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San Diego State University Imperial Valley Campus Course Syllabus Finance 329-International Business Finance, fall 2013 Independent Study Instructor: Richard C. Martin, Ph.D. E-mail: [email protected] (best way to reach me) Office: Faculty Office East 112 Office Phone: (760) 768-5681 Office Hours: Monday 4:30PM-5:30PM, Wednesday 3:30PM—4:00PM or by appointment The instructor reserves the right to adjust the course design I Course Description: This course is about the financial management dimension of multinational management. The course objective is to provide a deeper understanding of international finance from a business perspective. To accomplish the above the course studies International Business Finance from a theoretical and practical analysis of the financing and investment decisions of multinational firms operating in international financial markets. Topics include: international monetary systems, balance of payments, theory of competitive advantage, currency transactions, foreign exchange, international asset valuation, international financing and investments and foreign exchange risk exposure, international capital budgeting. As such, this course extends financial management to the international environment. II. Student Learning Objectives: Identify the reasons for international trade Describe the importance of balance of trade and balance of payments to the development of macroeconomic policy. Discuss the role that international institutions play in the global arena. Judge whether international parity conditions are met Describe the various currency arrangements a country may adopt Identify opportunities for arbitrage and discuss methods to exploit these opportunities. Describe and distinguish among alternative derivative instruments, including the different types of exposures multinational corporations face when using derivative instruments Learn capital budgeting in a multinational environment Review investing in a multinational environment. III. Course Format: This course is an independent study. Participants will be required to read the text and the study guide. The students are then expected to work the problems in the study guide. After working the problems in the study guide, the students will work 1 the assigned problems from the text. After these activities students will be required to email to the instructor a list of questions which will be answered in a face to face meeting. IV. Evaluation Participant performance will be assessed on examinations and a Foreign Currency Report. V. Prerequisites: Finance 323 Fundamentals of Finance Approved upper division business major, business minor, or another major approved by the College of Business Administration General understanding of algebra and economics is desirable. In addition, since this course cuts across all major finance topic areas, a strong background in domestic corporate finance and investment is desirable. General background in international business/monetary environments is useful but not necessary. VI. Course Requirements: 1. Textbook: a. Moffett, Michael; Stonehill, Arthur; Eiteman, David; Multinational Finance, 3rd Edition, 2009, Pearson Prentice-Hall, Inc., N.J b. Study Guide: for the above text. 2. Examinations: There will be four exams during the semester. The exams may include short answer questions, essays and problems. The exams are not cumulative and will cover only the material contained for the weeks specified prior to the exam. 3. Report on Foreign Currency: Participants will choose a foreign currency to follow. No two participants can follow the same currency. Staring on Oct. 21 every participant will start following the changes in their chosen foreign currency. Each participant will keep a log with an entry every Monday starting Oct. 21 with the value of the currency compared to the U.S. dollar. Starting on Oct. 28 the log will state the value of the currency and the amount that currency increased or decreased in relation to the U.S. dollar. In addition, the log should show in U.S. dollars and in the foreign currency amount the value of a U.S. $100,000 investment made on Oct. 21. The participants should review the news to see if they can find reasons for the change in the value of the currency. Log entries will be made until Dec. 2. Participants should be prepared to discuss the changes in the currency they follow. Please post to blackboard turnitin assignments by Dec. 10 a three to four page report that contains the following. A. A one-page executive summary