Finance Faculty in the News: May 2020
William B. English
- “Powell Steps Gently Onto Congress’s Turf With Spend-More Message,” Bloomberg
- “Fed enters a risky new world with ‘Main Street’ loan program,” AP News
William Goetzmann
- “No debe quedar en casa,” El Mundo
Paul Goldsmith-Pinkham
- “Faculty Describe Challenges and Lessons Learned in the Virtual Classroom,” Yale School of Management
- “Here comes another bad jobless claims number,” Politico
Song Ma
- “As retailers including J. Crew and Neiman Marcus file for bankruptcy, experts worry about skittish creditors and an overloaded bankruptcy court system,” Business Insider (Singapore)
Andrew Metrick
- “Faculty Viewpoints: Preventing a Financial Crisis,” Yale Insights
- “The big problem coronavirus poses for White House economists,” CNN
Tobias Moskowitz
- “As we consider a future without fans in the stands, what does that mean for athletes?” Boston Globe
- “No Fans Allowed? How home-field advantage could be affected in NFL season without full stadiums,” CBS Sports
- “Manchester United's potential Europa League opponents in action as Bundesliga is back,” Manchester Evening News
- “Bundesliga is back but will home advantage now mean nothing?” Irish Mirror
Robert Shiller
- “The Investor's Guide Through Irrational Exuberance,” Seeking Alpha
- “Profiling S&P 500 Drawdowns Since 1871,” Seeking Alpha
- “Here's what kind of return you can expect from stock markets going forward,” Financial Post
- “Moderna Vaccine Fiasco Shows Power of Stock Market Narratives,” Bloomberg
- “Have the Record Number of Investors in the Stock Market Lost Their Minds?,” The New Yorker
- “Robert Shiller: “Not Much of a Sell Signal” for U.S. Stocks,” Advisor Perspectives
- “Does Covid-19 Prove the Stock Market Is Inefficient?,” Pairagraph
Matthew Spiegel
- “Forging a New Field: Finance Sustainability,” Homeland Security News Wire