The University of Texas at Tyler Soules College of Business Spring 2019 FINA Investments (Section 001)

Similar documents
Class Numbers: & Personal Financial Management. Sections: RVCC & RVDC. Summer 2008 FIN Fully Online

COURSE WEBSITE:

ACCT 100 Introduction to Accounting Course Syllabus Course # on T Th 12:30 1:45 Spring, 2016: Debra L. Schmidt-Johnson, CPA

FINN FINANCIAL MANAGEMENT Spring 2014

FINANCE 3320 Financial Management Syllabus May-Term 2016 *

MGT/MGP/MGB 261: Investment Analysis

Syllabus Foundations of Finance Summer 2014 FINC-UB

ECON492 Senior Capstone Seminar: Cost-Benefit and Local Economic Policy Analysis Fall 2017 Instructor: Dr. Anita Alves Pena

MGMT 4750: Strategic Management

STANDARDIZED COURSE SYLLABUS

Name: Giovanni Liberatore NYUHome Address: Office Hours: by appointment Villa Ulivi Office Extension: 312

MATH 1A: Calculus I Sec 01 Winter 2017 Room E31 MTWThF 8:30-9:20AM

Office Hours: Day Time Location TR 12:00pm - 2:00pm Main Campus Carl DeSantis Building 5136

Accounting 312: Fundamentals of Managerial Accounting Syllabus Spring Brown

Course Syllabus for Math

The University of Texas at Tyler College of Business and Technology Department of Management and Marketing SPRING 2015

BUSI 2504 Business Finance I Spring 2014, Section A

Preferred method of written communication: elearning Message

Required Text: Oltmanns, T. & Emery, R. (2014). Abnormal Psychology (8th Edition) ISBN-13: ISBN-10:

MGMT 3280: Strategic Management

Book Reviews. Michael K. Shaub, Editor

MKT ADVERTISING. Fall 2016

Class Meeting Time and Place: Section 3: MTWF10:00-10:50 TILT 221

Course Policies and Syllabus BUL3130 The Legal, Ethical, and Social Aspects of Business Syllabus Spring A 2017 ONLINE

Department of Accounting ACC Fundamentals of Financial Accounting Fall, 2015 Syllabus

Social Media Journalism J336F Unique ID CMA Fall 2012

Beginning and Intermediate Algebra, by Elayn Martin-Gay, Second Custom Edition for Los Angeles Mission College. ISBN 13:

BUSINESS FINANCE 4265 Financial Institutions

FIN 571 International Business Finance

MGMT 479 (Hybrid) Strategic Management

Pitching Accounts & Advertising Sales ADV /PR

Class Tuesdays & Thursdays 12:30-1:45 pm Friday 107. Office Tuesdays 9:30 am - 10:30 am, Friday 352-B (3 rd floor) or by appointment

The Policymaking Process Course Syllabus

AGN 331 Soil Science Lecture & Laboratory Face to Face Version, Spring, 2012 Syllabus

EDIT 576 (2 credits) Mobile Learning and Applications Fall Semester 2015 August 31 October 18, 2015 Fully Online Course

Scottsdale Community College Spring 2016 CIS190 Intro to LANs CIS105 or permission of Instructor

General Physics I Class Syllabus

Spring 2015 CRN: Department: English CONTACT INFORMATION: REQUIRED TEXT:

Course Syllabus. Alternatively, a student can schedule an appointment by .

Firms and Markets Saturdays Summer I 2014

SYLLABUS- ACCOUNTING 5250: Advanced Auditing (SPRING 2017)

POFI 1349 Spreadsheets ONLINE COURSE SYLLABUS

EDIT 576 DL1 (2 credits) Mobile Learning and Applications Fall Semester 2014 August 25 October 12, 2014 Fully Online Course

CS 100: Principles of Computing

Texas A&M University - Central Texas PSYK PRINCIPLES OF RESEARCH FOR THE BEHAVIORAL SCIENCES. Professor: Elizabeth K.

