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Course Criteria
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3.00 Credits
(Same as REA 2949.) Examines the methods and techniques used by investors, developers, and lenders in evaluating income-producing real estate investment debt and equity investments. Students identify sources of capital and analyze the types of financing available in the real estate industry. Topics include mortgage instruments and notes, mortgage underwriting, the secondary mortgage market, and the construction loan.
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3.00 Credits
(Same as REA 2963.) A solid understanding of investment cash-flow analysis. Examines methods of measurements employed in quantitative analysis of real estate investments and income-producing properties. Concepts and calculations covered include net operating income, cash on cash return, internal rates of return, net present value, discounted cash flow, capitalization, debt service, leverage, depreciation, capital gains, and income taxes.
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3.00 Credits
No course description available.
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3.00 Credits
Discusses the basic principles of the field of insurance and risk management, including ethical, financial, social, economic, and political issues. Students analyze institutional aspects of risk management to allow the business or individual to minimize financial loss from unforeseen courses.
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3.00 Credits
A comprehensive study of insurance and risk management in a global context. Systematic examination of various environmental factors (economic, financial, political/ legal, regulatory/tax, demographic/sociocultural, and physical/technological), and the patterns and degrees of change associated with each. Course objective is to provide students with technical and managerial skills suitable for use in the rapidly changing global setting of insurance and risk management. Major ethical, social, and political issues are examined. Current events and trends are noted throughout; students follow the performance of a selected portfolio of global insurance stocks.
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3.00 Credits
A comprehensive study of personal management from the individual consumer, family, and small business points of view, with a life-cycle perspective. Explores 1) financial goals and objectives, budgets and other tools, money and money management, borrowing and debt management, tax planning, and housing; 2) personal risk management and insurance (life, health, property, and liability); 3) stocks, bonds, mutual funds, and other investments; and 4) retirement and estate planning.
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3.00 Credits
No course description available.
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3.00 Credits
An examination of the historical development of financial institutions and markets from the Middle Ages to the present. Focuses specifically on the contributions of key bankers and banking families/firms, such as Hayim Solomon, Alexander Hamilton, Bernard Baruch, Alex Brown, Goldman Sachs, Lehman, Kuhn Loeb/Jacob Schiff, Sandy Weill, Rothschild, and Warburg.
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3.00 Credits
What do Investment Bankers and Private/Merchant Banker do currently, and what have they done historically? Examines current practice in investment banking, merchant banking and private banking. Studies relevant valuation techniques and funding methodologies. Practical, recent cases and examples will be discussed. Emphasis on the United States, the United Kingdom, Europe, and Australia from 1815 to the present, and the fiscal, monetary, political, technological, banking, and financial market developments and issues that have affected these specialized financial intermediaries.
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3.00 Credits
Promotes strong fundamental understanding of forecasting techniques and their application to business. Covers simple linear regression, multiple regression, and logistic regression, and introduces time-series models. Discussion of the derivation of various models; development of the understanding needed to apply them to real-life business problems.
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