2012/2013 KAN-OECON_OE36 Hedge Fund Strategies
English Title | |
Hedge Fund Strategies |
Course information |
|
Language | English |
Exam ECTS | 7.5 ECTS |
Type | Elective |
Level | Full Degree Master |
Duration | One Semester |
Course period |
Autumn
Changes in course schedule may occur Monday 09.50-12.35, week 36-41, 43-48 |
Time Table | Please see course schedule at e-Campus |
Max. participants | 60 |
Study board |
Study Board for MSc in Advanced Economics and Finance
|
Course coordinator | |
|
|
lhp.fi@cbs.dk Secretary: Rikke Glahn - rg.eco@cbs.dk |
|
Main Category of the Course | |
|
|
Last updated on 24-04-2012 |
Learning objectives | |||||||||||||||||
The grading of the class is based on the students’ proven ability to understand active investment strategies and analyze them using rigorous quantitative methods. This includes, among other things,
|
|||||||||||||||||
Prerequisite | |||||||||||||||||
Please note that this course is taught at an elite level. More specifically, students are required to have taken Portfolio Theory (FIR) or Financial Markets and Instruments (FSM) or Capital Market Theory (AEF) or Asset Pricing (cand.oecon.) or Corporate Finance and Incentives or Asset Pricing Theory (cand.polit.). Graduate students in MØK and cand.scient.oecon. must have completed at least their bachelor courses in finance.
|
|||||||||||||||||
Examination | |||||||||||||||||
3-hour written | |||||||||||||||||
|
|||||||||||||||||
Examination | |||||||||||||||||
The exam is a Closed-Book Written Exam, although students may bring a calculator fulfilling CBS's "Rules for Using Electronic Aids During Written Examinations". | |||||||||||||||||
Course content | |||||||||||||||||
The class describes some of the main strategies used by hedge funds and proprietary traders and provides a methodology to analyze them. In class and through exercises, the strategies are illustrated using real data and students learn to use “backtesting” to evaluate a strategy. The class also covers institutional issues related to liquidity, margin requirements, risk management, and performance measurement. The class discusses the main strategies used by hedge funds in individual equity markets (equity long-short, equity market neutral, dedicated short bias), in tactical asset allocation of equity indices, currencies, fixed-income, and commodities (global macro, managed futures, emerging markets), and in relative-value arbitrage strategies (event driven investments, convertible bond arbitrage, fixed income arbitrage). To analyze these active investment strategies, the class applies tools for performance measurement, backtesting, regression analysis, managing transaction costs, market liquidity risk, funding a strategy, margin requirements, risk management, drawdown control, and portfolio optimization. Also, the class discusses the economics underlying these strategies, why certain strategies might work and why others might not. The class is highly quantitative. As a result of the advanced techniques used in state-of-the-art investments, the class requires the students to work independently, analyze and manipulate real data, and use mathematical modeling. |
|||||||||||||||||
Teaching methods | |||||||||||||||||
The course is based on lectures, including class discussion and problem solving. Students are expected to be prepared for class (including reading material and solving problem sets) and to participate actively in the discussion and problem solving. The course has 36 class hours. |
|||||||||||||||||
Expected literature | |||||||||||||||||
The course aims at teaching the most recent hedge fund strategies from a rigorous academic perspective. Given that there is no book that covers well all of the topics of the class, the course is based on a set of lecture notes as well as a number of research papers. While the list of research papers is subject to change as new strategies are developed and new literature becomes available, the below gives an overview of some of the relevant papers. Introduction to hedge funds
Methodology
|
Last updated on 24-04-2012