Foothill College Summer 2016

IST 440, Section 004: Technology Integration and Problem-Solving Spring 2017 Mon, Wed, & Fri 12:20-1:10pm Room IST 202

ITSC 1301 Introduction to Computers Course Syllabus

STA2023 Introduction to Statistics (Hybrid) Spring 2013

BIOL 2421 Microbiology Course Syllabus:

Instructor: Khaled Kassem (Mr. K) Classroom: C Use the message tool within UNM LEARN, or

Strategic Management (MBA 800-AE) Fall 2010

MURRAY STATE UNIVERSITY DEPARTMENT: NUTRITION, DIETETICS, AND FOOD MANAGEMENT COURSE PREFIX: NTN COURSE NUMBER: 230 CREDIT HOURS: 3

BUSINESS FINANCE 4239 Risk Management

INTRODUCTION TO SOCIOLOGY SOCY 1001, Spring Semester 2013

San José State University

PSYCHOLOGY 353: SOCIAL AND PERSONALITY DEVELOPMENT IN CHILDREN SPRING 2006

MGMT3274 INTERNATONAL BUSINESS PROCESSES AND PROBLEMS

CIS 121 INTRODUCTION TO COMPUTER INFORMATION SYSTEMS - SYLLABUS

CHMB16H3 TECHNIQUES IN ANALYTICAL CHEMISTRY

Syllabus: PHI 2010, Introduction to Philosophy

AGN 331 Soil Science. Lecture & Laboratory. Face to Face Version, Spring, Syllabus

English Policy Statement and Syllabus Fall 2017 MW 10:00 12:00 TT 12:15 1:00 F 9:00 11:00

Social Media Journalism J336F Unique Spring 2016

SOUTHERN MAINE COMMUNITY COLLEGE South Portland, Maine 04106

University of Massachusetts Lowell Graduate School of Education Program Evaluation Spring Online

Cleveland State University Introduction to University Life Course Syllabus Fall ASC 101 Section:

INTERMEDIATE ALGEBRA Course Syllabus

Texas A&M University-Central Texas CISK Comprehensive Networking C_SK Computer Networks Monday/Wednesday 5.

IPHY 3410 Section 1 - Introduction to Human Anatomy Lecture Syllabus (Spring, 2017)

MAT 122 Intermediate Algebra Syllabus Summer 2016

Class Mondays & Wednesdays 11:00 am - 12:15 pm Rowe 161. Office Mondays 9:30 am - 10:30 am, Friday 352-B (3 rd floor) or by appointment

ITSC 2321 Integrated Software Applications II COURSE SYLLABUS

Introduction to Information System

INTRODUCTION TO GENERAL PSYCHOLOGY (PSYC 1101) ONLINE SYLLABUS. Instructor: April Babb Crisp, M.S., LPC

University of North Carolina at Greensboro Bryan School of Business and Economics Department of Information Systems and Supply Chain Management

Mktg 315 Marketing Research Spring 2015 Sec. 003 W 6:00-8:45 p.m. MBEB 1110

SOUTHWEST COLLEGE Department of Mathematics

ASTRONOMY 2801A: Stars, Galaxies & Cosmology : Fall term

Mcgraw Hill Financial Accounting Connect Promo Code

SYLLABUS: RURAL SOCIOLOGY 1500 INTRODUCTION TO RURAL SOCIOLOGY SPRING 2017

/ On campus x ICON Grades

Streaming Video Control Review. Who am I?

