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As a finance PhD student at Chicago Booth, you’ll join a community that encourages you to think independently.
Taking courses at Booth and in the university’s Kenneth C. Griffin Department of Economics, you will gain a solid foundation in all aspects of economics and finance--from the factors that determine asset prices to how firms and individuals make financial decisions. Following your coursework, you will develop your research in close collaboration with faculty and your fellow students. Reading groups and workshops with faculty, student-led brown-bag seminars, and conferences provide many opportunities to learn from others.
The Finance PhD Program also offers the Joint Program in Financial Economics , which is run by Chicago Booth and the Department of Economics in the Division of the Social Sciences at the University of Chicago.
Chicago Booth finance faculty are leading researchers who also build strong relationships with doctoral students, collaborate on new ideas, and connect students with powerful career opportunities.
Assistant Professor of Finance and Liew Family Junior Faculty Fellow, Fama Faculty Fellow
Professor of Finance and Entrepreneurship
Leo Melamed Professor of Finance
Merton H. Miller Distinguished Service Professor of Finance
Robert R. McCormick Distinguished Service Professor of Finance
Neubauer Family Associate Professor of Finance and Fama Faculty Fellow
David Rockefeller Distinguished Service Professor The University of Chicago Departments of Economics, Statistics and the Booth School of Business
Joseph L. Gidwitz Professor of Finance
Neubauer Family Distinguished Service Professor of Entrepreneurship and Finance and Kessenich E.P. Faculty Director at the Polsky Center for Entrepreneurship and Innovation
Stevens Distinguished Service Professor of Economics and Finance
AQR Capital Management Distinguished Service Professor of Finance and Fama Faculty Fellow
Professor of Finance and Fama Faculty Fellow
Fama Family Distinguished Service Professor of Finance
Assistant Professor of Finance and Cohen and Keenoy Faculty Scholar
Neubauer Family Professor of Finance and Kathryn and Grant Swick Faculty Scholar
Charles P. McQuaid Distinguished Service Professor of Finance and Robert King Steel Faculty Fellow
Katherine Dusak Miller Distinguished Service Professor of Finance
Bruce Lindsay Distinguished Service Professor of Economics and Public Policy
Assistant Professor of Finance and Fama Faculty Fellow
Deputy Dean for Faculty and Chicago Board of Trade Professor of Finance
Myron S. Scholes Distinguished Service Professor of Finance and Neubauer Faculty Director of the Davis Center
Associate Professor of Finance
Robert C. McCormack Distinguished Service Professor of Entrepreneurship and Finance
Professor of Economics and Finance
Graduates of the Stevens Doctoral Program go on to successful careers in prominent institutions of higher learning, leading financial institutions, government, and beyond.
Assistant Professor of Business, Finance Division Columbia Business School, Columbia University Simon's research interests are asset pricing, investments, and insurance. He studies how institutional frictions impact the pricing of risk, focusing on market dynamics and investor behavior and often leveraging machine learning tools. Simon's dissertation area is in financial economics.
Assistant Professor of Finance UCLA Anderson School of Management, University of California, Los Angeles Shohini Kundu's research lies in financial intermediation and macroeconomics, security design and externalities of financial contracts, and emerging market finance. Her dissertation area is in finance.
Assistant Professor of Business, Finance Division Columbia Business School, Columbia University Jane's research lies at the intersection of macroeconomics and finance. She is particularly interested in how financial intermediaries affect the real economy and how different types of financial institutions can contribute to financial instability. Her dissertation area is in financial economics.
The pages of Chicago Booth Review regularly highlight the research findings of finance faculty and PhD students.
Chicago Booth’s Eugene F. Fama describes the serendipitous events that led him to Chicago, and into his monumental career in academic finance.
It was a dramatic example of how White House communications on climate policy can affect asset prices, according to Washington University in St. Louis’s William Cassidy, a recent graduate of Booth’s PhD Program.
It’s become harder for many prospective borrowers to access capital. But private debt funds have stepped in to fill the gap, according to Joern Block (Trier University), Booth PhD candidate Young Soo Jang, Booth’s Steve Kaplan, and Trier’s Anna Schulze.
While go-betweens can benefit the broader economy by smoothing the flow of credit, there are now probably too many links in the credit chain, argue Zhiguo He and Jian Li (Booth PhD graduate).
Chicago Booth is home to several interdisciplinary research centers that offer funding for student work, host workshops and conferences, and foster a strong research community.
Fama-Miller Center for Research in Finance Tasked with pushing the boundaries of research in finance, the Fama-Miller Center provides institutional structure and support for researchers in the field.
Becker Friedman Institute for Economics Bringing together researchers from the entire Chicago economics community, the Becker Friedman Institute fosters novel insights on the world’s most difficult economic problems.
Center for Research in Security Prices CRSP maintains one of the world’s largest and most comprehensive stock market databases. Since 1963, it has been a valued resource for businesses, government, and scholars.
Kent A. Clark Center for Global Markets Enhancing the understanding of business and financial market globalization, the Clark Center positions Chicago Booth as a thought leader in the understanding of ever-changing markets and improves financial and economic decision-making around the world.
George J. Stigler Center for the Study of the Economy and the State Dedicated to examining issues at the intersection of politics and the economy, the Stigler Center supports research by PhD students and others who are interested in the political, economic, and cultural obstacles to better working markets.
Rustandy Center for Social Sector Innovation Committed to making the world more equitable and sustainable, the Rustandy Center works to solve complex social and environmental problems. The center’s student support includes fellowships, research funding, and networking opportunities.
For Itzhak Ben-David, PhD ’08, the PhD Program in Finance was an exploratory journey.
