SOUTHERN CONNECTICUT STATE UNIVERSITY
SCHOOL OF BUSINESS
DEPARTMENT OF ECONOMICS AND FINANCE
FALL 2006

WEATHER CHECK NUMBER: 392-7669

COURSE NO:
FIN 341-01
COURSE TITLE:
Principles of Investments
COURSE DESCRIPTION:
An introduction to securities, sources of information, securities exchanges and regulations, with emphasis on equity valuation.
PREREQUISITES:
FIN 300 and 340 or permission of the instructor
PROFESSOR:

Dr. Robert M. Eldridge.
Seabury Hall 304
Tel: (H)876-5046
(O)
392-5628;
Fax: 203-392-5254;
email: eldridger1@southernct.edu

OFFICE HOURS:
Tues: 1400-1630;
Wed: 1400-1630;
Thurs: 1100-1300
or by appointment
CLASS HOURS:

Wed. 1700-1930;

EN A 113

MATERIALS:

1. Required:
A) "Fundamentals of Investing", Gitman & Joehnk 9th edition, 2005, Boston:Addison-Wesley
B) Subscription to the Wall St Journal
C) Your text from corporate finance
.
D) A basic 4-function calculator

COURSE OBJECTIVES:
The objective of this course is to establish a foundation the process of analyzing securities and selecting them for portfolios
METHOD OF INSTRUCTION:
The course will include lectures, problems and questions from the reading material.

METHOD OF GRADING:
1. Exams: 3@ 20%: 60%
2. 9 short papers: 25%
3. "Two minute drills: 10%
4. Ethics questions: 3%
5. Participation and attendance: 2%
Total 100%
SPECIAL NOTES:

1. "Two minute drills". At least once a week, at the end of the lecture, there will be a one-question quiz lasting two minutes. I will count only the top 10 grades. This will constitute 10% of the final grade.

2. At the end of the course, the student will be requested to complete a "Course Survey" form, separate and distinct from any University Evaluation form. This survey helps me in preparing the course for the next time it is offered. For each form returned, 1/n points will be added to the final grade, where "n" represents the number of students enrolled in the course based on the registrar's final class list.

3. The student is permitted and encouraged to tape record lectures for personal study use only.

4. If any student has a particular disability-related need in order to participate in this course, such as special seating, note-taking assistance, use of tape recorders or modified exam conditions, you will need to visit the Disability Resource Office, EN C105A, to arrange for approved accommodations. If you have other information you wish to share with me, such as emergency medical information, or arrangements in case the building has to be evacuated, please tell me as soon as possible.

5. I have developed a phobia: cell phones/pagers/other personal communications devices that go off in class. To maintain good diplomatic relations with me, please turn off all such devices in the classroom. NO EXCEPTIONS UNLESS PREVIOUSLY APPROVED BY ME.

6. Technology constraint: Cell phone calculators are not permitted for examinations.


EXPECTATIONS:

A. What you may expect from me:

1. A strong grounding in investment analysis

2. A willingness to work with you on specific problems you have with the course or scheduling.

3. A sense of excitement about the field of finance.

B. What I expect of you:

1. Come to class prepared by having read the assigned material and done any outside work assigned.

2. If you know that you will miss a class, a call to me would be appreciated

3. If something does not make sense, you will ask me either in class, in office hours or call me at home.

4. A sense of what is going on in the world of business and finance through a daily reading of the Wall St Journal, sections one and three at a minimum.

C. Profile for success or failure. If you go into an exam behind in the reading and not up with the class discussions, you will probably not be successful. If, on the other hand, you have done the reading and been faithful in attendance, you should have no problem with any exam you get from me.

ASSIGNMENT SCHEDULE

Subject to modification based on class progress at the discretion of the instructor

Date
Topic
Assignment
Remarks
Sept 6

Introduction. The investment environment and online information

 Chapter 1,3
 
Sept 13 Markets, transactions; return and risk

Chapter 2,4
paper 1 due
Sept 20 Modern Portfolio concepts Chapter 5 papers 2 and 3 due
Sept 27 Catch up and Review Exam I Discussion of papers 1,2 and 3 after the exam
Oct 4 Common stocks Chapter 6  
Oct 11 Discussion   OTIS establishment and operation 
Oct 18 Analyzing common stocks Chapter 7  
Oct 25 Discussion   paper 4 due
Nov 1 Stock valuation

Chapter 8  
Nov 8 Discussion  
paper 5 due 
Nov 15

Market price behaviour

Chapter 9

paper 6 due
Nov 22 Catch up and Review Exam II  
Nov 29 Fixed Income securities Chapter 10 paper 7 due
Dec 6

Bond valuation; Preferred and convertible securities

Chapter 11,12  
Dec 13 Discussion   papers 8,9 due
Dec 20 Final Exam
1715-1915    

Papers:

1. 1-2 pages. In this paper you will lay out your investment objectives (income, capital gains); the investment style you would follow (growth securities, value value securities) and your investment horizon (which should be tied in to your objectives). Each element above (objective,style and horizen) should include a rationale.

2. 1-2 pages. In this paper you will establish your asset allocation with a rationale. Shw how this allocation will support your objective, style and horizon of paper 1.

3. 1-2 pages. In this paper you will establish the benchmarks by which your portfolio will be measured. Include a benchmark for measuring both equity and bond holdings. Provide a rationale for your selection.

4.-8. 2-4 pages. These papers will report the results of investing in your portfolio, the results of the benchmarks and an explanation of the results. Pay particular attention to news reports that affect either the markets as a whole or specific stocks or bonds or sectors.

9. 3-4 pages. A final report on the exercise.

 

Some assistance:

www.finance.yahoo.com

Go to "stock research"
screener
     Launch Yahoo Finance Stock Screener
                                   or
     Large Cap value
                                   or
     Bargain growth