Fundamental Accounting Principles, 21st Edition Author(s): Wild, John; Shaw, Ken; Chiappetta, Barbara ISBN-13:

IDS 240 Interdisciplinary Research Methods

Business Computer Applications CGS 1100 Course Syllabus. Course Title: Course / Prefix Number CGS Business Computer Applications

MATH 205: Mathematics for K 8 Teachers: Number and Operations Western Kentucky University Spring 2017

MTH 215: Introduction to Linear Algebra

BUS Computer Concepts and Applications for Business Fall 2012

BUFFET THEORY AND PRODUCTION - CHEF 2332 Thursday 1:30pm 7:00pm Northeast Texas Community College - Our Place Restaurant Course Syllabus Fall 2013

Syllabus - ESET 369 Embedded Systems Software, Fall 2016

Fulltime MSc Real Estate and MSc Real Estate Finance Programmes: An Introduction


Medical Terminology - Mdca 1313 Course Syllabus: Summer 2017

Instructor: Matthew Wickes Kilgore Office: ES 310

San José State University Department of Marketing and Decision Sciences BUS 90-06/ Business Statistics Spring 2017 January 26 to May 16, 2017

Financial Accounting Concepts and Research

University of Texas at Tyler Nutrition Course Syllabus Summer II 2017 ALHS

GEOG 473/573: Intermediate Geographic Information Systems Department of Geography Minnesota State University, Mankato

Instructor. Darlene Diaz. Office SCC-SC-124. Phone (714) Course Information

Transcription:

The University of Texas at Tyler Soules College of Business Spring 2019 FINA 3330- Investments (Section 001) Instructor Name: Dr. Chialing Hsieh (Pronounce: Charlene Shay) Office Location: Soules College of Business 350.14 Email Address: chsieh@uttyler.edu (Best Contact Method) Office Hours: 12:30 pm-1:50 pm on Tuesday & Thursday, or by appointment. Contact will be also via e-mail. You can expect a response within 24 hours except for those sent on Saturday and Sunday as well as those sent after 5 pm on Friday, when you can expect a response within 48 hours. Classroom Soules College of Business 111 Location: Class Meeting Tuesday, Thursday 11:00AM 12:20PM Days & Times: Prerequisites: ECON 2301 or ECON 2302, and ACCT 2301 Required Text: Recommended Text and References: Bodie, Z., Kane, A., and Marcus, A.J. Essentials of Investments, 10th edition, 2017. Irwin: McGraw Hill. ISBN 9780077835422 Financial Calculator - BA II PLUS by Texas Instruments is recommended. The Wall Street Journal, Financial Times, Bloomberg/BusinessWeek. COURSE OBJECTIVES: 1. KNOWLEDGE OBJECTIVES OF THIS COURSE INCLUDE: 1. To develop analytical skills relevant to valuation of equity and fixed-income securities. 2. To learn to combine various securities in order to meet specific investment objectives. 2. COMPETENCIES TO BE DEMONSTRATED IN THIS COURSE INCLUDE: 1. COMPUTER-BASED SKILLS: A. WORD PROCESSING: Required for producing project reports. B. SPREADSHEET: Required for data entry and data analysis. C. PRESENTATION SOFTWARE: Not demonstrated in this class. D. DATABASE MANIPULATION: Required for equity data analysis. E. INTERNET SEARCH SKILLS: Required for project and stock research. 2. COMMUNICATION SKILLS: A. WRITTEN a. REPORT ORGANIZATION: Required for project reports. b. REFERENCING: Required project reports. B. ORAL: Not demonstrated in this class. 3. INTERPERSONAL SKILLS: A. TEAM-BASED ABILITIES INTRA-GROUP AND INTER-GROUP COOPERATION: Not demonstrated in this class. B. LEADERSHIP: Not demonstrated in this class. C. CONFLICT RESOLUTION: Not demonstrated in this class. 4. PROBLEM SOLVING (CRITICAL THINKING): A. CONCEPTUAL THINKING: Required in class discussion dynamics. 1

