20259 - PRIVATE BANKING AND MONEY MANAGEMENT FOR INSTITUTIONAL INVESTORS
Department of Finance
ANDREA CESARE RESTI
Suggested background knowledge
Mission & Content Summary
MISSION
CONTENT SUMMARY
Watch me present the course in a 13-minute video: https://youtu.be/DG8ZnFvUAcM
- The demand and supply of private banking services: size, characteristics, strategies.
- The demand and supply of institutional money management: size, characteristics, strategies.
- Products and services to compete in private banking and institutional money management, including e.g. UCITS, alternative investment funds (including private equity and hedge funds), secured lending, art advisory, investing in commodities, creating trusts.
- The relationship with the customer relationship: measurement and reporting of performance. The case of hedge funds.
- How services are billed and the different types of fees and commissions.
- The allocation of assets across multiple managers.
Intended Learning Outcomes (ILO)
KNOWLEDGE AND UNDERSTANDING
- Know about the demand and supply of private banking services, the strengths and weaknesses of different producers and the evolution of demand.
- Know about the demand and supply of institutional money management.
- Know the main products and services and the distinctive factors of satisfaction and risk to the customer.
- Know the different types of fees charged.
- USE all the above mentioned concepts in practical situations
APPLYING KNOWLEDGE AND UNDERSTANDING
- Compare different products and services, choosing the most appropriate ones in relation to the customer profile.
- Measure the performance of a managed portfolio based on several alternative techniques and explain the results to a customer.
- Apply safeguard clauses to management fees, foreseeing their impact.
- Allocate assets among multiple mutual funds based on customer preferences.
- Critically examine asset management products.
- Read and explain the documentation accompanying the main investment products
Teaching methods
- Lectures
- Guest speaker's talks (in class or in distance)
- Individual works / Assignments
- Collaborative Works / Assignments
DETAILS
ONLINE LESSONS
The availability of online lectures will be decided centrally by the University. Should there be a resurgence of the pandemic, some of the experts mentioned in the next paragraph may be forced to give their speeches online.
INDIVIDUAL TESTIMONIES AND ASSIGNMENTS:
The course hosts talks by industry experts who first present their own vision of some emerging issues, and then are interviewed by the teacher and the students. The latter, in order to have a "bonus" of points for the exam, may prepare questions in advance and submit them to the teacher. The questions selected by the teacher and asked to the external speaker during his/her talk will bring an additional score.
GROUP ASSIGNMENT:
As part of an optional assignment, each group will have to review a client, assess his/her characteristics, analyse his/her current investment portfolio (e.g., in terms of past performance and fees) and finally produce a portfolio reshuffle proposal for the client.
Assessment methods
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ATTENDING AND NOT ATTENDING STUDENTS
The final score originates from three activities: the written exam, the questions asked to the experts giving talks to the class (as explained above) and an optional group work.
WRITTEN EXAM
The written exam is identical for attending and non-attending students. It consists of multiple choice questions (short and objective) and open-ended questions, which also tend to be short and focused.
For multiple-choice questions, in general there is no penalty in case of incorrect answer (although it could be introduced, exceptionally, in case of seriously incorrect answers).
OPTIONAL GROUP WORK
In the optional group work, students will pretend to be an independent consulting firm addressing a new (wealthy) client that is currently served by his/her bank through a sub-optimal portfolio (low performance and/or high fees). The group must perform a "check-up" to this customer, write a short PowerPoint report and present the results in the classroom (students who cannot participate in person because they are taking part in an internship will be allowed to join the presentation online).
FINAL SCORE
The final score will be assigned as follows
a) The written exam (regardless of whether it is carried out in a single test or divided into two partial tests) will provide a maximum of 28 points (additional points will be earned through the activities described under items b) and c) below).
b) In the exam there may be a question relating to the talks performed by external experts: the maximum penalty for those who cannot answer that question correctly will be 3 points. Students who have earned extra points by asking questions to the experts during the course may use those points to offset the penalty. If their answer to that question is already correct, they might be entitled to one extra point for the final score.
c) Students participating in the group work will be entitled to a bonus of 1 to 2 points (3 points for results that are exceptionally accurate)
As a result of the above, the final score could reach 31 (28 + 1 + 2, or 28 + 0 + 3) or even 32 (28 + 1 + 3), in which case a "cum laude" will be assigned.
Teaching materials
ATTENDING AND NOT ATTENDING STUDENTS
- PowerPoint slides distributed before each lesson.
- Mandatory readings (few) and recommended readings. The list will be delivered before the partial exam.
- Handouts written by the teacher and distributed after concluding each topic (e.g. the demand and supply of private banking services may take 3 lessons to complete, after which a handout will be distributed).