MARKET ECONOMY AND FINANCIAL INSTITUTIONS

MARKET ECONOMY AND FINANCIAL INSTITUTIONS

Claudio Boido

Instructional goals

Provide the basic knowledge of the mechanisms of financial intermediation and the functioning of financial markets; Pass on skills relating to the management conditions of financial intermediaries, with particular reference to economic and risk aspects; Learn the technical, legal, financial and operational characteristics of financial instruments traded by intermediaries

Intended learning outcomes

Know how to use the essential tools of financial mathematics

Course Contents

Analysis of the characteristics and functioning of financial markets Theory of intermediation and functions of financial intermediaries Financial intermediaries: management, risks and regulation Analysis of the characteristics of financial instruments traded on financial markets

Reference Books

Economia degli Intermediari finanziari Saunders et al. V edition Mc Graw Hill or Istituzioni e mercati Finanziari (9 edizione) Miskins Eakins Beccalli ed Pearson Slides and exercises presented in class and signalled by the professor as part of the final exam

Teaching Methods

The teaching activity is articulated as follows: Frontal lectures: aimed at providing basic knowledge, and discussing with students the program's topics. Exercises: aimed at the improvement of application skills and problem solving. Seminars: analysts, experts, representatives of the credit and financial intermediation sector are invited to enrich the course content by bringing their professional experience to the classroom. Group project: students are involved in group project presentation activities to develop the skills of research, coordination, adoption of technical language and public speaking. Individual study: students integrate the knowledge and skills acquired in the classroom with an individual study of the textbook and reading of in-depth documents indicated by the teacher to promote independent learning skills.

Assessment Method

For attending students, the final grade is made up of : a) The first assessment (50%) (attendance >70%) b) The final assessment (50%) (attendance >70%) Attending students are those who attend lectures. (attendance >70%) The written test will consist of exercises carried out or assigned during classes, multiple-choice questions, and short open-ended questions. The test subject will be announced during the course. Plus, any other distributed reference material during the year, and indicated as "study material". For non-attending students: Written exam (100%) Non-attending students cannot systematically follow the course (regardless of the reason, i.e., participation in internships or completion of the Erasmus period does not allow attendance). Non-attenders are also those who do not participate or withdraw from group work. In September, all students in debt are considered non-attending. Non-attending students will be assessed only on the final written exam, with the same structure, but the number of question exercises will be 100% of the test value. The test will cover all the chapters of the textbook.

Thesis assignment criteria

There are no formal barriers. The assignment of the final thesis is made by the professor after the approval of the topic, the bibliographic research, and a brief memo illustrating the thesis project.

Week 1

Why study financial institutions and markets? Banks: foundations of business and management

Week 2

Money Markets Bond Market

Week 3

Bond practical class Basic Options

Week 4

Options practical class Structured Bond Bond Management

Week 5

Bond Portfolio practical class Stock Market

Week 6

Spot and forward exchange rates Financial Future Sawap and F.R.A.

Week 7

Derivatives practical class Bank: introduction Banking sector: structure and competition

Week 8

Banking operations Mutual funds Insurance and Pension Fund

Week 9

The bank balance sheet Financial statement analysis and banking business indicators

Week 10

Banking practical class Investment banks, brokers and dealers, venture capital firms Banking and financial regulation

Week 11

Basel III international regulatory framework for banks The conventional theory of performance evaluation

Week 12

Central Bank and Monetary Policy Risk Management