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Major Field Meeting

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73 at Citigroup. 63 at Goldman, Sachs & Co. 59 at JP Morgan Chase. 45 at HSBC. 38 at Deutsche Bank ... links (see also Professors' own web pages for links) ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Major Field Meeting


1
Major Field Meeting
  • Finance Department
  • Fall 2005

2
Agenda
  • Two Branches of Finance
  • Capital Markets / Investments
  • Corporate Finance
  • Careers Within Each Branch
  • Finance_at_Kellogg
  • Finance I
  • Finance Major
  • Analytical Finance Major
  • Classes

3
Capital Markets/Investments
  • Perspective The investors portfolio
  • Key issues
  • Expected rates of return
  • Beta and the Capital Asset Pricing Model
  • Multi-factor models
  • Measuring risk
  • Variances and covariances
  • Short-run risk, long-run risk
  • Security Pricing (stock, bonds, derivatives)

4
Corporate Finance
  • Perspective The firm
  • Which projects to pick?
  • Capital Budgeting Valuing investment projects
  • Net present value, real options
  • How to finance them?
  • Capital structure Debt versus equity
  • Risk Management
  • What to do with the profits?
  • Dividend policy Dividends/share
    repurchases/retained earnings

5
Careers
  • Capital Markets
  • Money Management (buy side)
  • Pension funds
  • Mutual funds
  • Hedge funds
  • Research, Sales and Trading (sell side)
  • Security analysis
  • Design securities to manage risks
  • Market making
  • Corporate Finance
  • Management
  • Finance Department
  • General Management
  • Investment/commercial banking
  • Raising Capital
  • Mergers and Acquisitions
  • Corporate Clients
  • Consulting
  • Strategic
  • Valuation
  • Managerial performance evaluation/compensation

FINANCE WEB SITE LISTS COURSE RECOMMENDATIONS BY
CAREER
6
  • Use the Alumni Network to find Kellogg grads
  • http//kelloggalumni.northwestern.edu/Directory/
  • BasicSearch.asp
  • 160 at Merrill Lynch
  • 118 at Morgan Stanley
  • 94 at Lehman Brothers
  • 73 at Citigroup
  • 63 at Goldman, Sachs Co.
  • 59 at JP Morgan Chase
  • 45 at HSBC
  • 38 at Deutsche Bank

7
Finance Our Market Share at Kellogg
  • 19 of Graduates last year took jobs in finance
  • 26 of Interns last year took jobs in finance
  • Finance is one of the most popular majors at
    Kellogg (about tied with marketing and management
    and strategy).
  • And, were growing!

8
Finance _at_ Kellogg
9
Finance I (FINC430)
  • Which projects to pick?
  • Optimal investment decisions by firms
  • What cash flows does the project generate?
  • How to adjust for timing and uncertainty of cash
    flows?
  • Also a lot of useful techniques applicable to
    personal finance
  • We deal first with time...
  • basic discounting techniques, application to
    stock and bond valuation
  • capital budgeting under certainty
  • ...then with uncertainty
  • asset pricing models
  • capital budgeting under uncertainty
  • market efficiency

10
Major Requirements
  • Finance Major
  • Analytical Finance Major
  • Both majors build on knowledge from FINC 430 (FIN
    I) and FINC 441 (FIN II)

11
Finance II (FINC 441)
12
Options for First Years
  • Option 1 Take Required Classes
  • Finance I and Finance II
  • or Finance I/II (Turbo) (combines Fin I and Fin
    II in one class)
  • Option 2
  • Waive Finance I. Take Finance II.
  • Option 3
  • Waive Finance I and Finance II

13
Finance Major
  • Finance I Finance II (or FIN 440 (Turbo))
  • One capital market course from list F
  • 2 additional courses

14
Analytical Finance Major
  • Finance I Finance II (or FIN 440 (Turbo))
  • 3 courses from List A
  • Derivative Markets I
  • Practicum

15
Classes
  • Capital Markets
  • Derivative Markets I F (A)
  • Derivative Markets II F A
  • Investments F A
  • Fixed Income Securities F A
  • International Finance F
  • Money Markets the Fed F
  • Emerging Markets
  • Securitization
  • Corporate Finance
  • Financial Decisions A
  • Fin. Strategy Taxes A
  • Entrepreneurial Finance
  • Venture Capital and Private Equity Investing
  • Real Options
  • Investment Banking
  • Corporate Restructuring
  • Mergers and Acquisitions
  • Security Analysis
  • Case Studies in Venture Investment and Management

NOTE 1You can target your courses to your career
plans NOTE 2 It is not all math! Many courses
use cases and analytical frameworks.
16
Practicum in Analytical Finance FINC-925
  • The focus of the course this year will be Value
    Investing.
  • First half (a) formal lectures, (b) in class
    valuation discussions, (c) presentations by
    leading value investors.
  • Second half Students will (i) design strategies
    for efficiently searching for value investing
    strategies, and (ii) identify an interesting
    value investing opportunity, in groups.
  • The course uses large data bases of returns
    data. You will learn to use STATA to analyze
    strategies.
  • Each group will make a final presentation on (i)
    and (ii). A couple of leading value investors to
    be present during the final presentation.
  • http//www.kellogg.northwestern.edu/faculty/jagan
    nathan/ teaching/practicum/2005/index.htm

