Enquiry Form [New Window]
     
Qualification details

Introduction

Lead College
Academic Staff
Who is it for?
Structure and Syllabus
Individual Professional Courses
Assessment
Planning your studies
Study materials
How you study
Study calendar 
Skills & aptitudes
Duration
Applying & Registering
Entrance requirements

How to apply

Fees
Scholarship
Information&Resources
Mentor Support
Library

Prospectus

[2.4.MB; PDF; New window]

Programme Regulation

[8.4 MB; PDF; New window; Approx. may take 5 minutes to load]

Application Form

[91 KB; PDF; New window]

Online Application
If you wish to apply to join any of the CeFiMS programmes by distance learning, please first complete this online form and submit. [New window]

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Centre for Financial & Management Studies (CeFiMS) - University of London

Postgraduate

MSc Financial Management

MSc Structure and Syllabus

Seven courses from the following:

Managerial economics [C218]

Quantitative methods for financial management [C219]

Corporate finance [C221]

Macroeconomic policy and financial markets [C225]

Bank financial management [C222]

Risk management: principles and applications [C223]

Investment and project appraisal [C227]

The Japanese financial system [C224]

Banking and capital markets [C226]

Finance in the global market [C242]

The International Monetary Fund and Economic Policy [213]

Dissertation* [C228]

* The topic for the dissertation must be approved by the Programme Director.

Detailed Syllabus

Managerial economics [C218]
The main aim of this course is to present the main ideas and analytical tools in microeconomics and managerial economics. These ideas and tools are essential for a sound understanding of financial management. The course starts by discussing the methods of microeconomic analysis and of managerial economics and their relevance for financial economics and management. The theory of the consumer and the theory of the firm are then explored in detail. After examining the behaviour of individual firms, the course looks at the interactions among firms by analysing various types of market equilibrium: perfect competition, monopoly and oligopoly. The analysis of oligopoly is carried out by making use of game-theoretic tools to model the strategic interactions among the competing firms. The course then presents some modern developments in managerial economics, which are based on the idea that firms and agents have only an imperfect knowledge of their competitors or of other agents. They must therefore behave or design contracts (e.g. wage contracts or financial contracts) in such a way that their own welfare is maximised, despite them being unable to observe perfectly the behaviour of the other partners in the contract (e.g. workers or managers of firms). Finally, the course looks at the classical and modern theories of investment and finance, and applies these theories to financial decisions and to corporate control issues.

[Top]

Quantitative methods for financial management [C219]
This course introduces some of the quantitative methods of financial management which are commonly used by financial analysts, firms’ managers and individual investors. It examines techniques for the valuation of different classes of securities, analyses criteria for guiding investment decisions, considers the measurement of asset risk and return and discusses statistical techniques of forecasting. The MICROFIT computer package is provided for regression analysis and diagnostic procedures. The aim of the course is to give students confidence and skill in the use of the mathematical and statistical methods used in the analysis of financial instruments and financial markets, including the calculation of financial market yields and prices, frequency distributions, risk and probability, correlation and regression analysis. Statistical inference, the multiple linear regression model, autocorrelation, and risk reassessment and investment are all topics covered in the course, which teaches not only the relevant theoretical concepts but, in the belief that quantitative techniques can only be learned by doing, gives abundant practice in the manipulation of numerical material with problems and exercises.

[Top]

Corporate finance [C221]
The theories, examples, and empirical studies in Corporate finance which are discussed in this course concentrate on the finance of corporations whose shares are traded on a well organised stock market. The purpose of the course is to explain the observable financial decisions of corporations and portfolio managers, and to interpret the behaviour of the securities markets which results from the decisions of those and other agents. Traditionally, the securities markets considered in corporate finance are ‘spot’ or ‘cash’ stock markets dealing in company shares and bonds. But modern finance also includes large and growing markets in ‘derivatives’, especially options and futures, which are contracts relating to the future prices of the underlying shares or bonds. To ‘explain the behaviour’ of any of the financial markets involves explaining how the prices of shares, bonds and derivatives are determined. The course aims to enable students to understand and analyse the theoretical principles relating to corporate finance, and the controversies and criticisms which surround these theoretical propositions. It focuses on the relation between corporations’ decisions on investing in productive (‘physical’) assets and issuing financial liabilities, and the markets in the financial liabilities (equities and debt) which they issue. The theorems concerned with corporations’ decision problems which the course examines include the Net Present Value Rule, the Modigliani-Miller Theorem on Dividend Policy and their earlier seminal Theorem on Debt-Equity Ratios, and Agency Theory; and the main theorems focusing on the Operation of Financial Markets analysed are the Efficient Markets Hypothesis, the Capital Asset Pricing Model, and the Theory of Option Pricing.

