Modules offered each academic year are subject to change. Listed below are the modules and timetable for 2021/22.
Preliminary Modules (early September)
Electives (choose 4 in Hilary Term)
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Advanced International Financial Statement Analysis (5 ECTS)The module explores all the sections of companies’ annual report. The main emphasis is on the analysis and interpretation of basic financial statements. It also highlights the important contribution of narrative reports in carrying out a financial analysis and how the abuse of accounting flexibility affects those statements and the analysis of financial statement relationships.Having successfully completed this module, the student should be able to:
Corporate Finance (5 ECTS)Corporate finance concerns itself with three main issues: how corporations choose investments (real and financial) using the principles of capital budgeting, how corporations choose to raise capital (in particular the choice of a mixture of debt and equity securities) and how they then choose to redistribute any surplus earned by the deployment of these capital resources (dividend decisions). At the heart of corporate finance is the concept of the cost of capital, an area that despite several decades of research, at least three Nobel prizes and thousands of research papers is still at one and the same time a simple concept and one that is exceedingly difficult to operationalise.Having successfully completed this module, the student should be able to:
Derivatives (5 ECTS)This module examines the primary types of derivatives (forwards, futures, options and swaps), shows how they are used to achieve various hedging and speculating objectives, outlines a framework for pricing derivatives and studies several applications of derivative pricing techniques outside derivative markets.Having successfully completed this module, the student should be able to:
Econometrics and Data Science (5 ECTS)An important element of this module will be the provision of the ability to apply cross sectional, panel and time series analysis as they are used in portfolio management. It introduces the students to modern techniques in modelling financial returns, volatilities and correlations. The students will be introduced to ARCH/ GARCH models, dynamic conditional correlation models, copulas and Value at Risk estimation.Having successfully completed this module, the student should be able to:
Credit and Fixed Income Analysis (5 ECTS)Starting from the perspective of the difference between a fixed income and other asset class, the module examines a number of perspectives. We derive a consistent pricing mechanism for the general class of fixed income (bond) assets; we then examine issue such as bonds with embedded derivatives, bonds with special provisions, bonds with equity like characteristics and other forms of bonds. The characteristics of the Sukuk market will also be analysed. Credit derivatives are examined from the perspective of their use in hedging, and we examine bond portfolio and bond refinancing issues.Having successfully completed this module, the student should be able to:
Investment Theory (5 ECTS)The module explores the basic foundations of investment choices, investors' behaviour and underlying theoretical models of investment returns, and risk returns interactions in broadly defined equity, alternative investments and fixed income investment markets.Having successfully completed this module, the student should be able to:
Portfolio and Wealth Management (5 ECTS)Wealth management examines the investment decision making challenges which face investors, both institutional and individual, in the current global investment landscape. The course assesses the practical challenges and behavioural of these entities as they pertain to investment management, portfolio execution, financial and long term estate planning. A focus on cross generational wealth planning is also central to the course.
Having successfully completed this module, the student should be able to:
International Finance (5 ECTS)This module describes and analyses the operations of the main international financial institutions and markets, it demonstrates the essential elements of international risk management, and it provides practical examples of managing risk.Having successfully completed this module, the student should be able to:
Alternative Investments (5 ECTS)This module provides the student with an overview of the main characteristics and portfolio desirability of alternative investments a set of investment classes often overlooked. Many portfolios contain alternative investments, which are typically large, illiquid and complex. In addition to real estate, other major classes include commodities, private equity, and hedge funds.Having successfully completed this module, the student should be able to:
Private Equity (5 ECTS)The object of the Private Equity module is to explore the operation of private equity capital markets in the context of modern finance theory as developed from the study of public equity markets. The structure of the market and the operation of the investment process in private equity markets are dramatically different from those of public equity markets. The module uses the tools of modern finance to explain why this is the case and examines how the organisational structure of the market leads to greater efficiencies and superior outcomes in terms of performance, or why as Swensen claims, “it is a superior form of capitalism”.Having successfully completed this module, the student should be able to:
Treasury Management (5 ECTS)The aim of this module is to gain an understanding of the ways in which corporations manage financial risks, funding and liquidity. The module is made up of two parts. The first part focuses on key functions of treasury departments in industrial companies: hedging of commodity and exchange rate risks as well as debt financing. The second part examines how banks manage liquidity and interest rate risk arising from their intermediation activities.