17
New Courses This Year
  • Investment Banking (Stowell, Winter 2006)
  • Focus on securities industry, Wall Street, LBO
    funds and hedge funds, various functions of
    I-banking
  • Sarbanes Oxley and the regulatory environment,
    exchanges
  • MA strategies, valuation and defense
  • Corporate financing IPOs, SEOs, debt and
    convertibles
  • Cases in Venture Investment and Management
    (Hochberg, Winter 2006)
  • Focus on evaluating early stage business
    opportunities and assessing VC investments
  • Learn how to make decisions in uncertain
    environments
  • Based on a series of cases
  • Will revolve around in-class case analysis with
    the venture capitalists and entrepreneurs
    involved in the cases
  • 5/5 ratings when taught at Cornell

18
More InformationFinance Department Web
Pagehttp//www.kellogg.northwestern.edu/finance/i
ndex.htm
  • Course recommendations by career
  • Course offerings, descriptions
  • Some course page links (see also Professors own
    web pages for links)
  • Professors
  • Email addresses
  • Biographical information
  • Research interests

19
Questions ?
20
Financial Decisions FINC-442
  • Uses case studies to enhance the student's
    understanding of managerial financial decision
    making, specifically investment and financing
    decisions.
  • Topics include short- and long-term financing,
    capital structure and dividend decisions, cost of
    capital, capital budgeting, firm valuation,
    financial and operational restructuring, and
    mergers and acquisitions.
  • The course is sufficiently general so as to be
    of interest to all students. It provides students
    with the opportunity to apply the concepts and
    theories developed in other finance courses.
  • At its most fundamental level, the course
    attempts to improve problem-solving skills
    problem definition, gathering and organizing the
    relevant information, developing feasible
    alternative courses of action, evaluating
    alternative choices, and recommending and
    defending the best course of action.

21
Entrepreneurial Finance FINC-446
  • This course teaches students how to become an
    entrepreneur by focusing on financial aspects.
  • Topics include pro forma development and review,
    business valuation models, cash flow analysis and
    raising capital from private investors, venture
    capitalists and banks.
  • The course is taught using the case method
    process ("real life" case studies). Periodically,
    technical notes will be used and guests invited
    to augment subjects addressed. This is not a
    quantitative analysis course. Rather, it focuses
    on marketing, sales, management and strategic
    planning.

22
Venture Capital and Private Equity Investing
FINC-445
  • This course teaches students about the venture
    capital and private equity industry from the
    primary perspective of the investor.
  • Topics include the structure of VC funds, the
    contracts between VCs and their investors, the
    contracts between VCs and entrepreneurs,
    valuation of deals, monitoring of investments,
    and exit strategies such as IPO / MA
  • The course is taught using a combination of
    lectures, class discussions, and the case method
    process ("real life" case studies). Periodically,
    technical notes will be used and guests invited
    to augment subjects addressed. This is not a
    quantitative analysis course, though frameworks
    for thinking about valuation are provided.

23
International Finance INTL-470
  • Managing an international business or one
    exposed to global competition requires an
    understanding of international financial
    instruments, markets and institutions. This
    course seeks to provide students with a working
    knowledge of these issues.
  • Topics include the nature of foreign exchange
    risk the determination of exchange rates and
    interest rates the management of foreign
    exchange risk with forwards, options and swaps
    exchange rate forecasting the anatomy of
    currency speculative attacks and the dynamics of
    the balance of payments with a focus on
    understanding international capital flows,
    country debt and exchange rate fluctuations.

24
Investments FINC-460
  • This course is a comprehensive study of
    investment theory from the perspective of plan
    sponsors and portfolio managers.
  • Emphasis is on optimal portfolio construction
    and portfolio performance evaluation using modern
    portfolio theory and asset-pricing models.
  • Topics include equity valuation, benchmark
    tracking, transactions costs, term structure of
    interest rates and bonds, use of derivatives in
    index fund management and hedge fund strategies.

25
Money Markets and the Fed FINC-451
  • This course covers two aspects of money markets
    financial institutions, and financial
    instruments.
  • In the first half of the course, the linkages
    between the financial system and the
    macro-economy are studied including interest rate
    determination, the role of the Federal Reserve
    and the conduct of monetary policy.
  • The second half of the course provides an
    overview of the instruments of the money market
    Federal Funds, Commercial Paper, Treasury Bills,
    etc. Basic valuation and hedging techniques in
    short term futures and swaps are also covered.

26
Derivatives Markets I, FINC-465
  • This course covers the use and pricing of
    forwards and futures, swaps and options.
  • Specific topics include strategies for
    speculation and risk management, no-arbitrage
    pricing for forward contracts, the binomial and
    Black-Scholes option pricing models and
    applications of pricing models in other contexts.
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