FIN E Financial Management Spring 2013 Monday 6:15 8:55 p.m., UCD 421

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FIN 504 81E Financial Management Spring 2013 Monday 6:15 8:55 p.m., UCD 421 Instructor: Dr. Celine Hoe Office: BA 102E Phone: 903-886-5680 E-mail: Celine.Hoe@tamuc.edu Office Hours: Wednesday 11:00 a.m. 4:00 p.m. and before class by appointment I. Course Description This course examines general business finance within the economic environment. Topics will include reporting, analysis, markets and regulations, and global and ethical topics. We will also cover the following: corporate risk, firm valuation, capital budgeting, working capital management, and other decision rules in the context of the overall goal to maximize the value of the firm. Our overall focus will be on total quality management in the corporate environment. II. Prerequisite FIN 304, Intro to Business Finance, or FIN 501, Finance for Decision Makers, or consent of instructor. III. Learning Outcomes Upon the successful completion of Financial Management, the students should be able to perform the following tasks: 1. Demonstrate an of the advanced concepts of contemporary management and the application of its methods. 2. Demonstrate an ability to analyze and apply asset valuation techniques. 3. Demonstrate an and measure strategic decisions in a risk/return context as it relates to today s dynamic world. IV. Required Course Materials 1. Contemporary Financial Management, Twelfth Edition by R. Charles Moyer. James R. McGuigan and William J. Kretlow, South-Western, Cengage Learning. The ISBN is 0-538-47917-5. * The student free companion content site can be accessed at: http://www.wadsworth.com/cgi-wadsworth/course_products_wp.pl?fid=m20b& product_isbn_issn=9780538479172&token= 2. Financial Calculator: Texas Instruments BAII Plus calculator or comparable (not alpha programmable). For free guidebook/reference of TI BAII+, see: http://education.ti.com/guidebooks//baiipluspro/baiiplusproguidebook_en.p df or http://movies.atomiclearning.com/k12/ti_ba2/ * PowerPoint slides will be oriented toward the TI BAII Plus. 1

V. Recommended Reading Wall Street Journal VI. Policies and Procedures The student is responsible for all material covered and all information disseminated when he/she misses a class or arrives late. Email Use The best way to communicate with me outside of class is by email. You should expect a response to your emails within 24 hours during regular business hours on weekdays. You have to send emails from your myleo accounts. Quizzes There will be 3 scheduled quizzes during the semester. You will have to take them through ecollege. The lowest grade on quizzes will be dropped. In view of this, there will be no makeup quizzes or any other provision to make up for a missed quiz. Exams There will be three exams, including two midterm exams and a mandatory final exam. The exams will be held in the class meeting time as scheduled. The exams will be closed book and closed notes. Students should bring a calculator to the exams. Sharing of calculators and the use of a laptop or any other electronic device will not be allowed during an exam. There will be no makeup exams. If you have to miss an exam because of a legitimate and verifiable reason, you must contact me before the exam. Failing to do so or failing to provide documentation of the reason for absence from a medical doctor or TAMU-Commerce official will result in a grade of zero on the exam. Homework End of chapter questions & problems and other questions & problems will be assigned as homework. You do not have to submit the solutions. These assignments should be completed for enhanced learning. Some (but not all) of the problems on the exams will be similar to the problems in these homework assignments. Solutions to homework problems will be available in DocSharing. Grading All quizzes will have the same weight. No assignment for extra credit will be given to any individual student. For grading purposes, the following weights will be assigned: Quizzes 15% Class Participation 4% Mid-term examination I 27% Mid-term examination II 27% Final examination 27% 2

and letter grades apply as follows: 90 100 A 80-89.99 B 70-79.99 C 60-69.99 D 0-59.99 F Below are guidelines that help to explain how student work is evaluated: Criteria (Course Objectives) Demonstrate an of the advanced concepts of contemporary management and the application of its methods. Demonstrate an ability to analyze and apply asset valuation techniques. Demonstrate an and measure strategic decisions in a risk/return context as it relates to today s dynamic world. 1 (Unsatisfactory) 2 (Emerging) 3 (Proficient) 4 (Exemplary) limited ability to understand or apply even the more basic concepts and methods of limited ability to analyze or apply even the more basic techniques of asset valuation. limited ability to understand or measure even the more basic decisions involved in business and the ability to apply only the more basic concepts and methods of analyze and apply only the more basic techniques of asset valuation and the ability to measure only the more basic decisions involved in business and apply the basic but not advanced concepts and methods of analyze and apply the basic but not advanced techniques of asset valuation. and measure the basic but not advanced decisions of and apply the advanced as well as basic concepts and methods of analyze and apply the advanced as well as basic techniques of asset valuation and measure the advanced as well as basic decisions of 3

