BUSN 460.
B0. Managerial Finance. 3 credit
hours.
Dr.
Class
meets on Tuesdays:
Office
hours: Tuesdays, Wednesdays, Thursdays:
Prerequisites: BUSN 270 (Basic Statistics), BUSN 300 (Applied
Mathematics for Business)
Website: http://vista.acaweb.org e-mail: soumbat@lmunet.edu
Course
Objective: to help student develop
skills in basic financial analysis tools including capital budgeting, ratio
analysis, interest rates, and risk analysis.
Required Text: Brigham & Houston, “Fundamentals of
Financial Management”, concise 4th edition, South-Western, Thomson
Learning, 2004. ISBN 0-324-25870-4
Your
grade in this class will be determined based on your performance on quizzes, assignments,
homework, midterm, a class project and a comprehensive final exam:
|
Type |
Weight |
Due date |
Type
of questions |
Comments |
|
Class
participation |
5% |
n/a |
Open |
Class discussions |
|
Quizzes |
10% |
n/a |
Multiple choice |
Two lowest grades will be
dropped |
|
Homework/ Assignments |
15% |
to be announced |
Multiple choice, short
problems, and/or case studies |
Homework is due at the
beginning of the class period. You might
receive a partial credit if your homework is late. |
|
Project |
20% |
April 13 |
A financial instruments’ study |
No partial credit will be
given if you turn in your project late |
|
Midterm
Exam |
20% |
March 2, regular class
hours |
Definitions, multiple choice
and short problems |
Test review will be on February
24 |
|
Final
Exam |
30% |
May 4, |
Definitions, multiple
choice, an essay and short problems |
Test review will be on April 27 |
Grading Scale
A 90+ A- 87-89.9
B+ 85-86.9 B 80-84.9 B- 77-79.9
C+ 75-76.9 C 70-74.9 C- 67-69.9
D+ 65-66.9 D 60-64.9 D- 55-59.9
F <55
Your
overall grade will be lowered by 10 points (one letter grade) if you skip 3 or
more class meetings.
Calendar (tentative)
|
Class
Date |
Topic |
Text
Assignment |
|
1/13 |
Introduction |
Chapter
1 |
|
1/20 |
Financial
Statements |
Chapter
2 |
|
1/27 |
Analysis
of Financial Statements |
Chapter
3 |
|
2/3 |
Risk
and Rates of Return |
Chapters
4, 5 |
|
2/10 |
Time
Value of Money |
Chapter
6 |
|
2/17 |
Stocks
and Bonds |
Chapters
7, 8 |
|
2/24 |
Review
for the Midterm |
Chapters
1 – 8 |
|
3/2 |
Midterm
Exam |
Chapters
1 – 8 |
|
3/9 |
Cost
of Capital |
Chapter
9 |
|
3/16 |
Capital
Budgeting |
Chapter
10 |
|
3/23 |
Spring
Break. No classes |
|
|
3/30 |
Capital
Structure and Leverage |
Chapters
11, 12 |
|
4/6 |
Distribution
to Shareholders |
Chapter
13 |
|
4/13 |
Presentations |
|
|
4/20 |
Financial
Planning and Forecasting |
Chapters
14, 15 |
|
4/27 |
Review
for the Final Exam |
Chapters
9 – 16 |
|
5/7 |
FINAL EXAM @ |
Chapters 1 – 16 |
It is
the aim of the faculty of
1. Cheating: dishonesty of any kind on
examinations or written assignments, unauthorized possession of examination
questions, the use of unauthorized notes during an examination, obtaining
information during an examination from another student, assisting others to
cheat, altering grade records, or illegally entering an office are instances of
cheating.
2. Plagiarism: offering the work of
another as one’s own without proper acknowledgment is plagiarism; therefore,
any student who fails to give credit for quotations or essentially identical
material taken from books, magazines, encyclopedias, web sources or other
reference works, or from the themes, reports, or other writing of a fellow
student has committed plagiarism.
Academic
Grievance Procedure
Grievances
concerning any aspect of academics should first be taken to the instructor of
the class if a classroom situation is in dispute. If a student feels he/she needs to take the
matter further, the chair of the department offering the course should be
consulted. The next appeal source is the
Dean,
Students
with Disabilities