Video Transcript
Itzhak Ben-David, ’08: 00:03 For me, the PhD Program was an exploratory journey. It was about discovering what was interesting for me, what will be interesting for other economists. It was about discovering something new about the world. Much of the PhD Program experience is to explore and to wonder a bit and to just think and expose yourself to new ideas and new disciplines. Back then, this was 2006, I found a billboard that said, "If you buy this house, we're going to give you a free car or $20,000 in cash." And this seemed really odd to me. What I realized that was going on, that this was part of a borrower fraud and the idea was that seller and the buyer will agree on a higher price on a house and the lender would be under the impression that the collateral worth more than it really is.
Itzhak Ben-David, ’08: 00:58 So I started to investigate other parts of the real estate food chain. What I saw is that in many parts of this chain, there were incentives in place pushing the intermediaries or the different economic agents to inflate prices. It's not always a bubble, but oftentimes it points out behavior that is not consistent with our textbook behavior. I had the dream team of advisors, Toby Moskowitz, Dick Taylor, Steve Levitt, and Erik Hurst. Each one of them contributed in different way to my dissertation and brought different ideas, brought different aspects. There is no better place of doing research than in Booth. It's really a hub of academic activity. There is no important work that doesn't pass at Chicago before being published. It's really an intellectual home. When you meet people and you know that they are from Booth, you can see the difference in their thinking.
PhD students in finance study a wide range of topics, including the behavior and determinants of security prices, the financing and investment decisions of firms, corporate governance, and the management and regulation of financial institutions. They go on to careers at prestigious institutions, from Yale University to the International Monetary Fund.
Current Students
Ching-Tse Chen Natalia Corado Mihir Gandhi Huan (Bianca) He Jessica Li Edoardo Marchesi Alexa Marciano Rayhan Momin Lauren Mostrom Meichen Qian Francisco Ruela
Booth also offers joint degrees. Learn more about the current students in our Joint Program in Financial Economics .
The Stevens Doctoral Program at Chicago Booth is a full-time program. Students generally complete the majority of coursework and examination requirements within the first two years of studies and begin work on their dissertation during the third year. For details, see General Examination Requirements by Area in the Stevens Program Guidebook below.
Download the 2023-2024 Guidebook!
Stern’s Ph.D. program in finance trains scholars to conduct research at the leading edge of financial economics. The faculty represents one of the largest finance research groups in the world that has been ranked consistently as the leading publisher of academic research in top finance journals. Comprised of more than 40 researchers, including a Nobel-prize-winning economist, our faculty are active in all areas of finance—asset pricing, corporate finance, derivatives, market microstructure, and behavioral finance—with both theoretical and empirical focus, and with emerging specialization in the areas of financial intermediation, crises, and macro-finance. As a result of this unusual breadth, students have access to expertise in almost any topic that they might wish to explore.
Discover our other fields of study.
Financial economics encompasses a broad area of topics and issues, including corporate investments and financing policy, security valuation, portfolio management, the behavior of prices in speculative markets, financial institutions, and intermediation.
The PhD specialization in finance is designed to give the student a strong background for study and research in both theoretical and empirical work in finance and related areas. Emphasis is placed on understanding the important concepts and models. Students normally take several graduate courses in the Department of Economics, particularly in microeconomics and macroeconomic theory, the economics of uncertainty, and econometrics.
The program offers two courses specifically in financial theory and its applications. In addition, the faculty and doctoral students attend a seminar that features speakers from around the country. However, the specialization is built primarily around individual study and research under the guidance of the faculty.
General information.
Finance is the study of investment and financing decisions by firms, the portfolio decisions of individual investors, and the implications of those decisions for the pricing of capital assets. Finance includes the study of corporate financial decisions, corporate control, the role and management of financial institutions, new venture financing, mutual funds and other investment vehicles, market microstructure, asset pricing and portfolio choice, international finance, and the behavior of interest rates and foreign exchange rates.
The Finance department at the Foster School has a long and distinguished record of excellence. It is the birthplace of the Capital Asset Pricing Model (CAPM), the Western Finance Association (WFA), and the Journal of Financial and Quantitative Analysis (JFQA) . The finance department is the longtime home of the JFQA, widely regarded as one of the four leading journals in Finance. Our faculty serve as editors and associate editors at all four of the top journals in finance – at the Journal of Finance, the Journal of Financial Economics, the Review of Financial Studies, and the Journal of Financial and Quantitative Analysis – and at other leading finance journals.
The main objective of the finance PhD program is to produce outstanding researchers who can be placed in the world’s top academic finance departments. Our faculty are open to a large variety of research styles and methods. At the same time, we have a strong department identity, which stresses the joint application of equilibrium reasoning and empirical analysis to understanding financial economics. We have a very active seminar and summer visitor program which attracts leading academics to Seattle and provides many opportunities for interaction. Our heavy representation at top journals ensures that PhD students will be exposed to cutting edge research and will have the opportunity to learn first-hand how leading journals evaluate papers submitted for publication.
Course work in the area of finance covers the basic tools, theory, and empirical evidence necessary to give students a solid foundation upon which to generate and disseminate new knowledge throughout their careers. Students regularly enter into research projects jointly with faculty in addition to the dissertation requirement. Students also obtain valuable teaching experience during their Ph.D. program of studies at the University of Washington.
Course requirements for finance major.
The following courses are required for all finance majors. The number of credits for each course is indicated in parentheses after the course number.
FIN 580 (4) | Corporate Finance I |
FIN 585 (4) | Empirical Methods in Finance |
FIN 589 (4) | Advanced Topics in Finance |
FIN 590 (4) | Asset Pricing I |
FIN 591 (4) | Corporate Finance II |
FIN 592 (4) | Asset Pricing II |
Finance majors are also expected to register for and attend the Finance Research Workshop (FIN 599) each quarter of the regular academic year in which they are enrolled in residence.
