Section Information
Section Description Provided by Instructor
Investment bankers serve a critical social function in their work as corporate advisors, facilitating capital allocation and managing risk. This course will explore bankers' activities from both a theoretical and practical perspective, with the aim of preparing students to counsel--or to pursue career as--advisors to corporations on significant financial and strategic decisions.
We will begin from a theoretical perspective, establishing basic corporate finance concepts and valuation techniques. Then we will give detailed attention to the economic and legal analysis underscoring four principal activities of investment bankers: advising on mergers and acquisitions, raising debt capital, raising equity capital, and corporate restructurings.
For each type of transaction we will begin with theoretical context for the economic, legal, and strategic reasons that corporations pursue each activity. Then, using case studies of specific transactions, we will illustrate the investment banker's role in each activity through detailed description of each process, including preparation and presentation of financial analysis and coordination with capital markets participants. Finally, we will consider the nature of and need for legal counsel throughout the banker's work. Throughout the course, we will be joined by practitioners who will shed light on the strategic and financial considerations that gave rise to the transactions we will study. Rather than an exam, students will be evaluated on problem sets, group work product reflecting investment bankers' tasks in connection with each of the activities that will be our focus, and class participation.
In addition to students considering transactional practice and investment banking, the course may be of particular interest to students contemplating practice in securities regulation and corporate law. Courses in corporations and corporate finance are prerequisites, although these may be waived in consultation with the instructors.
Professors Friedman and Jackson are happy to consider students for this course who do not meet one or both of the pre-requisites. If you wish to register for this course but do not meet the pre-requisites listed here, please send Professor Jackson a one-page description of your background in corporate finance and corporate law. LLM students must follow this procedure if they wish to be considered for the course.
Semester
Fall 2012
Section
001
Schedule
TR 2:50p - 4:10p
Location
JGH 304
Points
3.0
Method of Evaluation
Other
J.D. Writing Credit
No
Course Limitations
Pre-requisite Courses
Corporations and
Corporate Finance
Co-requisite Courses
None
Recommended Courses
None
Other Limitations
Students who do not meet the pre-requisites, new LLM students, and entering transfer students should send Professor Jackson a one-page description of their background in corporate finance and corporate law and request permission to pre-register.

