Search Results

Results for Risk management:

Ant Bozkaya

Ant Bozkaya

Department: Lecturer, Global Economics and Management

Contact: (617) 953-4558, bozkaya@mit.edu

Expertise: Angel investing; Banking regulation; Biotechnology; Business plans; Cross-cultural awareness; Cultural differences; Developing countries, economics; Emerging businesses; Emerging markets; Energy; Entrepreneurial finance; Entrepreneurial management; Entrepreneurship / New ventures; Equities; Global entrepreneurship; Innovation; Investment banking; Investment risk; Labor market policy; Management of technology; Middle East; Non-profits; Paper industry; Private equity; Startups; Strategic management; Technological innovation; Venture capital

Hui Chen

Hui Chen

Jon D. Gruber Career Development Professor in Finance

Department: Associate Professor of Finance

Contact: (617) 324-3896, huichen@mit.edu

Expertise: Bankruptcy; Bond pricing; Contagion; Financial econometrics; Financial engineering; Inflation; Investment risk

John DeTore

John DeTore

Department: Senior Lecturer, Finance

Contact: (617) 226-1789, jdetore@mit.edu

Expertise: Analysts forecasts; Arbitrage pricing theory; Asset management and pricing; Bayesian statistics; Capital market; Component software technologies; Contagion; Currency; Data acquisition; Data storage; Earnings management; Earnings manipulations; Equities; Financial econometrics; Financial engineering; Financial information technology; Financial markets; Financial services; Futures; Hedge funds; Information technology for management; Investment analysis; Investment risk; Investment strategies; Leverage; Management of information technology; Market, categorical structures in; Meltdown; Mutual funds; Portfolio choice; Portfolio construction; Portfolio design and management; Probability, applied; Risk capital; Risk management; Risk models; Security prices; Simulation; Stock market; Stock valuation; Trading decisions; Valuation; Wall Street

Simon Johnson

Simon Johnson

Ronald A. Kurtz (1954) Professor of Entrepreneurship

Department: Professor of Global Economics and Management

Contact: 617-290-9618, sjohnson@mit.edu

Expertise: Corporate governance; Economic crisis; Economics; Economy, current conditions; Entrepreneurship / New ventures; Government; New stock markets; Political economy; Sustainability; Tax policy; Trade policy; Unemployment; United States; Venture capital

Charles Kane

Charles Kane

Department: Senior Lecturer, Finance

Contact: (617) 253-3386, ckane@mit.edu

Expertise: Accounting, domestic; Accounting, international; Africa; Alliances; Analysts forecasts; Argentina; Asia; Asia Pacific; Auditing/auditors; Banking; Banking management; Brazil; Business education; Business ethics; Business intelligence; Business plans; Capital budgeting; Capital controls; Capital market; Chemical; China; Competitive strategy; Component software technologies; Computer aided software engineering; Computer industry; Corporate finance; Corporate governance; Corporate strategy and policy; Cross-cultural awareness; Cultural differences; Data acquisition; Data storage; Database and information integration technologies; Derivatives; Developing countries; Disclosure; Distance learning; Downsizing; E-commerce; Earnings manipulations; eBay; Education; Elevator pitch; Emerging markets; Entrepreneurial finance; Entrepreneurial management; Entrepreneurship / New ventures; Equities; Euro; Exchange rates; Executive education; Financial engineering; Financial reporting; Financial services; Financial statement analysis; Foreign investment; Futures; Global entrepreneurship; Global sales strategies; Globalization; Google; High technology companies; Interest rates; International corporate strategy; International finance; International management; International trade; Internet security; Internet software; Internet software/applications; Internet strategy; Investment banking; Investor relations; K-12 education; Knowledge sharing; Logistics; MBA; Mergers and acquisitions; Microsoft; Monetary policy; Negotiation and conflict resolution; Non-profits; Online feedback mechanisms; Operations management; Options; Options pricing, valuation; Price fixing; Private equity; Privatization; Process control; Project management; Research, academic; Revenue management; Risk management; Sales force automation; Sales support systems and databases; Sarbanes-Oxley compliance; Service industry; Software; Startups; Strategic management; Strategic planning; Supply chain management; Tax policy; Taxation, corporate; Turkey; Venture capital

Gordon Kaufman

Gordon Kaufman

Morris A. Adelman Professor of Management, Emeritus

Department: Professor of Statistics

Contact: (617) 253-2651, gkaufman@mit.edu

Mozaffar Khan

Mozaffar Khan

Contact: (617) 252-1131, mkhan@mit.edu

Expertise: Accounting, domestic; Accounting, international; Analysts forecasts; Asset management and pricing; Bankruptcy; Capital market; Corporate finance; Corporate governance; Disclosure; Dividend policy; Earnings management; Earnings manipulations; Economic crisis; Economy, current conditions; Education; Equities; Financial reporting; Financial services; Financial statement analysis; Hedge funds; Investment risk; Investment strategies; Middle East; Mutual funds; Pakistan; Security prices; Stock market; Valuation; Wall Street