B. GATHERING AND ANALYZING DATA: Required for projects. C. QUANTITATIVE/STATISTICAL SKILLS: Demonstrated in investment analysis. D. CREATIVITY AND INNOVATION: Demonstrated in simulation and term-project for the course. 5. ETHICAL ISSUES IN DECISION MAKING AND BEHAVIORS: Demonstrated in class discussions regarding fiduciary responsibilities of investment analysts. 6. PERSONAL ACCOUNTABILITY FOR ACHIEVEMENT: A. MEETING DEADLINES: Evaluated by instructor. B. QUALITY OF WORK PERFORMED: Evaluated via graded outcomes of student work and exam scores. 7. COMPETENCE IN BASIC BUSINESS PRINCIPLES: A. COMPETENCE IN MAJOR FIELD AND GROUNDING IN OTHER MAJOR CORE AREAS: Course content integrates economics and accounting functions into investment decision making. B. AWARENESS OF INTERNATIONAL AS WELL AS DOMESTIC IMPLICATIONS OF BUSINESS DECISIONS: Course content examines international political and foreign exchange risk in context of investment decisions. C. UNDERSTANDING AND APPRECIATION OF STRATEGIC IMPACT OF BUSINESS DECISIONS: Course includes content discussion which ties prudent investment decisions to successful strategic outcomes for the firm. 3. OUTCOMES FOR STUDENTS TO SUCCESSFULLY COMPLETE THIS COURSE INCLUDE: 1. Understand the securities valuation process, using appropriate valuation techniques under appropriate circumstances. 2. Be able to form portfolios based on investor risk preferences and other constraints. 3. Be familiar with the fiduciary responsibility to the client as an investment analyst Course Structure: To achieve course goals, students will be required to: 1. Read Powerpoint course slides and textbook chapters. 2. Attend Classes 3. Take every test and quiz. 4. Visit course on Canvas regularly. Course Evaluation Methods This course will utilize the following instruments to determine student grades and proficiency of the learning outcomes for the course. 1. Four tests: The lowest test score will be dropped from the computation of your course grade. *In-class tests will consist of written tests designed to measure students knowledge and understanding of course material. Exam questions will consist of primarily of short-answer questions and include some problems and essay-type questions. *Online tests will be designed to measure students knowledge and understanding of course material. Tests will generally cover the topics discussed or presented in class, however, other material may be identified as exam material when appropriate. Once you begin a test, you will be given a certain amount of time, depending on its length, to complete it. 2

You can take the test at any time during the test period. Note that you are allowed only ONE attempt per test so please make sure you study the module material thoroughly before you begin and can devote sufficient time to complete the test. Unless specified otherwise, each test period generally begins at noon on Sunday and ends at midnight on Thursday. Please note that each test will be only available for a limited time so check the course calendar and plan accordingly. If you cannot finish a test because of factors outside of your control such as a blackout or computer crash, you may ask the instructor for only one other chance to take the test only if fewer than 50% of the questions have been answered. For all other cases, including situations where the instructor is not able to re-set your test (because the request came too close to the deadline) your grade will be prorated based on your performance on the portion of the test completed. As an example, if you manage to complete 60% of the test when something prevents you from going any further and you got 70% on the questions you answered, your score will be 70% on the entire test. All material covered in readings, slides are considered fair game for tests. 2. Assignments and Quizzes: At the discretion of the instructor, there may be various pop-quizzes, homework assignments. These activities are intended to supplement and reinforce course material. A student may be responsible for completing an activity in or outside of class. 3. Extra Credit: Students may be given opportunities to earn extra credit at the instructor s discretion. Some possible sources of extra credit include online bonus quizzes to be announced on Canvas. Exam policy: Exams and quizzes should be taken as schedule; assignments should be submitted by the due date. No makeup examinations, quizzes, or assignments will be allowed except for documented emergencies (official evidence documents are required). The student should make every effort to contact the instructor prior to the exam. All requests for make-up or accommodation made after the due date for an assignment or deadline for a test will be rejected without any further consideration. WARNING: Attempts to change your grade at the end of the semester by asking the instructor to round up or by asking for further extra credit will be ignored. Grading Matrix: Instrument Value (points or percentages) Total 4 Tests 4 tests with 100 points each 300 (one may be dropped) Assignments and Quizzes 100 Total: 400 Grade Determination: A = 90% or better B = 80 89.99 % C = 70 79.99 % D = 60 69.99 % F = less than 60% To determine your course grade percentage, take the total number of points that you earned (including the 3 highest Tests, Assignments, Quizzes, and Bonus credits), then divide that number by the number of total possible points, i.e. 400. 3