Research Methods Minor Area Requirements
Finance students are strongly encouraged to take Econometrics as their research methods minor. An Econometrics minor consists of the following courses at a minimum:
Econometrics
ECON 580 (4) | Applied Econometrics I |
ECON 581 (4) | Applied Econometrics II |
ECON 582 (4) | Applied Econometrics III |
Other Minor Area Requirements
In addition to the finance area, all students majoring in finance are required to choose three support areas. Both research methods and microeconomics are required minor areas for finance majors. The third minor area depends upon the student’s interest. However, students are strongly recommended to take macroeconomics their third minor area of study. Other popular minor areas include, accounting, math, statistics, psychology, and computer science.
The microeconomics minor area must include the following three course sequence:
ECON 500 (4) | Microeconomic Analysis I |
ECON 501 (4) | Microeconomic Analysis II |
ECON 508 (4) | Microeconomic Analysis III |
The macroeconomics minor area must include the following three course sequence:
ECON 502 (4) | Macroeconomic Analysis I |
ECON 503 (4) | Macroeconomic Analysis II |
ECON 509 (4) | Macroeconomic Analysis III |
ECON 500 Microeconomic Analysis I | ECON 501 Microeconomic Analysis I | ECON 508 Microeconomic Analysis III | FIN 600 Independent Study |
FIN 590 Asset Pricing I | FIN 580 Corporate Finance I | FIN 585 Empirical Methods in Finance | Tools Examination |
ECON 580 Econometrics I | ECON 581 Econometrics II | ECON 582 Econometrics III | 1 year Summer Paper and Presentation |
FIN 599 Doctoral Seminar | FIN 599 Doctoral Seminar | FIN 599 Doctoral Seminar | FIN 599 Doctoral Seminar |
Teaching Effectiveness Seminar |
Second Year
FIN 591 Corporate Finance II | FIN 592 Asset Pricing II | FIN 589 Advanced Topics in Finance | FIN 600 Independent Study |
Elective | Elective | Elective | 2nd Year Summer paper and Presentation |
Elective | Elective | Elective | Area Examination |
FIN 599 Doctoral Seminar | FIN 599 Doctoral Seminar | FIN 599 Doctoral Seminar |
All finance students are encouraged to take the year-long macroeconomics sequence from the economics department if it fits with their research interests.
First-Year Paper Students create and present a research paper during their first summer under the guidance of their advisor. The paper may be an original idea or an extension of existing work, recognizing that original ideas are more likely to subsequently become working papers or dissertations, while extensions allow those struggling to find executable ideas a way to build their toolbox in a structured manner. This paper will be due for a last set of comments at the end of August and presented in mid-September.
Basic Tools Exam The basic tools exam for finance majors is administered near the end of the Summer Quarter at the end of the first year of study. The exam is designed primarily to test the student’s understanding of microeconomic analysis, as covered in the economics core sequence ECON 500, 501, and 508. It is administered by the Economics department. Previous examples of the Tools Examination can be obtained in the School’s Doctoral Program Office.
Major Area Examination The finance major area exam is administered near the beginning of a student’s second Summer Quarter. The exam tests a student’s understanding and knowledge of the entire field of finance. Previous examples of the Area Examination can be obtained in the School’s Doctoral Program Office.
Summer Research Project After completing the Major Area Examination, students complete an original research paper under the guidance of a faculty advisor. This project is to be independent research on a topic and issue selected by the student. Students present their work in a workshop setting in Fall Quarter.
General Examination After successfully completing the previous exams and research papers, the student will propose a dissertation. The proposal should demonstrate through existing work that a student has the capacity to complete a thesis. Members of the Supervisory Committee, a representative of the Graduate School, and any other interested faculty attend the proposal.
Dissertation and Final Examination After passing the general exam, students complete the proposed research and write the dissertation guided by a reading committee. The reading committee may consist entirely of members of the supervisory committee or may include one or more members not previously on the supervisory committee. The supervisory committee administers the final defense of the dissertation.
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2023-24 curriculum outline.
The MIT Sloan Finance Group offers a doctoral program specialization in Finance for students interested in research careers in academic finance. The requirements of the program may be loosely divided into five categories: coursework, the Finance Seminar, the general examination, the research paper, and the dissertation. Attendance at the weekly Finance Seminar is mandatory in the second year and beyond and is encouraged in the first year. During the first two years, students are engaged primarily in coursework, taking both required and elective courses in preparation for their general examination at the end of the second year. Students are required to complete a research paper by the end of their fifth semester, present it in front of the faculty committee and receive a passing grade. After that, students are required to find a formal thesis advisor and form a thesis committee by the end of their eighth semester. The Thesis Committee should consist of at least one tenured faculty from the MIT Sloan Finance Group.
The following set of required courses is designed to furnish each student with a sound and well-rounded understanding of the theoretical and empirical foundations of finance, as well as the tools necessary to make original contributions in each of these areas. Finance PhD courses (15.470, 15.471, 15.472, 15.473, 15.474) in which the student does not receive a grade of B or higher must be retaken.
Math Camp begins on the second Monday in August.
