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  List of Concentrations

Analytic Finance

The Analytic Finance concentration allows you to gain a deeper and more precise knowledge of financial theories, their application to a variety of business problems, and the empirical work by which we learn how the financial world works. Chicago Booth offers the largest number of advanced finance classes of any business school, and the analytic finance concentration gives recognition to students who pursue this specialization.

At Chicago Booth, you'll learn to do cutting-edge analysis as practiced in hedge funds, investment banks, risk management, and more. How do you evaluate a hedge-fund manager? How should an airline hedge its exposure to jet fuel costs? How is the value of a structured mortgage product affected if interest rates rise 1%? What is the evidence that the "carry trade" in international markets works? You will learn the quantitative tools needed to sift through complex financial data and analysis to create innovative solutions to real financial issues.

 

COCURRICULAR ACTIVITIES
You'll have the chance to explore operations outside the classroom in numerous ways that will also allow you to build new skills, relationships and networks. These include:

Community Activities

Training the Street LBO Modeling Seminar

This intensive one-day workshop is designed to develop an understanding of leveraged buyout analysis through actual hands-on construction of an LBO model. Each participant will build their own interactive LBO model from scratch to gain a detailed understanding of LBO analysis. The focus of the model is to effectively represent the interests of the three main constituents of the deal – the selling shareholders, the lenders and the financial sponsor.

 





 

COURSE SAMPLING
You’ll have the option of taking courses that address your individual career choices. Samples include:

Theory of Financial Decisions 1

This PhD-level course is concerned with models for portfolio decisions by investors and the pricing of securities in capital markets. It is meant to be difficult, but accessible to the motivated MBA student.

Portfolio Management

This quantitative course presents advanced material relevant for portfolio managers, extending the material covered in Investments. Topics include the money management industry (mutual funds, pension funds, hedge funds), modern techniques for optimal portfolio selection, liquidity and transaction costs, properties of asset returns, and investment strategies designed to exploit apparent violations of market efficiency.

Advanced Investments

The course has one central theme. Asset pricing has undergone a sea of change in the last 20 years or so, with the realization that expected returns do vary across time, and across assets in ways that the static CAPM and random-walk view does not recognize. We will cover a range of topics, including 1) how stock and bond returns can be predicted over time, 2) understanding the volatility of stock and bond returns, 3) multi-factor models for understanding the cross-sectional pattern of average returns, such as value, growth and momentum effects, 4) the size of the average market return and its relation to fundamental risks, 5) optimal portfolios that reflect multifactor models, return predictability and hedging motives, 6) advanced trading strategies used by trading desks and hedge funds, 7) performance evaluation and benchmarks for funds, 8) liquidity effects and "bubbles" in stock and bonds.

Fixed Income Asset Pricing

This course covers state-of-the art models and techniques required to analyze fixed income instruments, and their derivatives, in modern financial markets. By the end of the course, students will learn (i) the basic concepts of fixed income instruments, such as yield, duration, convexity; (ii) the modern empirical methodologies to describe Treasury and corporate bond data, such as "curve fitting," factor analysis, and default probabilities; (iii) the most recent modeling techniques for fixed income derivative products used in the Street, such as the models of Vasicek, Cox Ingersoll and Ross, Ho and Lee, Hull and White, Black-Derman-Toy, and Heath-Jarrow-Morton; and, importantly, (iv) how to use these models in practice to value both traditional derivative instruments, such as Swaps, Bond Options, Caps and Floors, as well as the more recent products, such as Inverse Floaters, Range Notes, Mortgage Backed Securities and Credit Derivatives. The key feature of Fixed Income Asset Pricing is that it strongly emphasizes the applications of these models to value real world fixed income products, and their derivatives, by focusing both on the practical difficulties of applying models to the data, as well as on the necessity to use computers to compute prices.

Financial Engineering: Cases in Financial Risk Management

Financial risk management is reported to be the main reason for the use of financial derivatives by non-financial institutions. The course has two main objectives. The first is to cover techniques to identify, measure and manage corporate financial risk, as modern financial markets and regulation require. Specifically, topics of discussion will include dynamic hedging and portfolio replication, the development of Value-at-Risk, the management of exchange rate risk, interest rate risk, credit risk and operation risk. The second main objective is to build a framework to integrate financial risk management solutions with long-term corporate strategy. We will discuss cases where the use of financial engineering was vital for the success of a business strategy. Typical applications in this case include privatizations, mergers and acquisitions, and financing strategies, among others. However, the course will focus more on the uses of derivative securities rather than their technical aspects.

FACULTY SAMPLING
You’ll study with professors who conduct groundbreaking research, collaborate with the entrepreneurial and private equity communities, and bring their own entrepreneurial experiences into the classroom.

Image for John H. Cochrane John H. Cochrane, is a research associate and past director of the asset pricing program of the National Bureau of Economic Research and a Fellow of the Econometric Society. His recent publications include the book, Asset Pricing, and numerous articles on his research topics. Image for Tobias J. Moskowitz Tobias J. Moskowitz, was recognized by the American Finance Association with its 2007 Fischer Black Prize, which honors the top finance scholar under the age of 40. The award cited his "ingenious and careful use of newly available data to address fundamental questions in finance."
Image for Douglas W. Diamond Douglas W. Diamond, specializes in the study of financial intermediaries, financial crises, and liquidity. His work has appeared in such notable journals as the Journal of Financial Economics, the Journal of Finance, the Review of Economic Studies, the American Economic Review, and the Journal of Political Economy. Image for Robert Novy-Marx Robert Novy-Marx, studies asset pricing, real options, general equilibrium, and real estate finance. Novy-Marx has received an award from the American Real Estate and Urban Economics Association as well as the Western Finance Association's Trefftz Award.
Image for Eugene F. Fama Eugene F. Fama, is widely recognized as the "father of modern finance." Fama is among the most cited of America's researchers. He focuses much of his study on the relation between risk and return and implications for portfolio management. Image for Raghuram G. Rajan Raghuram G. Rajan, served as Chief Economist at the International Monetary Fund between 2003 and 2006. He is the author, along with fellow GSB faculty member Luigi Zingales, of the book, Saving Capitalism from the Capitalists. He received the inaugural Fischer Black Prize in 2003.
Image for Ralph S. J. Koijen Ralph S. J. Koijen, conducts research on decentralized and delegated investment management, real estate finance, household finance, asset pricing, and financial econometrics. His published research includes "Optimal Decentralized Investment Management," which appeared in the Journal of Finance. Image for Amir Sufi Amir Sufi, studies the broad areas of financial intermediation, corporate finance, and consumer finance. His research has won numerous prizes, including the Brattle Prize and the inaugural Young Researcher Prize from the Review of Financial Studies. Sufi has articles in the Journal of Finance, the Review of Financial Studies and the Journal of Financial Economics.
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Last Updated 8/5/10