|
Course Description
Students examine futures, options and other derivative securities in the context of money management and corporate finance. Emphasis is placed on hedging and strategic techniques as a risk management tool. Pricing models and derivative strategies are covered in depth. The latest uses of derivatives in organizational decision making and exotic derivatives are also covered.
The primary method for teaching these points follows a two step approach. First, the student will be introduced to standard techniques for pricing, hedging, and other analysis. Next, these techniques will be applied through a variety of real world strategies. The end goal is to develop skills which the students can apply in derivative markets.
Assignments: Each student will be required to complete a series of assignments dealing with derivative pricing and strategies. These assignments will require students to use theoretical models, monitor market prices, and track strategy positions.
Required Materials
Fundamentals of Futures and Options Markets by John C. Hull, 7th Edition, Prentice Hall, 2011.
http://mgmt.utoronto.ca/~hull/
Options as a Strategic Investment by Lawrence McMillan, 4th Edition, New York Institute of Finance, 2002.
Email Account - (Send Email to instructor BEFORE 2nd class)
Financial Calculator - (recommend HP12C)
Access to Personal Computer and Spreadsheet program
Slides
Set 1 Set 2 Set 3 Set 4 Set 5
Set 6 Set 7 Set 8 Set 9 Set 10 Set 11
Prerequisites - MBA 680 (unless waived by Dr. Will)
Syllabus--SAMPLE ONLY--See syllabus distributed in class for exact course requirements
Web Links
Link 1 Derivatives overview
Link 2 Derivative terms
Link 3 Agricultural commodity futures
Link 4 Futures basics
Link 5 Treasury futures
Link 6 Interest rate swaps
Link 7 NUMA option calculator or Option Calculator at Columbia University
Link 8 Mortgages
Link 9 MBS overview
Other Links
Weather Derivatives
Misc Derivative Publications
Derivative definitions
Derivatives summary
Options 101
Option Strategies
Academic Dishonesty and Plagiarism
You must not adopt or reproduce ideas, words, or statements of another person without giving an appropriate acknowledgement to the source. You must give due credit to the originality of others and acknowledge an indebtedness wherever you:
· Quotes another person’s actual words, either oral or written;
· Paraphrases another person’s words, either oral or written;
· Uses another person’s ideas, opinions, or theories; or
· Cites facts, statistics, or other illustrative material, unless the information is common knowledge.
All assignments must be your original work and not the work of other students. Neither group work nor the individual work of another student may be submitted by you. Submission of such work will be considered academic misconduct. Incidents of academic misconduct, dishonesty and/or plagiarism will be handled as per the Student Handbook.
Academic Integrity and the penalties for violations are defined both on the public site of the university as well as in the Student Handbook (requires intranet access). It is the responsibility of the student to avail themselves of this information.
|