14.121/14.122 Micro Theory I/II
14.451/14.452 Macro Theory I/II ( strongly recommended)
14.380/14.381 — Statistics/Applied Econometrics
15.470 — Asset Pricing
14.123/14.124 Micro Theory III/IV
14.453/14.454 Macro Theory III/IV (strongly recommended)
14.382 – Econometrics
15.471 – Corporate Finance
15.472 — Advanced Asset Pricing
14.384 — Time-Series Analysis or 14.385 — Nonlinear Econometric Analysis (Enrolled students receive a one-semester waiver from attending the Finance Seminar due to a scheduling conflict)
15.475 — Current Research in Financial Economics
15.473 — Advanced Corporate Finance
15.474 — Current Topics in Finance (strongly encouraged to take multiple times)
15.475 — Current Research in Financial Economics
Beyond these required courses, students are expected to enroll in elective courses determined by their primary area of interest. There are two informal “tracks” in Financial Economics: Corporate Finance and Asset Pricing. Recommended electives are designed to deepen the student's grasp of material that will be central to the writing of his/her dissertation. Students also have the opportunity to take courses at Harvard University. There is no formal requirement to select one track or another, and students are free to take any of the electives.
Fnce9110 - financial economics (course syllabus).
The objective of this course is to undertake a rigorous study of the theoretical foundations of modern financial economics. The course will cover the central themes of modern finance including individual investment decisions under uncertainty, stochastic dominance, mean variance theory, capital market equilibrium and asset valuation, arbitrage pricing theory, option pricing, and incomplete markets, and the potential application of these themes. Upon completion of this course, students should acquire a clear understanding of the major theoretical results concerning individuals' consumption and portfolio decisions under uncertainty and their implications for the valuation of securities.
Prerequisites: ECON 6100 OR ECON 7100
This course provides students with an overview of the basic contributions in the modern theory of corporate finance and financial institutions. The course is methodology oriented in that students are required to master necessary technical tools for each topic. The topics covered may include capital structure, distribution policy, financial intermediation, incomplete financial contracting, initial and seasoned public offerings, market for corporate control, product market corporate finance interactions, corporate reorganization and bankruptcy, financing in imperfect markets, security design under adverse selection and moral hazard, and some selected topics.
This course is an introduction to empirical methods commonly employed in finance. It provides the background for FNCE 934, Empirical Research in Finance. The course is organized around empirical papers with an emphasis on econometric methods. A heavy reliance will be placed on analysis of financial data.
Prerequisites: FNCE 9110 AND STAT 5100 AND STAT 5110
This course covers some advanced material on the theory of financial markets developed over the last two decades. The emphasis is on dynamic asset pricing and consumption choices in a continuous time setting. The articles discussed include many classical papers in the field as well as some of the most recent developments. The lectures will emphasize the concepts and technical tools needed to understand the articles.
Prerequisites: FNCE 9110 AND ECON 7100 AND 7110
This course covers general equilibrium and rational expectations, foundations of the theory of information; learning from prices in rational expectations equilibrium models, moral hazard, adverse selection, and signaling bidding theories.
Prerequisites: FNCE 9220
This is a doctoral level course on macroeconomics, with special emphasis on intertemporal choice under uncertainty and topics related to finance. Topics include: optimal consumption and saving, the stochastic growth model, q-theory of investment, (incomplete) risk sharing and asset pricing. The course will cover and apply techniques, including dynamic programming, to solve dynamic optimization problems under uncertainty. Numerical solution methods are also discussed.
This course exposes student to recent development in the asset pricing literature. The starting point for the course is the standard neo-classical rational expectations framework. We will then investigate where this frameworkhas succeeded and where it has not. Recently documented deviations from the framework in the literature are discussed and placed in context. The course will also focus on hypothesis development, recent research methods, and research writing. The ultimate objective is for students to develop their own hyoptheses and research ideas, resulting in a paper.
The course will cover a variety of micro-econometric models and methods including panel data models, program evaluation methods e.g. difference in differences, matching techniques, regression discontinuity design, instrumental variables, duration models, structural estimation, simulated methods of moments. The structure of the course consists of lectures, student presentations, and empirical exercises. Published studies will be utilized in a variety of fields such as corporate finance, labor economics, and industrial organization to illustrate the various techniques. The goal of the course is to provide students with a working knowledge of various econometric techniques that they can apply in their own research. As such, the emphasis of the course is on applications, not theory. Students are required to have taken a graduate sequence in Econometrics, you should be comfortable with econometrics at the level of William Green's "Econometric Analysis of Cross-Section and Panel Data".
Prerequisites: STAT 5210
This course covers advanced theory and empirical investigations; financial decisions of the firm, dividends, capital structure, mergers, and takeovers.
To provide an understanding of selected topics of current academic research in the areas of international finance and its intersection with international macroeconomics; to teach interested students the tools for conducting research in this field. Each topic will be developed beginning with early classic papers and then updated through the current status of the profession. The typical target audience comprises students in their second year or later. Prerequisite: Completion of first year course requirements
This course has three main objectives: The first object is to introduce students to the fundamental works and the frontier of research in dynamic asset pricing. We will cover recent models that have been proposed to shed light on intreguing and important empirical patterns in the cross section and in the time series. Topics include non-separable utilities, market incompleteness, learning, uncertainty, differences of opionions, ex-ante and ex-post asymmetric information, ambiguity and Knightian uncertainty. The second objective is to teach students how to think of asset pricing research under a bigger or richer framework. We shall focus on the interactions between asset pricing and other fields such as macroeconomics, corporate finance, financial institutions, and international finance. The goal of inventigating the joint dynamics is not only to better understand how asset prices are determined, but also (maybe more importantly) how would asset pricing dynamics affect other important economic vaiables such as investment, corporate payout and financing, unemployment, risk sharing, and international capital flows. Students will learn production-based asset pricing models, particularly the asset pricing models with investment-specific technology shocks, risk shocks, financial friction, searching frictions and information frictions. Of course, the advanced solution methods will focus too. The third objective is to introduce advanced empirical methods to analyze the data and the quantitative dynamic models. It includes how to estimate structural dynamic models, how evaluate structural models beyond goodness-of-fit tests, how confront the models predictions with empirical data by simulation and re-sampling techniques, and how to efficiently test models and explore new patterns using asset pricing and macro data.
