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Course module: USEMFR
USEMFR
Financial Regulation
Course info
Course codeUSEMFR
EC5
Content
Please note the prerequisites for this course at the bottom of the course description.

The course Financial Regulation has been designed to introduce students to some of the key economic concepts, principles, and problems in the regulation of financial activities. The course deals both with the theoretical economic underpinnings of financial regulation as well as with the extant international regulatory framework, with a particular focus on Europe and the US. The course illustrates why financial intermediaries exist, how market failures affect the industry and how regulation attempts to deal with them. It presents the main international regulatory bodies and how they work. It covers the regulation of banking and financial markets activities, and how this is applied in practice. Finally, the severe challenges to regulation posed by the last financial crisis are discussed.

Learning objectives
At the end of the course the student is able to:
  • Apply the concepts of transaction costs, liquidity insurance, moral hazard, and adverse selection to financial markets and banking
  • Establish the link between theory and empirical and/or anecdotal evidence of financial markets failures
  • Explain the justification for, and impact and limitations of, financial regulation
  • Compute and interpret the key dimensions used in regulatory requirements for banks (Basel)
  • Understand and critically evaluate current advancements in the literature
Format
There will be lectures, seminars, and final presentations. 

Assessment method
  • Final exam (85%, individual)
  • Presentation in class (15%, group)
Prerequisites
Students in Banking & Finance and Financial Management should have no problem taking the course. Law & Economics students should be able to take the course with some extra effort. The course assumes an intermediate knowledge of finance and a basic knowledge of microeconomics and statistics: discounted cash-flows; yields, interest rates, net return, basic knowledge of derivatives (e.g., forward/futures; options) and how to price them, basic accounting,  normal and binomial statistical distributions, and basic utility maximization, i.e., Lagrangian functions. Students from any other master program are not encouraged to attend, unless they have taken at least two prior finance courses during their bachelor and/or master programs.

In case online access is required for this course and you are not in the position to buy the access code, you are advised to contact the course coordinator for an alternative solution. Please note that access codes are not re-usable meaning that codes from second hand books do not work, as well as access codes from books with a different ISBN number. Separate or spare codes are usually not available.
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Kies de Nederlandse taal