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Course Criteria
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3.00 Credits
This course applies the skills of financial analysis to the particular problem of financing new ventures and existing small businesses. Specific topics covered include legal forms of organization and how they affect financing alternatives, ratio analysis, identifying and evaluating sources of small business financing, buying existing small businesses, financing growth and diversification, and dealing with bankruptcy and liquidation. Emphasis is placed on the evaluation and preparation of financing packages for securing financing from banks, ventured capital investors and government agencies.
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3.00 Credits
Offered each semester. Prerequisite: FIN 3300 or ECON 2000. Fundamental information regarding the organization, regulation, and performance of securities in the various markets and financial instruments.
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3.00 Credits
Prerequisite: ECON 2221. Study of the impact of financial institutions on both the total level of economic activity and the allocation of funds to various sectors of the economy. Analysis of the intermediary process and the determination of interest rates in the financial markets.
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3.00 Credits
Prerequisites: ECON 2221 and FIN 3300. The financial management of the commercial bank from the perspective of senior management. An internal analysis of bank portfolio construction, bank capital structure, the lending function, and other decisions of the financial manager that affect the value of the bank.
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3.00 Credits
Offered each semester. A course focused upon the consumer interest in an interdisciplinary approach to the subjects of pure risk and decision-making with emphasis upon planning family insurance programs. Principal topics include the impact on the family of economic risk, the private insurance mechanism, government benefit programs, and specific types of insurance coverage of importance to the family. Specific attention is focused upon such financial instruments as life insurance, health insurance, automobile insurance, and insurance for the home. Consumer issues related to the private insurance mechanism and government benefit programs are considered. The roles of economic facts and consumer attitudes in making decisions among alternatives also will be explored.
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3.00 Credits
A study of valuation and appraisal methods for commercial, industrial, residential, and other income properties. Included will be the problems of real estate development, redevelopment, and property taxation.
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3.00 Credits
Issues and problems in the administration of real estate mortgages; sources and uses of mortgage funds, including land acquisition, construction, permanent, and secondary financing; cost of funds, mortgage yields and accompanying risk; federal and state role in mortgage markets.
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3.00 Credits
A survey of major topics in valuation of residential real estate. Topics include real estate valuation, supply and demand factors affecting land use, economics of land use, government and other external forces, affecting land use, planned unit development, historic properties, and major financial instruments.
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3.00 Credits
(ECON 4291 and FIN 4391 are cross-listed) Offered each semester. Prerequisites: Approval of the directed individual study by the department chair and the supervising professor is required prior to registration. The student should refer to the College of Business Administration Policy On Undergraduate Directed Individual Study available in the Department of Economics and Finance. This course is arranged individually in order to provide latitude for specialized study and research under the direction of a faculty member. Progress reports, readings, conferences, and a research paper are required. May be repeated.
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3.00 Credits
Prerequisites:BA 2780, QMBE 2786, and FIN 3300 and consent of department. Student intern is engaged in ten hours per week at the site of an assigned participating organization which directs the intern in a specific research project. Students wishing to take this course should apply a semester in advance since enrollment is limited by internships available.
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