Masters in Business

Bloomberg
undefined
Sep 21, 2017 • 1h 9min

Matthew Rothman

Bloomberg View columnist Barry Ritholtz interviews Matthew Rothman, the head of global quantitative equity research at Credit Suisse and a senior lecturer in finance at the MIT Sloan School of Management. He was hired a few years before the financial crisis hit to be the global head of quantitative research at Lehman Brothers (and then moved to Barclays Capital, following the Lehman bankruptcy). In the midst of the quant crash in 2007, he published “Turbulent Times in Quant Land,” which became the most highly distributed research note in Lehman’s history. He is a huge Bruce Springsteen fan, and as an analyst often weaved song lyrics into his research notes.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
undefined
Sep 15, 2017 • 1h 4min

Victor Niederhoffer: Lessons of Making and Losing a Fortune

Bloomberg View columnist Barry Ritholtz interviews the fascinating Victor Niederhoffer, a nationally ranked squash champion and former Berkeley professor of finance and statistics. An undeniably brilliant man who was still unable to adequately manage risk, he offers crucial lessons for all traders. In his first book, "The Education of a Speculator," he reveals the risk-embracing style that created his first fortune. In his follow-up, "Practical Speculation," he almost -- but doesn’t quite -- accept responsibility for the prior disaster. It was published before the devastating second set of losses suffered during the credit crisis.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
undefined
6 snips
Sep 8, 2017 • 1h 5min

Katie Stockton Started with Technicals in College

Katie Stockton, chief technical strategist at BTIG and a Chartered Market Technician, started studying technicals in college. She discusses why charts and trend-following drive her top-down work. Topics include falling market volume, favorite indicators like MACD and Fibonacci, the limits of sentiment tools, and how technology and passive flows reshape technical analysis.
undefined
Aug 31, 2017 • 1h 4min

What to Do When Paul McCartney Comes Calling

 What happens when Paul McCartney asks, “What are you doing for the next few years?” For Lawrence Juber, you think about it for a nano second, before saying “I guess I am playing with you.”  The session guitarist, musicologist, former Wings guitarist and Grammy-award winning composer with 25 albums to his name describes rehearsing with Paul and Linda before their next tour. McCartney wanted to record some tracks, but his favorite studio, Abbey Road, was unavailable -- so he built an exact reproduction of Abbey Road inside his own studio. He explains how composers and performers get paid a meager amount from music streaming, and why the real money is in television and movie soundtracks. The music business model has changed from record sales to live performances and merchandise sales.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
undefined
Aug 25, 2017 • 1h 15min

Steven Clifford Says You Don't Need a Compensation Consultant

Steven Clifford, a former tech CEO and author of "The CEO Pay Machine," passionately critiques the executive compensation system. He argues that compensation consultants act as parasites, inflating CEO salaries at the expense of shareholders. Clifford highlights the troubling disparity between CEO pay and average worker wages, and calls for a reevaluation of compensation practices to genuinely align pay with performance. He emphasizes the need for transparency and regulation to mitigate the harmful effects of excessive executive compensation on both companies and society.
undefined
Aug 18, 2017 • 1h 13min

Ellen Zentner's Shift From Public to Private Sector

Bloomberg View columnist Barry Ritholtz interviews  Ellen Zentner, the chief U.S. economist at Morgan Stanley. She explains why Texas came through the financial crisis so well, courtesy of its rainy day fund. Her career took her from the Texas Comptroller's office to Morgan Stanley, where she leads the North American Economics group. She said starting in government gave her time to think “deep thoughts” and develop her analytical approach. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
undefined
Aug 10, 2017 • 1h 15min

Matt Wallaert Is on a 'Chief Behavioral Officer' Mission

Bloomberg View columnist Barry Ritholtz interviews Matt Wallaert, a behavioral scientist who works at the intersection of technology and human behavior. After several years in academia and two successful startups, he joined Microsoft, where he led a team of experts using technology to help people live happier, healthier lives. During his time with Microsoft, he was a director at Microsoft Ventures, the firm’s venture capital arm. He sits on the boards of a variety of startups and nonprofits. Wallaert and Ritholtz discuss the role of behavioral psychology in startups. This interview aired on Bloomberg Radio.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
undefined
Aug 3, 2017 • 1h 24min

Richard Clarida of Pimco on the New Neutral of Monetary Policy

Bloomberg View columnist Barry Ritholtz interviews Richard Clarida, a global strategic adviser for PIMCO and former assistant secretary of U.S. Treasury. His first day at the Treasury Department was Sept. 11, 2001, and he describes what it was like to start work during such a chaotic period. He also reminds us that during the financial crisis, many were originally concerned with a deflation scare. He gives the Fed high marks for crisis management during the Great Recession, but says that since the recovery has begun, it has been too slow to normalize and not very clear in its communications.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
undefined
Jul 28, 2017 • 1h 21min

Rich Barton Talks About His Startup Companies

Bloomberg View columnist Barry Ritholtz interviews Rich Barton, the Microsoft engineer who developed Expedia while working for Bill Gates and Steve Ballmer in the 1990s. Barton then co-founded real estate app Zillow and jobs site Glassdoor, and joined the board of directors at Netflix, where he remains to this day. Barton tells Ritholtz that his companies bring transparency to industries that have traditionally lacked it. “Power to the people” says Barton, is not a political slogan, but “a technological one.” This interview aired on Bloomberg Radio.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
undefined
Jul 26, 2017 • 55min

Alan Shaw Says the Days of Charting Stocks By Hand Are Over

Alan Shaw, founder of the Market Technicians Association and former managing director of the technical research department at Smith Barney, tells Bloomberg View columnist Barry Ritholtz that he's happy he's not working today: It's much more difficult to be a technician and be in institutional sales than it was when he was working.\u0010\u0010(Note: This is a podcast extra which will not air on Bloomberg Radio.)See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

The AI-powered Podcast Player

Save insights by tapping your headphones, chat with episodes, discover the best highlights - and more!
App store bannerPlay store banner
Get the app