SOUTHERN
CONNECTICUT STATE UNIVERSITY
DEPARTMENT OF ECONOMICS AND FINANCE
SPRING
2009
|
| WEATHER
CHECK: |
(203)
392-7769 |
| COURSE
NUMBER: |
FIN
347-01 |
| COURSE
TITLE: |
International
Financial Management |
| COURSE
DESCRIPTION: |
A
study of the financial issues facing a firm operating in a multinational
environment. Topics include: balance of payments concepts, exchange
rate theories, currency markets, corporate treasury management,
capital budgeting, international cost of capital and risk management. |
| PRE-REQUISITES: |
FIN
300 or permission of the instructor |
| PROFESSOR:
|
Dr.
Robert M. Eldridge, Seabury Hall 304
Tel: 392-5628 (O); 876-5046 (H); 392-5254(F)
email: ELDRIDGER1@SOUTHERNCT.EDU |
| OFFICE
HOURS: |
Mon:
1530-1630;
Wed:
1530-1630;
Thurs: 1600-1900;
Or by appointment
|
| CLASS
HOURS: |
Mon:1700-1930;
Location: EN A 113
|
| REQUIRED
MATERIALS: |
-
Foundations of Multinational Financial Management, 6th
edition, Alan C. Shapiro and Atulya Sarin. John Wiley &
Sons, 2009.
-
Subscription to the The Financial Times of London.
|
| COURSE
OBJECTIVES: |
The
objective of this course is to:
-
Establish a foundation in the context of for-profit financial
operations in the international area as outlined in the course
description. At the end of the course, the student should have
an appreciation of the basic issues facing the financial manager
operating in the international environment;
|
| METHOD
OF INSTRUCTION: |
The
method of instruction will be primarily lectures and problems from
the textbook and the World Wide Web.
|
| METHOD
OF GRADING: |
|
1. 2 papers: #1@10%; #2 @ 20% |
30% |
| 2.
Exams 3@ 20% |
60% |
| 3.
"Two minute drills" |
5% |
| 4.
Ethics questions |
3%
|
| 5.
Participation and attendance |
2% |
| Total
|
100% |
|
| SPECIAL
NOTES: |
- "Two
minute drills". Generally, at the end of each class, there
will be a one-question quiz lasting two minutes. I will count
only the top ten grades. This will constitute 5% of the final
grade.
-
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 I offer it. 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.
-
The student is permitted and encouraged to tape record lectures
for personal study use only.
-
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.
-
I have developed a phobia: cell phones/pagers that go off in
class. To maintain good diplomatic relations with me, please
turn off all communications devices in the classroom. NO EXCEPTIONS
UNLESS PREVIOUSLY APPROVED BY ME.
- Calculators
that are part of a cell phone or other communications device
may not be sued for two minute drills or examinations
|
| EXPECTATIONS:
|
A.
What you may expect from me:
1.
A strong grounding in basic international finance.
2. A willingness to work with you on specific problems
you have with the course or its scheduling.
3. A sense of excitement about the field of international finance.
B.
What I expect to get from you:
1.
Come to class prepared by having read the assignment and at
least tried any homework problems.
2. If you know 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 international
business and finance through a daily reading of the Financial
Times.
|
| ASSIGNMENT
SCHEDULE
Subject
to modification based on class progress at the discretion of the
instructor. |
| Date |
Chapter |
Topic |
Remarks |
| Jan
26 |
1
|
Introduction |
|
| 3 |
Int'l
Monetary System |
|
| Feb
02 |
5 |
Balance
of Payments |
Q:
5: 1-3 |
| 11,
App 11A |
Country
Risk Analysis |
Prob:
3: 1,2,3 |
| Feb
09 |
|
Reference
Tutorial, Buley Library;
Foreign
Exchange markets |
1700-1745:
BU211; 1800-1930:Regular classroom.