on what you learned from following the currency. B. The log showing the value of the currency each week, the percentage change in the currency, and the value of the $100,000 investment made on Oct. 21 2 C. A summary of the major fluctuations in the currency for the past 20 years. D. Suggested format of table Date Amount of Foreign Currency 10/21 10/28 To be calculated Same as 10/21 $100,000 To be calculated 10/28 Same as 10/21 To be calculated To be calculated Monday Till 12/2 Entries To log made Exchange Amount in Rate U.S. Dollars Every Percentage increase or decrease to U.S. Dollar N/A To be calculated Possible reasons for change N/A To be filled in if relevant information To be filled in if relevant information Papers handed in late carry a 10-point penalty for each 24 hour period. The maximum possible late penalty is 50 points off the earned grade . 4. Evaluation Criteria: 1st Exam 2nd Exam 3rd Exam 4th exam Foreign Currency Report 20% 20% 20% 20% 20% 5. Grading Criteria: A = 100-94; A- = 93-90; B+ = 89-87; B = 86-83; B- = 82-80; C+ = 79-77, C=76-73, C=72-70, D+=69-67, D=66-63, D-+62-60, below 60=F A grade of “WU” for a “withdrawal unauthorized” (formally “U”) indicates that you enrolled in a course, did not officially withdraw from the course, but failed to complete course requirements. For purposes of GPA computation, this grade is equivalent to an “F”. If you attend a portion of a course and then, after receiving a failing grade, stop attending without officially withdrawing, you will receive a final grade of “F” rather than “WU” A grade of “I” for “incomplete authorized” is only given when a minor portion of required course work has not been completed and evaluated in the prescribe time period due to unforeseen, but fully justified, reasons. An incomplete shall not be assigned when the only way you could make up the work would be to attend a major portion of the class when it is offered next. 3 I will have discretion for adjusting the course grade by one grade category, (e.g. from D+ to C- or D)/ I do not normally use this discretion; however, have used it to raise a participant to a C- or D. VII. Schedule: Week of: Topic and Assignment Aug. 26 Moffett Ch. 1: Globalization and creating value, theory of competitive advantage, what is global financial management .Assignments: A. Questions 2, 4, 6, 7, 8, 9 B. Problem 6 Sept. 2 Moffett Ch. 3: International Monetary System, the Eurocurrency market, currency regime choices Assignments: A. Questions 4, 5, 6, 8, 9, 10, 12, 14 B Problems 2,7,13 Sept. 9 Moffett Ch. 4: Measure of international economic activity and balance of payments, affect on trade balances of exchange rate changes and volatility, history of capital mobility and capital flight Assignments: A. Questions 1, 2, 3, 5, 6, 8, 10, 13, 14, 15 B. Problem 1 Sept. 16 1st Exam Sept. 23 Moffett Ch. 17: Foreign Direct Investment Theory & Strategy, sustaining competitive advantage, the OLI paradigm, deciding where to invest, modes of involvement A. Questions 4, 6, 8, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14 Sept. 30 Moffett Ch. 5: Currency trading in global market, types of foreign exchange financial instruments, currency quotation, intermarket arbitrage Assignments: A. Questions 1, 2, 4, 6, 7, 9 B. Problems 1, 2 Oct. 7 Moffett Ch. 6: Inflationary affects on exchange rate, interest rates, forward currencies and market expectations, Assignments: A. Questions 1, 3, 5, 7, 8, 9, 10 4 B. Problems 6,10,15 Oct. 14 Second Exam Oct. 21 Moffett Ch. 7: Examine concept of supply and demand for currency, explore approaches to exchange rate determination, and review history of currency crises, technical and theoretical approaches to forecasting Assignments: A. Questions 4, 5, 7, 10, 11, 12, 13 B. Problems 2,5 C. Begin work on foreign currency report Oct. 28 Moffett Ch. 8: Examine foreign currency futures, forward contracts, options A. Questions 1, 5, 6, 7, 9, 10 Nov. 4 Third Exam Nov. 11 Moffett Ch. 9: Types of transaction foreign exchange, exposure, foreign exchange risk management, and hedging foreign exchange exposure, alternatives for managing transaction exposure Assignments: A. Questions 2, 4, 5, 8, 10 B. Problem 8 Nov. 18 Moffett Ch. 11: Translation practices and foreign exchange exposure, foreign subsidiary’s functional currency, converting foreign currency denominated financial statements A. Questions, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 7, 10, 11 B. Problems and cases to be assigned Nov. 25 Thanksgiving week no assignment Dec. 2 4th Exam Dec. 10 Foreign Currency Report Due 5