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Main-jindal-menu, phd in management science, finance concentration.
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Admission Procedures
- Director's Message
Student Publications
Program overview.
The PhD in Management Science with a concentration in Finance degree is designed for students seeking training in the most advanced issues, both theoretical and applied, in the field of managerial finance and analysis.
Applicants should have at least a bachelor’s degree. Admission is based on grade point average, graduate examination test score (GMAT* or GRE), letters of reference (at least three, with two from academic references), business and professional experience (if applicable), a written statement of personal objectives and compatibility with faculty research activities. Since the School of Management starts making first-round admission decisions on December 9, it is best to complete the entire application process no later than December 8. While applications will be accepted after that date, applying after December 8 may significantly lower your chance of acceptance.
* UT Dallas Naveen Jindal School of Management prefers the GMAT admission test. However, we gladly accept the GRE test as well.
Connect with the Director
Steven Xiao, PhD
Phd area coordinator, finance.
[email protected] | (972) 883-5056 | JSOM 14.504
Our PhD program is designed to produce well-trained researchers. Students take classes that equip them with the latest research tools and expose them to cutting edge research. They have access to a large pool of accomplished faculty who are actively engaged in research on corporate finance, asset pricing and financial intermediation.
Degree Requirements
Students must complete at least 75 semester credit hours of approved graduate work before a degree may be conferred. Credit may be granted for courses taken elsewhere.
Doctoral students in Management Science benefit from exposure to multiple functional areas in management. To ensure this benefit, students who enter the program without an MBA (or equivalent degree) are required to complete a combined minimum of four courses (at the master’s or doctoral level) in at least three functional areas. This cross-functional exposure is beneficial for students engaging in cross-functional research, positioning their research for broader appeal and effectively teaching business school students with diverse specializations.
- FIN 6370 Advanced Theory of Finance and Its Applications
- FIN 6381 Introductory Mathematical Finance.
The Management Science PhD core curriculum consists of a minimum of 9 courses.
Please visit the Management Science Degree Plan page for core and secondary core course requirements.
- Finance Theory Core ( FIN 7330 Asset Pricing Theory and FIN 7340 Theory of Corporate Finance)
- Finance Empirical Core ( FIN 7310 Seminar in Contemporary Finance, FIN 7335 Empirical Asset Pricing and FIN 7345 Empirical Corporate Finance)
- Electives may be from accounting, computer science, economics, finance, mathematics, statistics or other fields. Specific courses must be approved by the Finance PhD advisor.
Students in the program are expected to write research papers each year. Typically, they devote each summer entirely to research. Each fall, they present their research to faculty and their fellow students. Students are encouraged to both collaborate with faculty on research projects as well as develop research independently of faculty.
PhD in Finance students take a written preliminary exam at the end of their first year in the program over a set of core courses (ECON 6309 Econometrics I, MECO 6345 Advanced Managerial Economics). At the end of their fourth semester in the program, students take a written qualifying exam for research core and finance theory core courses, which they must pass before admission for candidacy for the doctorate degree.
The dissertation is written under the supervision of the dissertation committee. The student must identify a committee and a chairperson within one semester following successful completion of the written qualifying examination. Students must present and pass their dissertation proposal before they can proceed to their final oral defense. Twelve to 24 semester hours may be granted for the dissertation toward the minimum 75-hour requirement for the degree.
The PhD program in Finance at Naveen Jindal School of Management, UT Dallas, has a strong record of placing PhD graduates at top universities and corporations.
Below are examples of student publications in 24 leading business journals .
Nguyen, Nam, Alejandro Rivera, and Harold H. Zhang (2023). “Incentivizing Investors for a Greener Economy.” Journal of Financial and Quantitative Analysis , forthcoming
Han, Munhee, Sanghyun Hugh Kim, and Vikram K. Nanda (2024).”Institutional brokerage networks: Facilitating liquidity provision.” Review of Financial Studies , forthcoming.
Ben-David, Itzhak, Francesco Franzoni, Byungwook Kim, and Rabih Moussawi. “Competition for Attention in the ETF Space.” The Review of Financial Studies 36, no. 3 (2023): 987-1042.
Jie (Jack) He, Lantian Liang , Grace Hui Wang , and Han Xia (2023). Networking Behind the Scenes: Institutional Cross-Industry Holdings and Information Frictions in Corporate Loans. Management Science. Forthcoming.
Umit G Gurun, Jiabin Wu, Steven Chong Xiao, and Serena Wenjing Xiao , 2023. “Do Wall Street Landlords Undermine Renters’ Welfare?”, The Review of Financial Studies , 36(1), pp.70-121.
