Introduction
Never before have financial issues been so often being the headline news. It is therefore crucial that today’s business professionals expand their financial knowledge to allow them to contribute to daily decisions and debates.
This course is designed specifically for non-financial personnel; this intensive Training course educates and informs delegates of the key financial analysis markets/products/risks and hazards.
Objectives
The training course provides delegates with the tools required to find better answers to questions such as:
What are the major market indices and how are they linked?
What is meant by a dual listing?
How is a forward rate determined?
Can I profit from interest differentials?
What is the role of correlation in reducing risk?
How do I judge whether my performance in the market is good or bad?
What are futures and options?
How can futures and options be used to protect the value of my portfolio?
What is meant by spread trading?
What is the role of bonds in a portfolio?
The difference between fundamental and technical analysis.
What are the Active and Passive Investing?
The Risk-adjusted return measures.
What are Style analysis and performance attribution?
Methodology
Using a combination of lectures and individual exercises with practical applications, the delegates will gain both theoretical and practical knowledge of the topics covered. The emphasis is on the “real world” and as a result, delegates will return to the workplace with both the ability and the confidence to apply the techniques learned.
Organizational Impact
This training course provides an integrated blending of concept and practical application. As well as developing subject knowledge delegates will return with enhanced quantitative and technical skills. Advanced Excel skills are increasingly a prerequisite for financial analysis. Delegates will return to the organization with great exposure to the power of Excel.
Personal Impact
Delegates will acquire detailed knowledge about the trading, pricing, and risk management associated with a variety of financial products. The practical and real-world approach will provide delegates with a “tool-box” to bring back to the organization to assist in the analysis of financing, treasury, and risk management decisions
Outlines
DAY 1
An Introduction to the Financial Markets
An Introduction to the Equity Markets:
IPO’s
Market Indices
International Equity Market Links
Dual Listings
GDRs and ADR’s
An Introduction to Bond Markets
Long Term versus Short Term
Treasury versus Corporate
Types of Bond
An Introduction to the FX Market
The spot and forward market
Exchange Rate trends and linkages
Carry Trades
DAY 2
An Introduction to Portfolio Theory
The link between risk and return.
The role of correlation
The Markowitz model of Portfolio Risk
The benefits of diversification
The Capital Asset Pricing Model
Benchmarking
DAY 3 AND 4
Derivatives Use in Investment Management
An Introduction to the Derivatives Market
Futures
Options
The Cost of carrying Model
Cash and carry arbitrage
Reverse cash and carry arbitrage
Using Options to provide portfolio insurance
Using Futures to provide portfolio insurance
Using futures to change a portfolio “beta”
Spread trading:
Intra-commodity spreads
Intra-commodity spreads
Option trading strategies.
DAY 5
Bond Portfolio Management
Bond pricing
Bond Duration
Term structure of interest rates
The convexity of a bond
Bond ratings
Immunizing a bond portfolio
Structured products
Money Market Deposits/CD’s/Commercial Paper/Treasury Bills
DAY 6
Fundamental and Technical Analysis
Technical versus fundamental analysis
Yields and ratios
Valuation
Chartism
Technical Trading Rules
DAY 7
Performance measurement and benchmarking
measuring returns
Measuring dollar-weighted vs. time-weighted returns
Computing excess returns over a benchmark
Compounding excess returns: Geometric mean excess return
Basic measures of risk
Measuring bad variation
Tracking error and residual risk
DAY 8
Active vs. passive investing
Sharpe ratio - Introduction to general notion
Constructing the Sharpe ratio
Sortino ratio
Treynor’s measure
Jensen’s alpha
Appraisal ratio and information ratio
Comparing the risk-adjusted measures
DAY 9
Risk-adjusted return measures
Jensen's alpha
Appraisal ratio and information ratio
The Sharpe ratio, by William F. Sharpe
The Sharpe ratio and the information ratio
DAY 10
Performance evaluation: Style analysis and performance attribution
Style analysis
Style Analysis - Part II
Style analysis: How does it work?
Performance attribution
Performance attribution: Numerical illustration