Syllabus

Title
1284 Investing in Emerging Markets
Instructors
PD Dr. David Hauner
Contact details
hauner@stanfordalumni.org; for course administration please contact cems@wu.ac.at
Type
PI
Weekly hours
2
Language of instruction
Englisch
Registration
09/14/18 to 09/21/18
Registration via LPIS
Notes to the course
Dates
Day Date Time Room
Wednesday 12/19/18 09:00 AM - 05:00 PM D1.1.074
Thursday 12/20/18 09:00 AM - 05:00 PM D1.1.074
Friday 12/21/18 09:00 AM - 05:00 PM D1.1.074
Contents

Investing in emerging markets from a practitioner's perspective: macro and micro drivers of growth; macro and political risks; economic policies and their impact on investments; capitalmarkets and their local and global drivers.


Learning outcomes
Students will gain a basic understanding in what drives investment returns in emerging markets; how to analyze these factors; and how to express them in various asset classes.
Attendance requirements

80% of attendance is requested, but it is strongly recommended to attend the whole course.

Teaching/learning method(s)

The course will be highly interactive, and thus much of the assessment is based on active participation. Students will give presentations that will be enriched by active classroom discussionand real-world investment insights from the lecturer. Students will also work on a case study on investing in emerging markets. The course will conclude with an open-book exam to demonstrate that students have actively followed the course and are able to drawcoherent conclusions.

Assessment

50pc active participation; 25pc presentation; 25pc 2h open book exam at the end of the last day.

Each student should please select one topic from a list, (which will be distributed) for a 30 minute presentation. Use discretion in selecting the key parts of the publications, make good use of charts and skip the technical parts. Feel free to use additional outside sources to enrich your presentations. The topics differ in length and difficulty: this will be taken into account in the grading of the presentation. Please read as much of the material below as possible: it will show in your class room participation which accounts for most of the grade.


Recommended previous knowledge and skills
Introductory macro and finance
Availability of lecturer(s)

Dr David Hauner, MA, CFA, is chief strategist and economist for CEE, the Middle East and Africa at Bank of America Merrill Lynch in London. He also worked at the InternationalMonetary Fund and Munich Re. He studied at Stanford, ESSEC and the University of Vienna.

Contact: hauner@stanfordalumni.org.

Unit details
Unit Date Contents
1 19/12

2 20/12

Day 2: Emerging financial markets (10 Topics)

2a. Financialdevelopment in 205 economies

2b. Original Sin

2c. Internationalization of emerging market currencies - a balance between risks and rewards

2d. Two targets, two instruments: monetary and exchange rate policies in emerging market economies

2e. Managing large capital inflows

2f. Policies for macrofinancial stability - how to deal with credit booms

2g. Financial crises

2h. Emerging markets crises - a global perspective

2i. Financial and sovereign debt crises - some lessons learnt and those forgotten

2j. EM sovereign debt restructurings

 

3 21/12

Day 3: Investing in emerging markets (10 topics)

In your presentations on these topics please include the implications of the reading for an investment idea (eg, in equities, bonds or private equity): 1) what you want to buy; 2) rationale; 3) expected return (choose your time horizon); 4) potential risks to your investment and how to mitigate them.

 

3a. Are emerging markets the next developed markets?

3b. EM debt as an asset class

3c. Corporate governance in EM

3d. Developing a government bond market - Chapter 1

3e. Valuing EM equities

3f. Credit ratings

3g. Corporate bonds

3h. Sovereign bonds

3i. Local currency bonds

3j. Credit Default Swaps

 

Last edited: 2018-09-19



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