[Top]

Bank financial management [C222]
This course has a somewhat more practical orientation than many other courses in the MSc programme, focusing as it does on the microeconomic problems of financial management of banking firms. This does not mean, however, that the course is devoid of theoretical interest. It also raises some new theoretical problems for consideration, many of them concerned with the way we need to conceptualise the banking firm. This course examines the role and importance of bank financial management to the modern bank. It teaches the basic models of financial management taught by University Economics Departments and Business Schools, which were constructed from the experience of mature capitalist economies. The course discusses the various trends shaping banking markets, such as institutionalisation, securitisation, globalisation and concentration. Among its aims are the following: to set the banking firm in the context of a changing financial services industry; to look at the role of the financial manager within the banking firm; to examine bank capital and capital structure, and to consider the question of the adequate regulation of the banking sector to ensure its safety, to preserve bank liquidity and prevent bank failures.

[Top]

Risk management: principles and applications [C223]
Portfolio optimization: risk and return in securities markets. Principles of arbitrage and hedging. Hedging with options and futures. Pricing of options contracts and futures. Warrants, convertibles and swaps. Risk management using options and futures. Real options. Managing market risk. VAR techniques. Credit risk: credit ratings, creditmetrics.

[Top]

The Japanese financial system [0FM0207]
The financial system of Japan, particularly its banking sector, has frequently been in the news over the years since 1990 when Japan’s asset-price ‘bubble’ burst and the economy entered a period of stagnation. Until early 2004, the banking sector had mostly been in the news for the wrong reasons: bad loans, ban failures, low profitability, defensive mergers. Even then, academics were exploring key questions about the changes underway in Japanese finance and about the relation between the problems in the financial sector and the real economy. Those questions, such as the financing of investment across different sectors of the economy and firms of varying size, continue to be investigated as the economy and the financial sector appear to be showing definite signs of recovery. And in addition to its importance for Japan’s economy – the second largest in the world – Japan’s financial system is an important illustration of transition from an archetypal bank-based one into a system in which capital markets play an increasingly important role. This course explores some of the implications of that transition, which has relevance beyond Japan itself.

[Top]

Macroeconomic policy and financial markets [FME0101]
Macroeconomic policy and financial markets focuses on the relationship between macroeconomic policies and financial markets. How do central banks’ policies on interest rates and credit relate to financial markets? What is the relation between budget deficits and financial markets? How do financial markets relate to investment and savings flows? The course includes both theory and empirical material.

[Top]

Banking and capital markets [FME0103]
This course covers the role of banking and finance in the economy. It introduces some of the central issues and ideas in modern theories of banking and finance in the light of recent thinking about the relationship between banking, finance and the real economy. In this course, finance is examined within a general framework concentrating on the experience of advanced capitalist economies, including an introduction to the current concern with derivatives. As a contrast, applications to less developed economies are also, briefly, considered. The course is organised around four principal themes: the relationship between financial markets, financial institutions, and the economy’s real investment and savings; the trade-off between risk and expected returns and their links to information and monitoring; the efficiency of financial markets; and the dialectic between regulation and deregulation or liberalisation of financial markets.

[Top]

Investment and project appraisal [FME0205]
This course is concerned with the methodologies used in the selection and appraisal of investment decisions in private and public sectors. Two main themes are addressed: what is needed from the micro, corporate sector, point of view in order to analyse, assess and gauge investment activities, and how cost-benefit analysis can be applied to public sector investment projects. The course aims to introduce the main theoretical and practical issues involved in the appraisal and assessment of investment projects. The first part of the course covers private and public sector investment evaluation in developed countries (projects such as waterworks, irrigation, transport, communication, health, education, etc.). In the latter half, the focus is on the growth of development projects in less developed countries and addresses issues relating to shadow pricing, environmental projects and a more theoretical analysis of cost-benefit and appraisal methodologies, in the context of several specific case studies.

[Top]

Finance in the global market [C242]
Financing the global firm: multinational cost of capital and capital structure; sourcing debt and equity globally. Measuring and managing foreign exchange exposure. Foreign investment decisions. Corporate strategy and foreign direct investment. Foreign ventures. International portfolio investment. Multinational capital budgeting. International acquisitions and valuation. Country risk analysis. Multinational taxation. Legal aspects of foreign direct investment and multinational corporations.

 

The International Monetary Fund and economic policy [C213]
This course introduces a number of concepts and approaches — in particular, disequilibrium and structuralist models of macroeconomics and finance. One of the main aims of this course is to encourage self-directed study. Whereas the earlier courses direct students along a firmly structured path, this course sets the broad parameters within which a relatively independent mode of study is encouraged, with optional topics provided for the investigation of special interests. The macroeconomics studied in other courses is based on equilibrium (or neo-classical) models. In addition, this course introduces disequilibrium and structuralist models and aims to familiarise students with the main ideas, concepts and techniques needed to understand these models.

Dissertation [C228]
The Research methods course covers the methodological basis for the final dissertation. It includes methods for setting up and carrying out research on issues in development finance and related areas. The topic for the dissertation to be submitted by MSc students must be approved by the Course Director and is expected to relate to both theory and policy issues.

[Top]