Prerequisites: FNCE 9110 AND FNCE 9210
The primary goal of this 0.5cu course is to introduce students to the main areas of research in household finance. The emphasis will be on discussing papers on the research frontier on topics such as consumption, portfolio choices, housing, inequality and entrepreneurship. This course complements REAL 9480, Advanced Topics in Urban Economics: Household Real Estate Decisions-Making. Students are encouraged to take REAL 9480 in the first half of the spring semester and FNCE 9360 in the second half of that semester.
This is an advanced course in quantitative theory applied to macro and finance models. It is intended for doctoral students in finance, economics and related fields. The course focuses on four broad theoretical literatures: (i) firm investment and growth; (ii) corporate, household and sovereign debt; (iii) asset pricing in general equilibrium; and (iv) equilibrium macro models with a financial sector. My approach is to develop and discuss in detail a unified framework that is suited to address most topics, usually covering a few central topics and the core papers. We then discuss the more recent literature, highlighting how authors combine and expand upon the core ideas. This part of the course usually relies on regular student presentations.
Prerequisites: FNCE 9110
This course may be offered (and taken by a student) several times a year with varying topics.
PhD Program
More Information
The finance Ph.D. program is designed to prepare students for academic careers in financial economics. Financial economics is the study of how individuals and firms raise and invest resources, and how financial assets are priced. Specific topics in asset pricing include the determinants of asset returns, pricing of risk, behavior of investors, and trading mechanisms. Specific topics in corporate finance include capital structure, payout policy, financial intermediation, internal capital markets, venture capital, mergers and acquisitions, and corporate governance.
Sample Schedule
Students are assigned a faculty mentor upon entering the program. The faculty mentor advises the student on course selection and as appropriate involves the student in a research project. During the first summer, each student conducts a supervised reading of the literature and prepares a research proposal or study.
Students spend much of the second year developing and producing an independent study. The study is submitted to the program at the end of the summer, and serves as the qualifying exam for the second year.
The program maintains a supportive and collegial environment that fosters collaboration between faculty members and PhD students. All students are assigned one or more faculty mentors for the duration of their studies, and faculty members are actively engaged in supervision of student research.
Mario morales alfaro.
Wenqian (winston) chen, applying to the phd program, dates + deadlines.
December 15, 2024: Application Deadline - Accounting, Data Sciences & Operations, and Management & Organization*
January 15, 2025: Application Deadline - Finance & Business Economics and Marketing
The link to the PhD Program application is available on the Admissions page and the next opportunity to apply is for Fall 2025 admission. Late applications may or may not be considered at the discretion of the admissions committee.
Admissions decisions are made from mid-February to mid-April. You will be notified by email when a decision has been made.
Ph.D. Program USC Marshall School of Business 3670 Trousdale Parkway, BRI 306 Los Angeles, California 90089-0809 EMAIL
A Ph.D. in Finance from a business school equips individuals with advanced knowledge in financial theory, quantitative methods, and empirical research.
Our program at the School of Business Administration prepares scholars for careers in academia, research, and leadership roles within the financial industry. Through rigorous coursework and cutting-edge research, students develop expertise in financial theory, empirical analysis, and advanced quantitative methods.
Dr. Van Ness’s primary area of research examines financial markets and the trading of securities (commonly referred to as market microstructure research)
Chair and Professor of Finance, Holder of the Otho Smith Professorship
Adedapo Adeniyi [email protected]
Gideon Appiah [email protected]
Keshav Bhattarai [email protected]
Peter Burnett [email protected]
Michal Coccia [email protected]
Lingjin Liu [email protected]
Hannah James Musso [email protected]
Atash (Atoosh) Saha [email protected]
Lateef Subair [email protected]
Sarath Valsalan [email protected]
Rui Xu [email protected]
Linghui Zhou [email protected]
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Finance Doctoral students are trained in major areas in finance and economics, including, asset pricing, corporate finance, continuous-time models in finance, information economics, international finance, market micro-structure, and banking. The program prepares students for careers in scholarly research, and graduates take jobs primarily in academic or research institutions, while some students opt to work in industry. Details about the coursework and research students conduct on their way to earning their doctorate can be found on the Academics page.
The Finance Division at Columbia Business school has a track record of training scholars who go on to become academics at Universities, including many of the world’s most prestigious institutions. Our placement success is due in part to the close working relationship that students develop with the faculty in the division. The School intentionally keeps the PhD program small making it easier for students to find faculty collaborators and thrive. See our Placement page for more information.
The Columbia Business School doctoral community consists of 125 students across six programs. The program attracts exceptional students from all over the world who are looking to develop research skills under the tutelage of faculty experts. Students come to the School for the exceptional training but also because they value the diversity, creativity, entrepreneurship and social tolerance that NYC offers. See here for more about student life.
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Embarking on a PhD in Finance provides a unique opportunity to delve into the intricate world of financial systems, markets, and instruments. This rigorous path of study equips candidates with the analytical and quantitative skills necessary for high-level research and analysis of financial phenomena. PhDs in Finance explore a vast array of topics, from corporate finance and investment analysis to market behaviour and financial risk management.
Through these programmes, students uncover new insights into financial principles, contributing to the development of more robust financial models, strategies, and regulatory policies. The journey towards a PhD in Finance is not just about mastering financial theory; it’s about making a tangible impact on the financial sector and thereby influencing the global economy.
A PhD in Finance sets the stage for candidates to become leaders in financial research and innovation. These programmes challenge students to think critically and creatively about complex financial issues, fostering an environment of intellectual growth and discovery.
Doctoral research in finance often entails the application of advanced econometric and mathematical techniques to data analysis, providing new perspectives on the dynamics of financial markets or the effectiveness of financial policies. The ability to conduct such sophisticated analyses makes PhD graduates highly desirable in both academic and practical finance settings.