Mark Kritzman

Mark Kritzman

Department: Senior Lecturer, Finance

Contact: (617) 253-7125, mkritzman@mit.edu

Expertise: Asset management and pricing; Currency management; Financial engineering; Financial markets; Pension funds; Portfolio choice; Risk management

Donald Lessard

Donald Lessard

Epoch Foundation Professor of International Management

Department: Professor of Global Economics and Management Professor of Engineering Systems

Contact: (617) 253-6688, dlessard@mit.edu

Expertise: Capital budgeting; Corporate strategy and policy; Developing countries, economics; Energy; Executive Education; Foreign investment; Global business practices; Globalization; Green industries; Industrial partnerships; International finance; International management; Latin America; Management Education; Mergers and acquisitions; Mexico; Non-market strategy; Oil; Risk management; Strategic management; Sustainability; Taiwan

Andrew Lo

Andrew Lo

Charles E. and Susan T. Harris Professor

Department: Professor of Finance

Contact: (617) 253-0920, alo@mit.edu

Expertise: Analysts forecasts; Angel investing; Applied economics; Applied math; Applied probability; Arbitrage pricing theory; Artificial intelligence; Asset management and pricing; Banking; Banking management; Banking operations and policy; Banking regulation; Bankruptcy; Bayesian networks; Bayesian statistics; Bond markets; Bond negotiations; Bond pricing; Business education; Business intelligence; Business plans; Capital budgeting; Capital controls; Capital market; CEO compensation; Chat rooms, investment; Consumer behavior; Contagion; Corporate finance; Corporate governance; Corporate strategy and policy; Currency; Data acquisition; Data mining; Decision making, decision support; Deflation; Derivatives; Disaster recovery; Distance learning; Diversification, corporate; Dividend policy; Dot-com; E-commerce; Econometrics; Economic crisis; Economics; Economy, current conditions; Education; Emerging businesses; Entrepreneurial finance; Entrepreneurial management; Entrepreneurship / New ventures; Equities; Euro; Exchange rates; Executive compensation; Executive education; Federal Reserve; Financial econometrics; Financial engineering; Financial information technology; Financial markets; Financial reporting; Financial services; Financial statement analysis; Foreign investment; Futures; Government; Hedge funds; Hurdle rates; Inflation; Information technology; Information technology, artificial intelligence; Intellectual property; Intellectual property law; Interest rates; International finance; Intertemporal choice; Investment analysis; Investment banking; Investment risk; Investment strategies; Knowledge sharing; Law; Macroeconomics; Market, categorical structures in; Mathematical programming; MBA; Mergers and acquisitions; Mortgage funds; Mutual funds; Neural networks; New stock markets; New ventures; Non-linear dynamics; Online banking; Online feedback mechanisms; Operations research; Optimal control; Optimization; Options; Patents; Pensions; Personal finance; Portfolio choice; Portfolio design and management; Private equity; Probability, applied; Research and development; Research, academic; Retirement planning; Revenue management; Risk capital; Risk management; Sampling; Securities and Exchange Commission; Security prices; Simulation; Software agents; Startups; Statistics; Stochastic modeling; Stock exchange; Stock exchange consolidation; Stock market; Stock options; Stock trading; Sub-prime lending; Technology; Trading decisions; Treasuries; Valuation; Venture capital; Wall Street; Web-based marketing

Deborah Lucas

Deborah Lucas

Sloan Distinguished Professor of Finance

Contact: (617) 715-4816, dlucas@mit.edu

Expertise: Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac; federal budget; federal credit programs; government financial institutions; pensions; Social Security; student loans; valuation

Sinead O'Flanagan

Sinead O'Flanagan

Department: Senior Lecturer, Leadership

Contact: (617) 253-5703, sof@mit.edu

Expertise: Action based learning; Business education; Change management; Cross-cultural awareness; Cultural differences; Design of leadership development; Education; Employee motivation; Europe; High technology companies; International management; Ireland; Leadership; Management effectiveness, measuring; Management of engineers and scientists; Managerial communication; Managerial vision; Managing change; Motivation; Optimization; Organizational change; Organizational culture; Organizational learning; Silicon Valley; Socially responsible business; Sustainability