Webex:
5:1,2; Webex: 11:1,2; Prob 5:1,4 |
| 2 |
Determination
of Exchange Rates |
|
| Feb
23 |
4 |
Parity
Conditions in International Finance |
Webex:
6:1,2,3; Prob:6:1,2,3; Webex:2:5,6; Prob: 2:2,3,5 |
| Mar
02 |
|
Exam
I - 1 Hour |
|
| 9,
App 9A |
Translation/Transaction Exposure |
|
| Mar
09 |
9,
App 9A |
Translation/Transaction Exposure |
Webex:
9:1,3; Prob 9:1,2 |
| 10 |
Economic Exposure |
|
| Mar
16 |
12 |
International
Financing / National Capital Markets |
Webex:
10:1,2; Prob: 10:1,2 |
| Mar
30 |
|
Capital
Budgeting for the Multinational Firm
|
Webex:
12:1,3; Prob: 12:2,3
Paper 1 due |
| Apr 06 |
|
Catch-up/Review |
Prob:
14:3,4,5 |
| Apr
13 |
|
Exam II - 1 hour
|
|
| 15 |
Financing
Foreign Trade
|
|
| Apr
20 |
13
|
International
Portfolio Investment
|
Prob
15:1,2
|
| Apr
27 |
13 |
International
Portfolio Investment II |
|
| May
04 |
16 |
Managing
the Multinational Financial System |
Prob:
13:1,2; Paper 2 Due |
| May
11 |
|
Catch-up/Review |
Prob:16:1,4 |
| May
18 |
|
Final
Exam 1715-1915 |
|
| Paper
#1: |
Select
a country whose exchange rate you will examine in paper 2 discussed
below. For the 5 year period 1 Sept 2002-31 Dec 2007, do an analysis
of the balance of payments of the country. Your paper will address
the following issues:
- Report and analyze the four major categories of the BOP: Current
Account, Capital Account, Official Reserves and Statistical Discrepancy.
What has been happening in each account.
- Compare the balance of trade with the exchange rate of the
currency against the dollar.
- Identify the country's major trading partners and the major
products traded. Do either the trading partners or products have
a significant impact on the balance of trade.
Note:
A good reference here is International Financial Statistics
of the IMF |
| |
|
| Paper
#2: |
This
paper will look at the exchange rate relationship between the
U.S. dollar and a currency of your choice, as long as it has at
least five years of data in Datastream. The paper will be in two
parts: a historic look over the five year period of 1 Jan 2003-31
Dec 2007 and a current look at the period 1 Jan- 31 Aug 2008.
In both cases, using the Datastream system in the library, the
following data will be plotted:
- The exchange rate of the currency against the U.S. dollar (mean
value).
- The exchange rate of the currency against the U.S. dollar using
the bid and ask rates. (This means two plots on the same page:
one for the bid rates and one for the ask rates.)
- The bid-ask spread.
- The exchange rate against the interest rate differential of
the U.S. dollar (Fed Funds rate) and the equivalent short term
rate of the other country.
- The interest rates of each country.
- The interest rate differential.
- Calculate and print out the correlation coefficient resulting
from a regression of the exchange rate against the interest rate
differential.
Note that there will be two separate sets of outputs 1-7 above:
one for the period 2003-2007 and one for the eight months Jan-Aug,
2008. Do this for three exchange rates: bid,ask and mean. thus
there will be three outputs.
In the development of your paper, you should discuss:
- Interest rate changes implemented by the monetary authorities
of each country (the Fed in the US and the equivalent Central
Bank in the other country. Include here the amount of the changes
made (in basis points) and the reason for the change.
-
The policy/economic issues giving rise to the change.
The objective of the paper is to address the following questions:
- Did interest parity appear to hold with regard to the two currencies
during the period 1 Jan 2003-31 Dec 2007? If not, can you find
an explanation for why it did not hold? Note that Datastream does
not give you forward rates, so you have to look at equations 4.12
and 4.13 on page 121 of the textbook to infer as to the direction
of the forward rate.
- How closely were the exchange rates and interest rates correlated,
if at all. If they are not correlated, can you explain what is
happening?
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