Financial Economics

Paper Code: 
ECO 612
Credits: 
3
Contact Hours: 
45.00
Max. Marks: 
100.00
Objective: 

Course Objectives:

The objectives of this course are –

 

  1. To acquaint the students with the basics of financial economics.
  2. To help students understand the concept of cash flow and the Capital Asset Pricing Model.
  3. To develop an understanding of options and derivatives and concepts of corporate finance.

 

 

Course Outcomes (COs):

 

 

Course

 Outcome (at course level)

Learning and teaching strategies

Assessment Strategies 

Paper Code

Paper Title

ECO 612

Financial Economics

CO77: Acquire Knowledge of the concepts of financial economics.

CO78: Comprehend the Capital Asset Pricing Model.

CO79: Develop an understanding of the concepts of options, derivatives and corporate finance.

Approach in teaching: Interactive Lectures, Discussion,  Case studies.

 

Learning activities for the students:

Presentations, Assignments and Group discussions.

Class activity, Assignments and  Semester end examinations.

 

 

9.00
Unit I: 
Deterministic cash-flow streams

Basic theory of interest; discounting and present value; internal rate of return; evaluation criteria; fixed-income securities; bond prices and yields; interest rate sensitivity and duration; immunisation; the term structure of interest rates; yield curves; spot rates and forward rates.

 

9.00
Unit II: 
Single-period random cash flows

Random asset returns; portfolios of assets; portfolio mean and variance; feasible combinations of mean and variance; mean-variance portfolio analysis: the Markowitz model and the two-fund theorem; risk-free assets and the one-fund theorem.

 

9.00
Unit III: 
Capital Asset Pricing Model (CAPM)

The capital market line; the capital asset pricing model; the beta of an asset and of a portfolio; security market line; use of the CAPM model in investment analysis and as a pricing formula.

 

9.00
Unit IV: 
Options and Derivatives

Introduction to derivatives and options; forward and futures contracts; options; other derivatives; forward and future prices; stock index futures; interest rate futures; the use of futures for hedging; duration-based hedging strategies; option markets; call and put options; factors affecting option prices; put-call parity; option trading strategies: spreads; straddles; strips and straps; strangles; the principle of arbitrage; discrete processes and the binomial tree model; risk-neutral valuation.

 

9.00
Unit V: 
Corporate Finance

Patterns of corporate financing: common stock; debt; preferences; convertibles; Capital structure and the cost of capital; corporate debt and dividend policy; the Modigliani-Miller theorem.

 

Essential Readings: 
  1. David G. Luenberger, Investment Science, Oxford University Press, USA, 1997.
  2. Hull, John C., Options, Futures and Other Derivatives, Pearson Education, 6th edition, 2005.
  3. Thomas E. Copeland, J. Fred Weston and Kuldeep Shastri, Financial Theory and Corporate Policy, Prentice Hall, 4th edition, 2003.
  4. Richard A. Brealey and Stewart C. Myers, Principles of Corporate Finance, McGraw-Hill, 7th edition, 2002.
  1. Stephen  A.  Ross,  Randolph  W.  Westerfield  and  Bradford  D.  Jordan, Fundamentals of Corporate Finance. McGraw-Hill, 7th edition, 2005.
  1. Burton G. Malkiel, A Random Walk Down Wall Street, W.W. Norton & Company, 2003.
  2. William Sharpe, Gordon Alexander and Jeffery Bailey, Investments, Prentice Hall of India, 6th edition, 2003.

 

Academic Session: