Foundations of Finance

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Foundations of Finance Class code FINC-UB 9002.003 Instructor Details Class Details Instructor: Ricardo Gimeno Email: rg166@nyu.edu Office Hours: Monday & Wednesday, 7:00-7:30 (By appointment) Mondays & Wednesdays, 7:30-8:50 p.m. Prerequisites (1) STAT-UB 103 Statistics for Business Control and Regression/Forecasting Models O STAT-UB 1 Statistics for Business Control (4 credit) plus STAT-UB 3 Regression/Forecasting (2 credit) OR equivalent AND (2) one of the following: ECON- UB 1 Microeconomics OR ECON-UA 2 Economic Principles II, OR ECON-UA 5 Introduction to Economic Analysis, AND (3) ACCT-UB 1 Principles of Financial Accounting AND (4) At least Sophomore Standing. Class Description This course is a rigorous, quantitative introduction to financial market structure and financial asset valuation. The main topics of the course are arbitrage, portfolio selection, equilibrium asset pricing (CAPM), fixed income and equity securities and derivative pricing. You are expected to understand valuation formulas and be able to apply them to new problems. The appropriate tools necessary for solving these problems will be developed at each stage and practiced in the homework assignments. Desired Outcomes Assessment Components The assignments for the course consist of 6 problem sets, an in-class midterm examination and a final examination. Problem set questions will be handed out in class. Each student or group of students should hand in a set of solutions with his/her/all names displayed on the top. Midterm and final exam questions will draw heavily from the problem sets. The in-class midterm and the final exam will consist of multiple choice questions and short problems like those on the problem sets, in the textbook, and in the lecture notes. They will be closed book exams. Failure to submit or fulfill any required course component will result in failure of the class, regardless of grades achieved in other assignments. Grading Policy At NYU Stern, we strive to create courses that challenge students intellectually and that meet the Stern standards of academic excellence. To ensure fairness and clarity of grading, the Stern faculty have adopted a grading guideline for core courses with enrollments of more than 25 students in which approximately 35% Page 1 of 6

of students will receive an A or A- grade. In core classes of less than 25 students, the instructor is at liberty to give whatever grades they think the students deserve, while maintaining rigorous academic standards The final grade will be calculated as follows: Class participation 5% Problem sets 15% Midterm exam 35% Final exam 45% Statement on Provisions to students with disabilities Academic accommodations are available for students with documented disabilities. Please contact the Moses Center for Students with Disabilities at 212-998-4980 or see their website (http://www.nyu.edu/life/safety-health-andwellness/students-withdisabilities.html) for further information. Students with disabilities who believe that they may need accommodations in a class are encouraged to contact the Moses Center for Students with Disabilities at (212) 998-4980 as soon as possible to better ensure that such accommodations are implemented in a timely fashion. For more information, see Study Away and Disability. Attendance Policy Study abroad at Global Academic Centers is an academically intensive and immersive experience in which students from a wide range of backgrounds exchange ideas in discussion-based seminars. Learning in such an environment depends on the active participation of all students. And since classes typically meet once or twice a week, even a single absence can cause a student to miss a significant portion of a course. To ensure the integrity of this academic experience, class attendance at the centers is mandatory, and unexcused absences will be penalized with a two percent deduction from the student s final course grade for every week's worth of classes missed. Students are responsible for making up any work missed due to absence. Repeated absences in a course may result in harsher penalties including failure. Unexcused absences affect students grades: In classes meeting twice a week, a 1% deduction from the student s final course grade occurs on the occasion of each unexcused absence. Absences are excused only for illness, religious observance, and emergencies. Page 2 of 6 Illness: For a single absence, students may be required to provide a doctor s note, at the discretion of the Assistant Directors of Academics. In the case of two consecutive absences, students must provide a doctor s note. Exams, quizzes, and presentations will not be made up without a doctor s note.

