B8306-003: Capital Markets & Investments
MW - Full Term, 09:00AM to 10:30AM
Credit hours: 3.0
Location: URI 333
Instructor: Anton Lines
NOTE: This course is required for enrollment in most upper-level finance courses (8300 and 9300) and must be taken prior to or concurrently with any upper-level finance course. It is not required for upper-level economics courses (8200 and 9200).
This is a first course in capital markets and investments. The course has three principal goals:
- To introduce the principles of asset valuation from an applied perspective. The majority of the class is concerned with the valuation of financial securities. The valuation issues to be discussed are heavily used in portfolio management and risk management applications.
- To introduce the following concepts:
- Arbitrage.
- The term structure of interest rates.
- Portfolio theory, risk-control, and diversification.
- Equilibrium asset pricing models; the CAPM.
- Efficient and inefficient markets.
- Performance evaluation.
- Pricing and hedging basic derivative securities (futures and options)
- To provide sufficient background knowledge for students seeking an overview of capital markets and an introduction to advanced finance courses.
Anton Lines
Assistant Professor of Business
Professor Anton Lines currently conducts research in the areas of empirical asset pricing, asset management, information economics and market microstructure. His recent work examines fund manager skill, strategic trading, and the impact of institutional investor’s incentive contracts on the prices of the assets they hold. He earned a master’s degree from the London School of Economics and a PhD from...