In terms of employment, a PhD in Finance opens a wide range of career opportunities. In academia, graduates can shape the future of finance by engaging in research and teaching the next generation of finance professionals.
Outside of academia, PhD holders are sought after by banks, financial institutions, consultancies, and governmental agencies for their expertise in financial analysis, policy development, and strategic planning. The skills developed during these programmes, such as critical thinking, complex problem-solving, and advanced data analysis, are invaluable in addressing the challenges faced by the finance sector today.
Funded phd programme (students worldwide).
Some or all of the PhD opportunities in this programme have funding attached. Applications for this programme are welcome from suitably qualified candidates worldwide. Funding may only be available to a limited set of nationalities and you should read the full programme details for further information.
Business Research Programmes present a range of research opportunities, shaped by a university’s particular expertise, facilities and resources. You will usually identify a suitable topic for your PhD and propose your own project. Additional training and development opportunities may also be offered as part of your programme.
Australia phd programme.
An Australian PhD usually takes 3 years of independent study towards an original thesis. Unlike most countries, this will usually be assessed as a piece of written work, without an oral ‘viva voce’ exam. However, some universities may arrange an online viva.
Phd research project.
PhD Research Projects are advertised opportunities to examine a pre-defined topic or answer a stated research question. Some projects may also provide scope for you to propose your own ideas and approaches.
This project has funding attached, subject to eligibility criteria. Applications for the project are welcome from all suitably qualified candidates, but its funding may be restricted to a limited set of nationalities. You should check the project and department details for more information.
Self-funded phd students only.
This project does not have funding attached. You will need to have your own means of paying fees and living costs and / or seek separate funding from student finance, charities or trusts.
Future finance with artificial intelligence, supply chain digitalisation: building a sustainable supply chain, financial literacy as a barrier to entrepreneurial ambitions students from disadvantaged backgrounds, leveraging business models for investment due diligence in the venture capital, uk stock market, monetary policy, and the real economy, leeds university business school, investigating progress and implementation of female leadership among ftse 350 companies by 2025, empirical modeling in financial engineering, mathematical modelling: real estate finance and investment, financial engineering: modelling and methods.
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Finance is an applied branch of economics that studies the ways in which individuals, business entities, and other organizations allocate resources over time and make decisions in the presence of uncertainty.
The faculty in the finance area have wide-ranging expertise in all major areas of finance, including:
The faculty strive to produce a broad range of finance-related research that addresses topics of interest to academic researchers, practitioners, and policymakers. We communicate that research both through publication in scientific journals, and through the development of relevant and rigorous Stanford MBA Program and Stanford GSB Executive Education programs. We also train and mentor future finance scholars through our Stanford GSB PhD Program , which is regarded as one of the top finance doctoral programs worldwide.
Dollar safety and the global financial cycle, valuing long-term property rights with anticipated political regime shifts, monetary tightening and u.s. bank fragility in 2023: mark-to-market losses and uninsured depositor runs, jobs & placement, anat r. admati, robert p. bartlett, juliane begenau, jonathan b. berk, michael blank, greg buchak, john h. cochrane, antonio coppola, darrell duffie, steven grenadier, benjamin hébert, robert l. joss, arvind krishnamurthy, annamaria lusardi, hanno lustig, matteo maggiori, adrien matray, george g.c. parker, paul pfleiderer, monika piazzesi, joshua d. rauh, martin k. schneider, myron s. scholes, william f. sharpe, kenneth j. singleton, ilya a. strebulaev, james c. van horne, vikrant vig, jeffrey zwiebel, douglas abbey, pete briger, tariq fancy, mike harmon, john k. hurley, brian jacobs, christopher mahowald, ana marshall, james milligan, heiner schulz, john g. watson, recent insights by stanford business, a “grumpy economist” weighs in on inflation’s causes — and its cures.
Olin’s PhD in Finance emphasizes rigorous analytical training and prepares you to pursue a career in research and teaching at leading academic institutions across the globe.
As a PhD student in Finance, you will train alongside some of the most respected and accomplished academics in the world. Students in this program have strong quantitative backgrounds and analytical abilities, typically with undergraduate training in economics, mathematics, engineering or another quantitative discipline as well as high GMAT/GRE scores.
Finance research is mostly based on economic models, which are used to address problems such as the allocation of capital, risk and rewards in the economy. Empirical work widely uses the tools of econometrics—the application of statistics to economics. Mathematical tools are extremely important in finance, helping to solve sophisticated models that reflect, as closely as possible, the important features of the market.
You have the unique opportunity to benefit from and engage in corporate collaborations with partners such as Equifax and Alibaba. These collaborations have resulted in unique access to robust datasets and have already yielded several dynamic working papers.
Our research-active faculty members are easily accessible to you. Collaboration is encouraged early in the program, with faculty/student joint research resulting in co-authored papers published in important journals.
Our finance faculty members are active and renowned researchers dedicated to advancing the understanding of financial economics. Their research interests encompass many areas of finance, both empirical and theoretical topics, including banking and financial intermediation, corporate finance, corporate control and capital structure, mergers and acquisitions, asset pricing models, investments and portfolio allocation models, and market microstructure.
Research papers by faculty members have recently been published in well-respected journals such as:
Read about collaborative research by Finance faculty and PhD students.
As part of the program, you have access to the Wells Fargo Advisors Center for Finance and Accounting Research (WFA-CFAR). In addition to organizing a number of conferences that bring cutting-edge researchers to Olin, WFA-CFAR also funds data acquisition and student travel.
Olin’s PhD program in finance emphasizes rigorous analytical training and prepares you to pursue a career in research and teaching.
