Robert Jarrow is the Ronald P. and Susan E. Lynch Professor of Investment Management, Professor of Finance and Economics at The Johnson School, Cornell University.
Jarrow has over 25 years of work-experience. His teaching and research interests involve the study of mathematical finance. He is interested in credit derivatives, risk management, investments and asset pricing theory.
Jarrow's consulting experience includes Citigroup, Bank of America, Barclays Capital, Bankers Trust, Merrill Lynch, World Bank, Nomura Securities, Kamakura Corporation, SEC, US Attorney's Office, FDIC, and expert witness assignments.
Jarrow has authored over 120 publications and working papers, four books on options and derivatives, and edited three other books including two on risk. In addition, he holds advisory board positions with centers in The University of Hong Kong and NUS. He has also served on the Merrill Lynch Academic Advisory Council.
Robert Jarrow holds a BA from Duke University, an MBA from Dartmouth, and a PhD in Finance from MIT.
Given my experiences I think PhDs should be experts in two areas. One is their underlying discipline whatever that is, finance or economics or marketing. So let's stick to finance and a tool base. So if they're interested in empirical studies, they should be an expert on the tools underlying that...(Full transcript available to logged in subscribers.).
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