asset pricing model (CAPM),
the portfolio balance model, and the arbitrage pricing theory
(APT). Time-series techniques will also be applied to test
foreign exchange market efficiency and studies of interest rate
determination, the demand for money, and models of inflation.
Advanced econometric procedures such as ARMA and GARCH modeling
will be applied to the study of these and other problems in
applied financial economics.
Macroeconomics and Business
Fluctuations (MFE 601)
Analysis of national and international
economic environments, the structure of macroeconomic systems as
well as questions and controversies concerning policy questions
and empirical estimates of key relationships. Topics will
include the following: aggregate expenditures, national income,
measurement of gross domestic product; savings and investment in
open economies; economic growth; unemployment and inflation;
fiscal policies; money supply process; asset markets and
monetary policy.
Financial Derivatives (MFE
644)
This is a risk management course. It
would deal with a contract specification, characteristics of
options and trading procedures and the pricing mechanism that
joins commodity, options, futures and futures options markets.
Examples on the use of these instruments are discussed to
illustrate how risk is managed in hedging or speculation.
This course offers an introduction to
futures and options, including the financial instruments
themselves, the markets where they are traded and strategies
which might give rise to their use. The specific items
underlying the derivatives include the traditional commodity
markets for grains, livestock, precious metals, energy and soft
commodities, and the newer financial derivative market for
stocks, stock indices, bonds and currencies.
International Trade and
Financial Economics (MFE 640)
The benefits from international trade, the
law of comparative advantage, the factor endowment explanation
of international trade, economies of scale as a basis for trade,
the preference similarity hypothesis (Linder's explanation of
international trade), the effects of trade barriers (tariffs,
quotas, etc) on domestic production, prices, and consumption,
economic integration (the European Economic Union), different
theories of exchange rate determination, spot, and forward
markets, currency swaps, interest arbitrage, interest rate
parity, portfolio theory, speculation, balance of payments,
international indebtedness, the interrelationship between
exchange rates, balance of payments, fiscal and monetary policy,
international banking: reserves, debt, and risk, and
Eurocurrency markets.
Master's Seminar (MFE 696)
Writing a research project on the topic of
your choice under the supervision of two faculty members.
Internship (MFE 670)
It involves an internship with a financial
company for a minimum of 100 hours. Once a company agrees to
offer you an internship, a letter should be submitted, on the
company’s letterhead, to the graduate chair describing your
responsibilities during the internship. At the end of the
internship, a second letter should be submitted by the company
evaluating your performance.
Return to List
|