Jess Cornaggia , Kimberly J Cornaggia, and Ryan Israelsen, Rating Agency Fees: Pay to Play in Public Finance?, The Review of Financial Studies , Volume 36, Issue 5, May 2023, Pages 2004–2045
Fred Bereskin, Seong K. Byun , and Jong-Min Oh . “Technological Fit and the Market for Managerial Talent.” Journal of Financial and Quantitative Analysis 58.2 (2023): 837-874.
Walter Pohl , Karl Schmedders, and Ole Wilms, 2021. “Asset pricing with heterogeneous agents and long-run risk.” Journal of Financial Economics , Vol. 140
Itzhak Ben-David, Francesco Franzoni, Rabih Moussawi , and John Sedunov, 2021, “The Granular Nature of Large Institutional Investors.”, Management Science , vol. 67
Seong K. Byun, Jong-Min Oh , Han Xia, 2021. “Incremental vs. Breakthrough Innovation: The Role of Technology Spillovers.” Management Science , vol. 67.
Jess Cornaggia , Kimberly J. Cornaggia, Ryan Israelsen, 2020. “Where the heart is: information production and the home bias.” Management Science , vol. 66.
Jay Yin Li , Jess Cornaggia , 2019. “The value access to finance: evidence from m&as.” Journal of Financial Economics , vol. 131.
Itzhak Ben-David, Francesco Franzoni, and Rabih Moussawi , 2018. “Do ETFs Increase Volatility.?” Journal of Finance , vol. 73
Ole Wilms, Walt Pohl , Karl Schmedders, 2018. “Higher order effects in asset pricing models with long-run risks.” Journal of Finance , vol. 73.
Ryan Isrealsen, Jess Cornaggia , Kimberly Cornaggia, 2018. “Credit ratings and the cost of municipal financing.” The Review of Financial Studies , vol. 31.
Fabian Ackerman, Karl Schmedders, Walt Pohl , 2017. “Optimal and naïve diversification in currency markets.” Management Science , vol. 63.
Jess Cornaggia , Alexander Butler, Umit Gurun, 2017. “Do local capital market conditions affect consumers’ borrowing decisions?” Management Science , vol. 63.
Valentina Bruno, Jess Cornaggia , Kimberly J. Cornaggia, 2016. “Does Regulatory Certification Affect the Information Content of Credit Ratings?” Management Science, Vol. 62.
Jess Cornaggia , Kimberly J. Cornaggia, Han Xia, 2016. “Revolving doors on Wall Street,” Journal of Financial Economics , Vol. 120.
Jay Yin Li , Dragon Yongjun Tang , 2016. “The leverage externalities of credit default swaps”. Journal of Financial Economics , Vol. 120.
Jess Cornaggia , Yifei Mao, Xuan Tian, Brian Wolfe, 2015. “Does banking competition affect innovation?” Journal of Financial Economics, Vol. 115.
Nina Baranchuk, Robert Kieschnick, Rabih Moussawi , 2014. “Motivating innovation in newly public firms,” Journal of Financial Economics , Vol. 111.
Itzhak Ben-David, Francesco Franzoni, Augustin Landier, Rabih Moussawi, 2013. “Do hedge funds manipulate stock prices?” Journal of Finance, Vol. 68.
Jess Cornaggia, 2013. “Does risk management matter? Evidence from the U.S. agricultural industry,” Journal of Financial Economics, Vol. 109.
Jess Cornaggia and Kimberly Cornaggia, 2013. “Estimating the costs of issuer-paid credit ratings,” The Review of Financial Studies, Vol. 26.
Zhonglan Dai, Douglas Shackelford, Harold Zhang, Chongyang Chen, 2013. “Does financial constraint affect the relation between shareholder taxes and the cost of equity capital?” The Accounting Review, Vol. 88.
Itzhak Ben-David, Francessco Franzoni, Rabih Moussawi, 2012. “Hedge fund stock trading in the financial crisis of 2007-2009,” The Review of Financial Studies, Vol. 25.
Theodore Day, George Li, Yexiao Xu, 2011. “Dividend distributions and closed-end fund discounts,” Journal of Financial Economics, Vol. 100.
Alexander Butler and Jess Cornaggia, 2011. “Does access to external finance improve productivity? evidence from a natural experiment,” Journal of Financial Economics, Vol. 99.
Aleandar Butler, Jess Cornaggia, Gustavo Grullon, James Weston, 2011. “Corporate financing decisions, managerial market timing, and real investment,” Journal of Financial Economics, Vol. 101.
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