Religious Observance: Students observing a religious holiday during regularly scheduled class time are entitled to miss class without any penalty to their grade. This is for the holiday only and does not include the days of travel that may come before and/or after the holiday. Students must notify their instructor and the Academic Office in writing via email one week in advance before being absent for this purpose. If exams, quizzes, and presentations are scheduled on a holiday a student will observe, the Assistant Directors, in coordination with the instructor, will reschedule them. Please note: if you are unable to attend class, you are required to email your professors directly and notify them. Late Submission of Work Plagiarism Policy The problem sets should be handed in before the end of the class session in which they are due. They can be given to me in class or emailed. Regardless of the method of delivery, the same deadline applies. Assignments that are late but within 24 hours of the deadline, will receive ½ credit. After 24 hours, no assignments will be accepted (unless due to documented serious illness or family emergency); it is unfair to the other students in the class. At NYU, a commitment to excellence, fairness, honesty, and respect within and outside the classroom is essential to maintaining the integrity of our community. Plagiarism: presenting others' work without adequate acknowledgement of its source, as though it were one s own. Plagiarism is a form of fraud. We all stand on the shoulders of others, and we must give credit to the creators of the works that we incorporate into products that we call our own. Some examples of plagiarism: a sequence of words incorporated without quotation marks an unacknowledged passage paraphrased from another's work the use of ideas, sound recordings, computer data or images created by others as though it were one s own submitting evaluations of group members work for an assigned group project which misrepresent the work that was performed by another group member altering or forging academic documents, including but not limited to admissions materials, academic records, grade reports, add/drop forms, course registration forms, etc. using language translation software. For further information, students are encouraged to check www.nyu.edu/about/policies-guidelines-compliance/policies-andguidelines/academic-integrity-for-students-at-nyu.html Page 3 of 6

Required Text(s) in Print Form The main textbook for the course is Zvi Bodie, Alex Kane, and Alan J. Marcus, Essentials of Investments, 9 th Edition, McGraw-Hill Irwin, 2013. The text comes with a solutions manual for the end-of-chapter problems. Further required material is in the custom published version of selected chapters from Stephen A. Ross, Randolph W. Westerfield, and Bradford D. Jordan, Essentials of Corporate Finance, 8 th Edition, McGraw-Hill Irwin, 2014. Finally, you need a calculator for this class. It is a distinct advantage to have a financial calculator, but not an absolute requirement. However, if you plan to take other finance classes, you will get good use out of a financial calculator. Required Text(s) available via NYU Classes BKM refers to Bodie, Kane and Marcus, Essentials of Investments, and RWJ refers to Ross, Westerfield, and Jordan, Essentials of Corporate Finance. Readings should be done prior to the class session in which the material is discussed. Session 1 January 29 th (FRIDAY) Introduction Course overview Session 2 February 1 st Financial Instruments & Markets Skim: BKM 1-3 Session 3 February 3 rd Session 4 February 8 th Time Value of Money Read: RWJ 4, 5.1-5.2 PV, FV, r Annuities, perpetuities Performance Measurement Read: RWJ 5.3, 8.1, 8.4 Compounding Investment evaluation (NPV, IRR) Session 5 February 10 th Portfolio Theory I Read: BKM 5.1-5.3 Statistics review Risk and return Session 6 February 15 th Session 7 Page 4 of 6 Portfolio Theory II Read: BKM 6.1-6.2 Combining 2 risky assets Portfolio terminology Portfolio Theory III

February 17 th Investor preferences Efficient portfolios Session 8 February 22 nd Portfolio Theory IV Read: BKM 5.4-5.6, 6.3 Adding a riskless asset Session 9 February 24 th Portfolio Theory V Read: BKM 6.4-6.6 Multiple risky assets Session 10 February 29 th The CAPM I Read: BKM 7.1-7.2 Equilibrium asset pricing Session 11 March 2 nd The CAPM II Read: BKM 7.3-7.5 Applying the CAPM Session 12 March 7 th Market Efficiency Read: BKM 8 Session 13 March 9 th Review/Problem Session Session 14 March 14 th Session 15 March 16 th Session 16 March 28 th Midterm Exam Equity Valuation I Read: BKM 13 Valuation ratios Dividend discount models Equity Valuation II Growth Session 17 March 30 th Arbitrage Arbitrage and the law of one price Session 18 April 1 st (FRIDAY) Session 19 April 4 th Fixed Income Securities I Read: BKM 2.1-2.2, 10.1-10.4 Bond prices and yields Fixed Income Securities II Read: BKM 10.6 Forward rates and the yield curve Page 5 of 6

Session 20 April 6 th Session 21 April 11 th Fixed Income Securities III Read: BKM 10.5, 11.1, 11.3 Interest rate risk and default risk Fixed Income Securities IV Read: BKM 11.2, 11.4 Interest rate risk management and active management Session 22 April 13 th Options I Read: BKM 15 Options markets and option payoffs Session 23 April 18 th Options II Read: BKM 16.1-16.2 Option strategies and the determinants of option value Session 24 April 20 th Options III Read: BKM 16.3-16.5 Binomial and Black-Scholes option pricing Session 25 April 25 th Session 26 April 27 th Futures Read: BKM 17.1-17.5 Forward and futures contracts Swaps Read: BKM 17.6 Session 27 May 4 th Investment Management Skim: BKM 4, 18 Mutual funds, hedge funds and performance evaluation Session 28 May 6 th (FRIDAY) Review Session Suggested Cocurricular Activities Page 6 of 6