VII. Progression of Course This agenda is subject to change. The exact timing of lectures and content of exams will depend on the flow of the course. I EXPECT ALL STUDENTS TO HAVE READ ALL ASSIGNED MATERIAL BEFORE CLASS. Week 1, January 14 Chapter 1 The Role and Objective of Financial Management Chapter 2 The Domestic and International Financial Marketplace - I Week 2, January 21 MLK Holiday Week 3, January 28 Chapter 2 The Domestic and International Financial Marketplace - II Chapter 3 Evaluation of Financial Performance Week 4, February 4 Chapter 4 Financial Planning and Forecasting Quiz 1: Ch 1, 2, 3 (8:00 a.m., February 8 to 11:59 p.m., February 10, CST) through ecollege Week 5, February 11 Review and Chapter 5 The Time Value of Money Week 6, February 18 Exam 1: Ch 1, 2, 3, 4 (Class Meeting Time) Week 7, February 25 Chapter 5 The Time Value of Money Chapter 6 Fixed-Income Securities: Characteristics and Valuation Week 8, March 4 Chapter 6 Fixed-Income Securities: Characteristics and Valuation Chapter 7 Common Stock: Characteristics, Valuation, and Issuance Quiz 2: Ch 5, 6 (8:00 a.m., March 8 to 11:59 p.m., March 10, CST and CDT) through ecollege Week 9, March 11 Spring Break (No Class) Week 10, March 18 Chapter 7 Common Stock: Characteristics, Valuation, and Issuance Chapter 8 Analysis of Risk and Return I Review Week 11, March 25 Exam 2: Ch 5, 6, 7, 8 - I (Class Meeting Time) Week 12, April 1 Chapter 8 Analysis of Risk and Return - II Week 13, April 8 Chapter 9 Capital Budgeting and Cash Flow Analysis 4

Week 14, April 15 Chapter 10 Capital Budgeting: Decision Criteria and Real Option Considerations Chapter 11 Capital Budgeting and Risk Quiz 3: Ch 8 II, 9, 10 (8:00 a.m., April 19 to 11:59 p.m., April 21, CDT) through ecollege Week 15, April 22 Chapter 12 The Cost of Capital Week 16, April 29 Chapter 13 Capital Structure Concepts, Review Week 17, May 6 Final Examination: Ch8 II, Ch 9, 10, 11, 12, 13 (Class Meeting Time) VIII. Other Information You shall start studying early in the course, well before the test/exam, to give yourself a head start in learning the material. When you don t understand course material, ask questions either in class, during office hours or by email. You will not get good grades if you wait until a week or couple of days before the test/exam to start studying. 5

Academic Integrity/Ethics: Syllabus Addendum Integrity will be stressed throughout the course. Refer to Student s Guide Book located at for the University policy on academic honesty: www.tamuc.edu/studentlife/guidebook.htm All students enrolled at the University shall follow the tenets of common decency and acceptable behavior conductive to a positive learning environment. You are expected to maintain high standards of integrity and honesty while pursuing your academic goal(s). The university s statement on academic honesty is found in the Texas A&M University-Commerce Procedures, A13.12, Academic Honesty. Academic dishonesty is defined in the following manner: Academic dishonesty includes, but is not limited to, plagiarism (the appropriation or stealing of the ideas or words of another and passing them off as one s own), cheating on exams or other course assignments, collusion (the unauthorized collaboration with others in preparing course assignments), and abuse (destruction, defacing, or removal) of resource material. Your grade is to reflect your work alone, and likewise, your classmates grades are to reflect their work alone, and not yours. Students found to have committed academic dishonesty will automatically receive a failing grade for the course and will be referred to Dean of the College of Business and Technology for possible expulsion from the program. All students enrolled in this course are required to sign and submit an Academic Honesty Policy form during the first week of the course. Students with Disabilities: The Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) is a federal anti-discrimination statute that provides comprehensive civil rights protection for persons with disabilities. Among other things, this legislation requires that all students with disabilities be guaranteed a learning environment that provides for reasonable accommodation of their disabilities. If you have a disability requiring an accommodation, please contact: Office of Student Disability Resources and Services Texas A&M University-Commerce Gee Library Room 132 Phone (903) 886-5150 or (903) 886-5835 Fax (903) 468-8148 StudentDisabilityServices@tamuc.edu Drop Policy: See University drop policy. 6