Venture Capital (5 ECTS)Learning where and how to source the initial investment made into an innovation led company is a major undertaking. In this module we examine this issue from the perspective of the prospective funderand from the entrepreneurs’ side. We begin with an overview of the various elements of the capital funding process, moving onto venture and angel capital specifically. We examine these as investmentsand also as processes, drawing out the essential elements into a strategic framework. We apply this learning to specific real projects seeking to secure investment. We analyse the investment proposition in the real project and make a recommendation on investment in it. We examine how state policies assist the process.
Applied Investment Management and Trading (5 ECTS)
The main objective of the course is to introduce the students to a structured understanding of investment decisions and trading strategies, and provide them with the introductory experience in trading and strategy development and execution. Topics covered will include introduction to the basic concepts of factors selection, quantitative approach to portfolio structuring and investment decisions, to algorithmic approach to investment management. Throughout the course, we will study actual trading models and algorithms and will use practical component of the course to develop hands on experience in quantitative and algorithmic trading.Having successfully completed this module, the student should be able to:
Energy Finance and Trading (5 ECTS)This module starts with an overview of energy finance and trading by first covering the current energy outlook, introduction to the oil and gas industry, and industry structure and terminology. After covering financial statement analysis of oil and gas companies, the module turns to capital budgeting and risk analysis of energy projects. In the remainder of the module, energy derivatives, energy risk management, and energy trading is discussed and applied to problems and situations.
Financial Markets and Institutions (5 ECTS)In this module we will discuss the role of a well-functioning financial system. The main types of financial institutions and financial markets are described. We will then cover the role of national and supranational financial institutions, and their involvement in recent events in financial markets. We will look at a number of financial crises that have occurred in recent decades, their causes and their effects. We will then examine the role of regulation and the regulatory changes that have been implemented to attempt to prevent future crises.
Trading Psychology and Behavioural Analysis (5 ECTS)This module will, through practical application, highlight the realities of taking decisions of risk in today’s financial markets. Candidates will be connected directly to our Amplify Trading’s London trading floor as they research, analyse and strategize for each trading decision made. Students will be encouraged to explore the practical implications of contemporary financial market theory. As candidates take and manage decisions of risk in live market prices, core behavioural theory will be explored in relation to the variability of their trading performance.
The module has been used as a basis to deliver behavioural training in 2018 to senior directors at leading buy-side firms including; Pictet Asset Managers, The Kuwaiti Sovereign Wealth Fund and Barclays Wealth Management.
Panel and Cross Sectional Data Analysis (5 ECTS)This module has two broad objectives: (1) To enhance students’ state-of-the-art knowledge on advanced econometrics and application in a rapidly growing field of study – the panel data – which combines features of both cross-sectional and time series data within single estimation framework. (2) To enrich students’ knowledge in terms of both theory and application on the study of panel data under alternative estimation environment, using semi-parametric and non-parametric methods.
Enterprise Risk Management (5 ECTS)The module starts with an overview of enterprise risk management and how risk management contributes to firm value. A general framework for how to use risk management to create value is presented and the course covers the tools and techniques of enterprise risk management. After a discussion of types of risk, the module turns to the implementation issues of enterprise-wide risk management, showing how to aggregate risks across the firm and how to use a firm-wide risk measure to make various corporate decisions and to evaluate performance within the firm.
Ethical Business (5 ECTS)This module aims to prepare students to understand, identify and shape the responsibility of businesses vis-à-vis society and the future generations. It seeks to help students to think critically about ethical issues that arise in the real business world and analyse the impact of business decisions on a variety of stakeholders. While there are no easy recipes for what corporations should and must do, our departing assumption is that learning to effectively manage ethical, social, and environmental issues can produce positive results for the manager, for the company, and for society at large.
The key themes in this course will revolve around moral decision making; stakeholder orientation; environment, social and governance dimensions and impact; and corporate social responsibility.
Finance Research Project (30 ECTS)The Finance Research Project is one of the elements of the degree that really differentiates it. The goal is for each student to produce a real-world piece of financial analysis. To do this, students must put into practice the portfolio of skills that are taught in the modules. The project is mentored by one of our academic or professional staff on a one-on-one basis, and many of our graduates find that this project segues them into the career of their choice, by acting as a calling card to interested employers. Recent topics researched in depth range from cryptocurrencies, to peer-to-peer lending, to the game theoretical foundations of 17th century trading clubs in Amsterdam.