Module ETB-2202:
Corporate Finance
Module Facts
Run by Bangor Business School
20.000 Credits or 10.000 ECTS Credits
Semester 1 & 2
Organiser: Prof John Ashton
Overall aims and purpose
NOTE: The 10-credit module ASB2203 Finance comprises the Semester 1 content of ASB-2202.
AIMS: To examine the concepts and principles underlying key financial decisions. To provide an introduction to corporate finance.
Course content
Present value and the opportunity cost of capital; Net present value and alternative methods of investment appraisal; Project analysis; Financial planning, and analysing financial performance; Investment risk and return, and portfolio theory; The Capital Asset Pricing Model; Short-term and long-term financing; Estimating the cost of debt and equity; Weighted average cost of capital; Capital structure, and market imperfections; Dividend policy; Finance for Small and Medium-sized Entities (SMEs).
Assessment Criteria
threshold
D- to D+ (40-49%): No major omissions or inaccuracies in the deployment of information/skills. Some grasp of theoretical/conceptual/practical elements. Integration of theory/practice/information present intermittently in pursuit of the assessed work's objectives.
good
B- to B+ (60-69%): Very good performance Most of the relevant information accurately deployed. Good grasp of theoretical/conceptual/practical elements. Good integration of theory/practice/information in pursuit of the assessed work's objectives. Evidence of the use of creative and reflective skills.
C- to C+
C- to C+ (50-59%): Much of the relevant information and skills mostly accurately deployed. Adequate grasp of theoretical/conceptual/practical elements. Fair integration of theory/practice/information in the pursuit of the assessed work's objectives. Some evidence of the use of creative and reflective skills.
excellent
A- to A+ (70%+): Outstanding performance. The relevant information accurately deployed. Excellent grasp of theoretical/conceptual/practice elements. Good integration of theory/practice/information in pursuit of the assessed work's objectives. Strong evidence of the use of creative and reflective skills.
Learning outcomes
-
Analyse financial performance.
-
Understand the nature and implications of risk and return in corporate finance.
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Understand the nature and implications of alternative long-term financing decisions.
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Apply techniques for financial valuation and rules for capital investment.
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Understand the portfolio concept in finance and the implications on corporate financing decisions.
Assessment Methods
Type | Name | Description | Weight |
---|---|---|---|
Semester 1 Online Test | 15.00 | ||
Semester 1 Formal Examination | 35.00 | ||
Semester 2 Online Test | 15.00 | ||
Semester 2 Formal Examination | 35.00 |
Teaching and Learning Strategy
Hours | ||
---|---|---|
Private study | Private study will include time reviewing lecture materials and recommended reading, completing assignments, and revising for the exam. |
160 |
Lecture | One 2-hour lecture per week. |
40 |
Transferable skills
- Literacy - Proficiency in reading and writing through a variety of media
- Numeracy - Proficiency in using numbers at appropriate levels of accuracy
- Information retrieval - Able to access different and multiple sources of information
- Argument - Able to put forward, debate and justify an opinion or a course of action, with an individual or in a wider group setting
Subject specific skills
- knowledge of theories and empirical evidence concerning financial management, risk and the operation of capital markets (in cases of degrees with significant finance content).
- Analysis, deduction and induction. Economic reasoning is highly deductive, and logical analysis is applied to assumption-based models. However, inductive reasoning is also important. The development of such analytical skills enhances students' problem-solving and decision-making ability.
- An appreciation of the nature of the contexts in which finance can be seen as operating, including knowledge of the institutional framework necessary for understanding the role, operation and function of markets and financial institutions (e.g. the economic, legal, regulatory and tax environment, both national and international; the firm; the capital markets and the public sector).
- A knowledge of the major theoretical tools and theories of finance, and their relevance and application to theoretical and practical problems (e.g. concept of arbitrage and examples of its use; financial mathematics and capital budgeting criteria; informational efficiency; optimal risk sharing; portfolio theory; asset pricing models and the valuation of securities; cost of capital; derivative pricing; risk management; information asymmetry; principal agency relationships; signalling; Fisher separation and capital budgeting criteria; behavioural finance; term structure and the movement of interest rates; determination of exchange rates and financial intermediation).
- An understanding of the financing arrangements and governance structures of business entities, and an appreciation of how theory and evidence can be combined to assess the effectiveness and efficiency of such arrangements (e.g. decisions as to sources of finance and financial structure; the pricing of corporate securities; the market for corporate control; corporate governance structures and mechanisms; financial planning and international dimensions of finance).
- Numeracy: the use of quantitative skills to manipulate data, evaluate, estimate and model business problems, functions and phenomena.
- Self-management: a readiness to accept responsibility and flexibility, to be resilient, self-starting and appropriately assertive, to plan, organise and manage time.
Resources
Talis Reading list
http://readinglists.bangor.ac.uk/modules/etb-2202.htmlReading list
http://readinglists.bangor.ac.uk/modules/asb-2202.html
Courses including this module
Compulsory in courses:
- N325: BSc Finance, Investment & Risk year 2 (BSC/FIR)
- N223: BSc Industrial Management year 2 (BSC/IM)
- L11M: BSc Business Economics (Franchised) year 2 (BSC/PBE)
- N34M: BSc Banking and Finance (Franchised) year 2 (BSC/PBF)