Canvas Access All class materials, course grades, and class announcements will be posted by Canvas. To access our course, visit uttyler.edu/canvas. You are encouraged to participate in Canvas 101, a practice course designed specifically for UT Tyler students to learn and refine Canvas skills. You can practice submitting assignments, participating in quizzes, customize your profile and notifications, plus get collaboration and Canvas tips. Important points when using Canvas: 1. Login using UT Tyler credentials. Contact itsupport@uttyler.edu for login assistance. 2. Use the HELP button at the bottom left corner of Canvas if you need assistance 24/7. 3. Reference your Student Canvas Guide for additional resources. If you have issues with Canvas access that may hinder your completion of course assignments or quizzes, you must contact UT Tyler s IT Support staff immediately (even on weekends) and get a ticket number. You must also inform the instructor of the issue BEFORE the due date for the assignment or quiz. Claims of Canvas access problems without a ticket number or ones reported to the instructor after the passing of the deadline will be dismissed without any further consideration. Deadlines may be extended only in case of Canvas system-wide issues reported by the university. All other Canvas-related issues are regarded as personal-level access issues and you must get them resolved without letting them interfere with your coursework. Personal-level access issues are not valid reasons to ask for deadline extension. Course Outline This schedule is subject to change by the instructor. Over the course of the semester, activities and items may be added, removed, or rescheduled in order to provide more information, improve accuracy, enhance learning, or correct errors. Any changes to this schedule will be communicated by instructions in class, announcements in Canvas, and/or Canvas email to students. TOPICS TIMELINE Syllabus and Introduction Chapter 1: Investments: Background and Issues Week 1: 01/14/19 Chapter 2: Asset Classes and Financial Instruments Time Value of Money Chapter 3: Securities Markets Test 1: Chapters 1, 2, 3 & Time Value of Money Week 2: 01/21/19 Week 3: 01/28/19 Week 4: 02/04/19 Week 5: 02/11/19 Chapter 4: Mutual Funds and Other Investment Companies Week 6: 02/18/19 Chapter 5: Risk and Return: Past and Prologue Week 7: 02/25/19 Chapter 6: Efficient Diversification Week 8: 03/04/19 Spring Break Week 9: 03/11/19 4

Test 2: Chapters 4, 5, 6 Chapter 7: Capital Asset Pricing and Arbitrage Pricing Theory Chapter 10: Bond Prices and Yield Test 3: Chapter 7 and Chapter 10 Chapter 13: Equity Valuation Chapter 15: Options Markets Test 4: Chapter 13 and Chapter 15 Week 10: 03/18/19 Week 11: 03/25/19 Week 12: 04/01/19 Week 13: 04/08/19 Week 14: 04/15/19 Week 15: 04/22/19 Week 16: 04/29/19 College of Business Statement of Ethics The ethical problems facing local, national and global business communities are an ever-increasing challenge. It is essential the College of Business and Technology help students prepare for lives of personal integrity, responsible citizenship, and public service. In order to accomplish these goals, both students and faculty of the College of Business and Technology at The University of Texas at Tyler will: Ensure honesty in all behavior, never cheating or knowingly giving false information. Create an atmosphere of mutual respect for all students and faculty regardless of race, creed, gender, age or religion. Develop an environment conducive to learning. Encourage and support student organizations and activities. Protect property and personal information from theft, damage and misuse. Conduct yourself in a professional manner both on and off campus. Information that must appear in each course syllabus: Includes UT Tyler Honor Code, Student Rights and Responsibilities, Campus Carry, tobacco-free University, Grade Replacement Policies, Course Drop Policies, Disability Services, Absences due to religious observances and university sponsored events, SS and FERPA, Evacuation, Student Standards of Conduct, and other resources). http://www.uttyler.edu/academicaffairs/files/syllabuspolicy.pdf 5