The Wells Fargo Advisors Center for Accounting Research is dedicated to the dissemination of cutting-edge research in finance and accounting.
Prior to the first year, we require mandatory attendance at math camp (offered through the Economics department).
Olin PhD Finance courses – you will take one of the following groups of courses:
Olin PhD Finance courses—you will take one of the following groups of courses:
Other Electives (see below for some choices)
Download Finance PhD course descriptions
Associate Professor
Campus Box 1133-124-05 One Brookings Drive St. Louis, MO 63130-4899
Office Hours: Monday–Friday 9:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.
Students in our PhD programs are encouraged from day one to think of this experience as their first job in business academia—a training ground for a challenging and rewarding career generating rigorous, relevant research that influences practice.
Our doctoral students work with faculty and access resources throughout HBS and Harvard University. The PhD program curriculum requires coursework at HBS and other Harvard discipline departments, and with HBS and Harvard faculty on advisory committees. Faculty throughout Harvard guide the programs through their participation on advisory committees.
There are many paths, but we are one HBS. Our PhD students draw on diverse personal and professional backgrounds to pursue an ever-expanding range of research topics. Explore more here about each program’s requirements & curriculum, read student profiles for each discipline as well as student research , and placement information.
The PhD in Business Administration grounds students in the disciplinary theories and research methods that form the foundation of an academic career. Jointly administered by HBS and GSAS, the program has four areas of study: Accounting and Management , Marketing , Strategy , and Technology and Operations Management . All areas of study involve roughly two years of coursework culminating in a field exam. The remaining years of the program are spent conducting independent research, working on co-authored publications, and writing the dissertation. Students join these programs from a wide range of backgrounds, from consulting to engineering. Many applicants possess liberal arts degrees, as there is not a requirement to possess a business degree before joining the program
The PhD in Business Economics provides students the opportunity to study in both Harvard’s world-class Economics Department and Harvard Business School. Throughout the program, coursework includes exploration of microeconomic theory, macroeconomic theory, probability and statistics, and econometrics. While some students join the Business Economics program directly from undergraduate or masters programs, others have worked in economic consulting firms or as research assistants at universities or intergovernmental organizations.
The PhD program in Health Policy (Management) is rooted in data-driven research on the managerial, operational, and strategic issues facing a wide range of organizations. Coursework includes the study of microeconomic theory, management, research methods, and statistics. The backgrounds of students in this program are quite varied, with some coming from public health or the healthcare industry, while others arrive at the program with a background in disciplinary research
The PhD program in Organizational Behavior offers two tracks: either a micro or macro approach. In the micro track, students focus on the study of interpersonal relationships within organizations and the effects that groups have on individuals. Students in the macro track use sociological methods to examine organizations, groups, and markets as a whole, including topics such as the influence of individuals on organizational change, or the relationship between social missions and financial objectives. Jointly administered by HBS and GSAS, the program includes core disciplinary training in sociology or psychology, as well as additional coursework in organizational behavior.
Business economics , health policy (management) , marketing , organizational behavior , strategy , technology & operations management .
The department prepares students for careers in research and teaching at the world’s leading academic institutions, focusing on Asset Pricing and Portfolio Management, Corporate Finance, International Finance, Financial Institutions and Macroeconomics.
Wharton’s Finance faculty, widely recognized as the finest in the world, has been at the forefront of several areas of research. For example, members of the faculty have led modern innovations in theories of portfolio choice and savings behavior, which have significantly impacted the asset pricing techniques used by researchers, practitioners, and policymakers. Another example is the contribution by faculty members to the analysis of financial institutions and markets, which is fundamental to our understanding of the trade-offs between economic systems and their implications for financial fragility and crises.
Faculty research, both empirical and theoretical, includes such areas as:
For information on courses and sample plan of study, please visit the University Graduate Catalog .
Visit the Finance website for details on program requirements and courses. Read faculty and student research and bios to see what you can do with a Finance PhD.
Finance Doctoral Coordinator Prof. Luke Taylor John B. Neff Associate Professor in Finance, Professor of Finance Co-Director, Rodney L. White Center for Financial Research Email: [email protected] Phone: (215) 898-4802
Small firms and startups don't always seem like sound lending opportunities to banks. But research by Olivia Kim shows that they draw down debt conservatively—and expanding their access to credit could drive growth.
In 2017 Fawn Weaver launched a premium American whiskey brand, Uncle Nearest. It became the fastest growing and most awarded whiskey brand in America, despite the challenges Weaver faced as a Black woman and outsider to the spirits industry, which is capital-intensive, highly regulated, competitive, and male-dominated. In October 2023, Weaver announced plans to expand into cognac with the goal of building the next major alcoholic beverages conglomerate. But the company was still heavily reliant on capital. How could Weaver convince new investors that her plans for cognac would yield success? Harvard Business School senior lecturer Hise Gibson discusses Weaver’s leadership style, growth strategies, and her use of storytelling to connect customers with her brand in the case, "Uncle Nearest: Creating a Legacy."
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Rising household debt alone isn't enough to predict looming economic crises. Research by Victoria Ivashina examines the role of corporate debt in fiscal crashes since 1940.
Medical debt not only hurts credit access, it can also harm one's mental health. But a study by Raymond Kluender finds that forgiving people's bills—even $170 million of debt—doesn't necessarily reduce stress, financial or otherwise.
Private equity firms often streamline the operations of portfolio companies, but cost-cutting isn't the only road to efficiency. The right technology improvements can increase the value of PE investments, says research by Brian Baik and Suraj Srinivasan.