John Parsons

John Parsons

Department: Senior Lecturer / MBA Program Finance Track Head

Contact: (617) 324-3745, jparsons@mit.edu

Expertise: Capital budgeting; Climate policy; Corporate diversification; Corporate finance; Corporate strategy and policy; Derivatives; Dividend policy; Emissions trading; Energy; Environment; Environmental economics; Environmental policy; Finance; Financial engineering; Financial markets; Gas; Hurdle rates; Nuclear power; Oil; Public utilities; Risk management; Securities and Exchange Commission

Stephen Ross

Stephen Ross

Franco Modigliani Professor of Financial Economics

Department: Professor of Finance

Contact: (617) 258-8371, sross@mit.edu

Expertise: Applied economics; Arbitrage pricing theory; Asia; Asset management and pricing; Banking; Bond pricing; Capital market; CEO compensation; Contagion; Corporate strategy and policy; Currency; Derivatives; Economics; Equities; Europe; Exchange rates; Executive compensation; Federal Reserve; Financial econometrics; Financial engineering; Financial information technology; Financial markets; Financial services; Futures; Hedge funds; Investment analysis; Investment risk; Investment strategies; Mortgage funds; Mutual funds; Options; Options pricing, valuation; Personal finance; Portfolio choice; Portfolio design and management; Retirement planning; Risk capital; Security prices; Stock exchange; Stock market; Stock trading; Treasuries; Valuation; Wall Street

Tavneet Suri

Tavneet Suri

Maurice F. Strong Career Development Professor

Department: Associate Professor of Applied Economics

Contact: (617) 253-7159, tavneet@mit.edu

Expertise: Africa; Applied economics; Applied microeconomics; Developing countries; Developing countries, economics; Econometrics; Economics

Adrien Verdelhan

Adrien Verdelhan

Douglas Drane Career Development Professor in Information Technology and Management

Department: Assistant Professor of Finance

Contact: (617) 253-5123, adrienv@mit.edu

Expertise: Arbitrage pricing theory; Bond markets; Bond pricing; Derivatives; Exchange rates; Federal Reserve; Macroeconomics

Jiang Wang

Jiang Wang

Mizuho Financial Group Professor

Department: Professor of Finance

Contact: (617) 253-2632, wangj@mit.edu

Expertise: Arbitrage pricing theory; Asset management and pricing; Bond pricing; Capital market; China; Contagion; Currency; Derivatives; Equities; Financial engineering; Financial markets; Futures; Investment risk; Investment strategies; Market microstructure; Mutual funds; Options; Options pricing, valuation; Portfolio choice; Portfolio design and management; Security prices; Stock exchange; Stock market; Stock trading; Trading decisions; Treasuries

Roy Welsch

Roy Welsch

Eastman Kodak Leaders for Global Operations Professor of Management

Department: Professor of Statistics and Engineering Systems

Contact: (617) 253-6601, rwelsch@mit.edu

Expertise: Bayesian statistics; Corporate strategy and policy; Data acquisition; Data mining; Econometrics; Experimental design; Financial econometrics; Financial engineering; Financial markets; Information technology; Managerial economics; Process control; Statistics

more results »

Podcasts & Video

Lunch with a Laureate: Robert Merton

As an MIT Museum audience peppers him with queries ranging from the barter system to development, and the role of intuition in economics, Nobel Prize-winner Robert Merton pushes back against any assumptions that he might be a "renaissance man." He carefully steers listeners to his areas of expertise -- financial engineering and innovation, and risk management.

Spender or Saver? The Choice May Not be Yours — Joshua Ackerman

From Marketwatch During a recession, why do some people spend money while others save? Money issues can be grounds for conflict in relationships. One person may be a spender while the other is a saver. Throw in financial stress such as an economic recession and one person’s preference can seem completely irrational to the other. How can people be so different when it comes to the “right” decisions? Recent research shows that our childhood economic environments have a lot to do with how we make financial decisions and handle financial risk later in life Read the full post at Marketwatch Joshua Ackerman is assistant professor of marketing at the MIT Sloan School of Management and co-author of “When the Economy Falters, Do People Spend or Save? Responses to Resource Scarcity Depend on Childhood Environments,” published in the Feb. 8 issue of Psychological Science.The post Spender or Saver? The Choice May Not be Yours — Joshua Ackerman appeared first on MIT Sloan Experts.

Your Recent Searches

Can't find what
you're looking for?

Contact us.

Twitter

Paul Denning
Director of Media
Relations
617.253.0576
denning@mit.edu

Patricia Favreau
Associate Director of
Media Relations
617.253.3492
pfavreau@mit.edu

MIT ©2010 MIT Sloan School of Management