Ph.D. in Finance

Ph.D. Advisor

Imre Karafiath

Room: BLB 365G
Phone: (940) 565-3065
Email: Imre.Karafiath@unt.edu

 

The University of North Texas College of Business Ph.D. in Business Administration, specializing in Finance, focuses the College's Ph.D. experience to include teaching training and research training that is appropriate for the field of Finance. You can read more about the details of the College program in the Handbook. The application for admission can be downloaded from the Admission Information page or here (in Word document format).

 

Finance Ph.D. Courses

Finance Ph.D. students normally have 18 hours of Finance Ph.D. courses:


The program is highly structured for all students:

Fall Semester, 1st year:
Econ 5640: Multivariate Regression Analysis
Econ 5600: Mathematical Economics
FINA 6100: Theory of Financial Decisions
Math 5810 or MSCI 6750: Probability and Statistics

Spring Semester, 1st year:
Econ 5650: Advanced Econometrics
Finance doctoral seminar
Finance doctoral seminar
Math 5820 or MSCI  6010: Probability and Statistics

All students must take the econometrics exit exam in June.

Fall Semester, 2nd year:
Finance doctoral seminar
Econ 5670: Applied Econometrics
Econ 5655: Econometric Analysis of Panel Data

Spring Semester, 2nd year:
Econ 5660: Time Series Analysis and Forecasting
Finance doctoral seminar
Finance doctoral seminar
MSCI 6000: Non-parametric Statistics

All students must take the written qualifying exam in August.



At the end of the appropriate coursework, Finance Ph.D. students will take minor field comprehensive exams as well as written and oral Finance comprehensive exams prior to beginning dissertation work. We offer written Finance comprehensive examinations in August and February. Written exams last for eight hours per day for two days. The oral examination is normally scheduled 14-21 days after the written examination is administered. Students should be ready to defend a dissertation proposal as early as their sixth long semester in the program.

Finance Ph.D. students will gain experience in presenting research to their peers and will gain experience in our classrooms. College level seminars will require independent research and presentations to peers. In addition, we expect every funded (assistantship) student to gain teaching experience as a teaching fellow (TF) during the Ph.D. program. Students who receive an assistantship from the university normally start as a teaching assistant or  research assistant and work in the finance tutor lab before teaching classes.

Prerequisites

  1. Students are expected to have an MBA-level knowledge in their specialty.
  2. Students applying for financial support (assistantship) must complete Calculus I and II prior to admission. Sponsored students may be permitted to complete these courses at UNT; however, this will add one year to the program.
  3. Admissions are based on a holistic process; no single factor is cause for acceptance or rejection. However, applicants should have  reasonable verbal and quantitative test scores; strong letters of reference are also important; and an MBA or MS from a tier 1 research university also strengthens the application.
  4. Please keep in mind that the process is competitive and we limit the number of admissions to 2 or 3 students per year.

Other Sources of Information about the Ph.D. Program

  1. UNT College of Business Advising Staff MBA/MS Page
  2. UNT Graduate Catalog FIREL Graduate Course Descriptions and Prerequisites
  3. FIREL Undergraduate Course Descriptions and Prerequisites
  4. General Link to UNT Catalogs