Our Bloomberg Terminals enable students to monitor and analyze real-time financial market data.

St. Bonaventure University

Finance Program


Our program is recognized by CFA Institute, which certifies financial professionals, for adhering to standards of ethics, education and professional excellence.

This designation ensures that students who complete CFA's University Recognition Program receive the highest quality business education, are proficient in the essential areas of study for finance professionals, ethically centered, and prepared for the best jobs in the field.


His greatest decision: a great SBU education


Finance major Bristol Barnes was well-prepared for his internship with the Bank of New York, and for his real-world job at JPMorgan Chase Bank.

Start by building a solid business core


Finance majors pursue a curriculum that emphasizes core courses in accounting, marketing, organizational behavior, quantitative analysis, economics and business law.

These foundational courses, which we refer to as our "business core," are taken in your freshman and sophomore years, accompanied by courses in the liberal arts.

Major courses, the focus of your final two years of study, target three key areas: corporation finance, investments, and financial institutions and markets. Required electives take you on a deeper dive into financial management, including courses in international finance, portfolio management, economics, financial statement analysis and bank management.

There is some flexibility built into the program, allowing students to complete a secondary concentration, such as a minor in economics, computer science, mathematics, or a foreign language.


Student giving a presentation in class

Hands-on, experiential learning: a SIMMple plan


In the Students in Money Management program, students oversee investments in a real endowment fund.

We believe in learning by doing, so there are a number of opportunities for students to put their classroom knowledge to work.

In the Students in Money Management (SIMM) program, students run an investment portfolio of approximately $560,000. Under the supervision of a finance professor and an advisory board, they meet regularly and make all investment and buy-sell decisions as a group.

Learn more about SIMM at School of Business Clubs & Organizations.

If you're looking for hands-on experience, finance internships are plentiful, not to mention a great way to enhance your resume and to network with industry professionals.

Learn more at School of Business Internships.

Students also have the opportunity to conduct independent research, or take an algorithmic trading class in which they participate in national competitions.


Program Information


The School of Business offers a BBA in finance and a minor in finance.

Bachelor of Business Administration in finance

The finance program offers a balance between economic theory and accounting with concentration and emphasis on the monetary system and its relationship to the firm and financial management.

Degree requirements and a four-year plan of study for the finance major

  • Finance minor

    For non-majors, the 18-hour minor in finance is one of nine School of Business minors offering students at opportunity to study a specific area of business in more detail.

    Requirements for a finance minor



    News-Publications-Research- Banner

    A legacy of possibility

    May 18, 2020

    By Susan Anderson

    As a walk-on for the Bonnies men’s basketball team in the 1990-1991 season, Chris Hagstrom played a total of maybe 10 minutes.

    He loved every second of it.

    “Coach Chapman invited me back to play the next year, but I told him ‘I think I’m gonna pass,’” he said with a laugh. “I just really appreciated being invited back again.”

    Setting a goal and achieving it appears to come naturally to Hagstrom, who now resides in Manhattan.

    He began his academic career at Jamestown Community College, receiving a full scholarship and walking on the basketball team. From there he headed to Bona’s, graduating in 1992 with a bachelor of business administration degree with a major in finance.

    Fast forward a few years to Wall Street, where he eventually earned an executive spot at UBS overseeing the bank’s prime brokerage business in the Americas for more than 15 years.

    And this month he launched Kayenta, a treasury technology firm for which he serves as CEO.

    “I would not have been able to get where I am now if not for Bonaventure,” he said. “The network and the people I’ve met along the way have affected my ability to grow and to learn and to try new things.”

    He also points to the consistent and positive influence of his mother, Karen Hagstrom, who taught in the Falconer Central School system and studied at St. Bonaventure. She passed away in 2007, leaving a legacy of possibility.

    “She encouraged me to always aim high and never be afraid to fail,” he said.

    He and his wife, Erin, established the Karen J. Hagstrom Memorial Scholarship as a way to honor the positive influence she had on so many students, friends and family members throughout her life and career.

    Hunter Ehrenberg, a rising junior finance major from East Aurora, New York, is a recipient of the scholarship.

    “This means the world to me,” Ehrenberg said. “The generosity of the Hagstrom family is helping me through college while making me feel that the hard work I’m putting in is paying off.”

    A member of Students in Money Management, Ehrenberg also makes time to meet with friends at the Richter Center several days a week to play basketball.

    Hagstrom enjoys hearing about the students, what they are doing in the classroom and how they are making the most of their time at Bona’s.

    His best advice for them?

    “Have the confidence to try whatever you are passionate about. Do not sell yourself short and don’t be afraid to go the distance.”

    Sound advice from someone who does exactly that each day.