Non-fungible tokens (NFTs), which allow individuals to own their digital assets and move them from place to place, are changing the interaction between consumers and digital goods, brands, and platforms. Professor Scott Duke Kominers and tech entrepreneur Steve Kaczynski discuss the case, “Bored Ape Yacht Club: Navigating the NFT World,” and the related book they co-authored, The Everything Token: How NFTs and Web3 Will Transform The Way We Buy, Sell, And Create. They focus on the rise and popularity of the Bored Ape Yacht Club NFTs and the new model of brand building created by owning those tokens.
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In 2018, artisanal Italian vineyard Frank Cornelissen was one of the world’s leading producers of natural wine. But when weather-related conditions damaged that year’s grapes, founder Frank Cornelissen had to decide between staying true to the tenets of natural wine making or breaking with his public beliefs to save that year’s grapes by adding sulfites. Harvard Business School assistant professor Tiona Zuzul discusses the importance of staying true to your company’s principles while remaining flexible enough to welcome progress in the case, Frank Cornelissen: The Great Sulfite Debate.
The steep inflation that plagued the economy after the COVID-19 pandemic took many economists by surprise. But research by Alberto Cavallo suggests that a different method of tracking prices—a real-time model—could predict future surges better.
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Find over 120 finance research topic ideas for your dissertation, thesis or project. Explore corporate finance, investment banking, private equity, asset management, hedge funds and more.
The field of finance covers the economics of claims on resources. Financial economists study the valuation of these claims, the markets in which they are traded, and their use by individuals, corporations, and the society at large. At Stanford GSB, finance faculty and doctoral students study a wide spectrum of financial topics, including the ...
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PhD students also enjoy the benefits of Stern's economics department, NYU's economics department in the Graduate School of Arts and Science (GSAS), and the Courant Institute of Mathematics. Graduates of Stern's Finance PhD program have been placed at leading research institutions such as Harvard, MIT, Chicago, Stanford, Wharton, Yale, and ...
The Ph.D. in Finance. Stern's Ph.D. program in finance trains scholars to conduct research at the leading edge of financial economics. The faculty represents one of the largest finance research groups in the world that has been ranked consistently as the leading publisher of academic research in top finance journals. Comprised of more than 40 ...
Edward P. Evans Hall. 165 Whitney Avenue. New Haven, CT 06511-3729. Apply Now Get Yale SOM News. Financial economics encompasses a broad area of topics and issues, including corporate investments and financing policy, security valuation, portfolio management, the behavior of prices in speculative markets, financial institutions, and intermediation.
The main objective of the finance PhD program is to produce outstanding researchers who can be placed in the world's top academic finance departments. Our faculty are open to a large variety of research styles and methods. At the same time, we have a strong department identity, which stresses the joint application of equilibrium reasoning and ...
2023-24 Curriculum Outline. The MIT Sloan Finance Group offers a doctoral program specialization in Finance for students interested in research careers in academic finance. The requirements of the program may be loosely divided into five categories: coursework, the Finance Seminar, the general examination, the research paper, and the dissertation.
This is an advanced course in quantitative theory applied to macro and finance models. It is intended for doctoral students in finance, economics and related fields. The course focuses on four broad theoretical literatures: (i) firm investment and growth; (ii) corporate, household and sovereign debt; (iii) asset pricing in general equilibrium ...
The finance Ph.D. program is designed to prepare students for academic careers in financial economics. Financial economics is the study of how individuals and firms raise and invest resources, and how financial assets are priced. Specific topics in asset pricing include the determinants of asset returns, pricing of risk, behavior of investors, and trading mechanisms. Specific topics in ...
Ph.D. in Finance Emphasis. Our program at the School of Business Administration prepares scholars for careers in academia, research, and leadership roles within the financial industry. Through rigorous coursework and cutting-edge research, students develop expertise in financial theory, empirical analysis, and advanced quantitative methods.
Academics. Finance Doctoral students are trained in major areas in finance and economics, including, asset pricing, corporate finance, continuous-time models in finance, information economics, international finance, market micro-structure, and banking. The program prepares students for careers in scholarly research, and graduates take jobs ...
This rigorous path of study equips candidates with the analytical and quantitative skills necessary for high-level research and analysis of financial phenomena. PhDs in Finance explore a vast array of topics, from corporate finance and investment analysis to market behaviour and financial risk management. Through these programmes, students ...
The faculty in the finance area have wide-ranging expertise in all major areas of finance, including: Asset pricing, or how security prices and interest rates are determined in the market. Corporate finance, or how corporations raise capital and make investment decisions. The faculty strive to produce a broad range of finance-related research ...
Olin PhD Finance courses - you will take one of the following groups of courses: B52 FIN 643 Info Econ & Corp Finance Theory (3 credits) - Prof. Anjan Thakor ... B62 539 Mathematical Finance and B62 538 Stochastic Foundations for Finance) B52 651 Topics in Finance (1.5 credits) B52 654 Empirical Methods in Asset Pricing (1.5 credits ...
Doctoral students in finance have the opportunity to work with some of the leading researchers in the field. Key areas of research within the Ph.D. in Finance department include: Corporate Finance. International Finance. Financial Intermediation. Financial Markets. Behavioral Finance. Empirical Investments. Theoretical Asset Pricing.
Students in our PhD programs are encouraged from day one to think of this experience as their first job in business academia—a training ground for a challenging and rewarding career generating rigorous, relevant research that influences practice. Our doctoral students work with faculty and access resources throughout HBS and Harvard University.
Wharton's PhD program in Finance provides students with a solid foundation in the theoretical and empirical tools of modern finance, drawing heavily on the discipline of economics. Overview. The department prepares students for careers in research and teaching at the world's leading academic institutions, focusing on Asset Pricing and ...
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Source: The Graduate Market in 2024, High Fliers Research Finance outperforms Prospects look healthier for graduates of management masters degrees from the leading business schools.