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In this episode of French Insider, Noel Rimalovski, Managing Director of GH Partners LLC joins host Brian Weimer, Telecom Team Leader of Sheppard Mullin, to discuss cross-border initiatives in the satellite and space industry. These initiatives include France's CoFace compared to The EXIM Bank in the United States, the emerging small launch industry, and the potential for commercial opportunities on the moon. What We Discussed in This Episode: How does working with France's CoFace differ from working with The EXIM Bank in the United States? How does The EXIM Bank compare to the way France approaches export credit agency financing? Who can access financing from an export credit agency? Can a French company approach The EXIM Bank? Aside from SpaceX, who are some of the players in the nascent industry of small launch providers? Are the small launch providers that have proliferated in recent years targeting SpaceX's market? Is the recent multi-orbit trend lately likely to continue? Why is it essential for space and satellite companies to ensure alignment with their government? Is there any real potential for large-scale commercial opportunities on the moon? Is the space industry transitioning into a more commercial chapter of financing? Is there a push for more sustainable projects in the space industry? About Brian Weimer Brian Weimer is a partner in Sheppard Mullin's Washington, D.C. office, where he also serves as Leader of the firm's Telecom Team and Co-Leader of the CFIUS Team. Brian provides regulatory and transactional advice across the entire telecommunications ecosystem. As leader of the firm's Space & Satellite practice, he is perhaps best known as a leading lawyer for the satellite industry. About Noel Rimalovski Noel Rimalovski brings a deep background in M&A and corporate finance to GH Partners. Throughout his 20-year career, he has provided advisory services to clients, including sales and acquisitions, restructurings, capital raisings, valuations and fairness opinions to domestic and international clients in the Telecommunications, Media, Technology, Industrial and Consumer sectors. Before joining GH Partners, Noel served as Senior Vice President at Macquarie Capital (USA), 2007-08, in the Telecommunications, Media, Entertainment and Technology Group. While at Macquarie, he completed $1.8bn of investments in the telecommunications sector. Prior to Macquarie, he was Director in the Mergers & Acquisition Group of Dresdner Kleinwort Wasserstein and its predecessor Wasserstein Perella, where he completed over $20 billion in transactions in the Industrial, Consumer, Technology, Telecommunications and Media sectors. Prior to joining WP, Noel gained experience as a banker on structured financings, securitizations and proprietary investments at Millennium Capital Markets and Lazard Frères. Contact Information Brian Weimer Noel Rimalovski Thank you for listening! Don't forget to SUBSCRIBE to the show to receive every new episode delivered straight to your podcast player every week. If you enjoyed this episode, please help us get the word out about this podcast. Rate and Review this show in Apple Podcasts, Deezer, Amazon Music, or Spotify. It helps other listeners find this show.
William Cohan pulled out all the stops to get the Wall Street Journal to hire him, including getting an MBA, but they just wouldn't. So he turned to corporate America. After nearly two decades as an investment banker, he got kicked out of Wall Street, forcing him to pivot again. In today's episode, William shares the incredible story of how he went from broke, award-winning journalist to investment banker to bestselling author. William Cohan is a prolific author and founding partner of Puck, a daily digital news and opinion publication focused on business. His first book, The Last Tycoons, won the 2007 Financial Times and Goldman Sachs Business Book of the Year Award. In this episode, Ilana and William will discuss: - His journey from broke journalist to investment banker - The parallels between journalism and finance - His expulsion from Wall Street - How he reinvented himself as an award-winning writer - Lessons from the downfall of General Electric - The value of transferable skills across different industries - How being open to new possibilities can lead to unexpected career paths - Persistence in the face of resistance - The need for CEOs to be open to dissenting views - And other topics… William D. Cohan is the bestselling author of The Last Tycoons, which won the 2007 Financial Times and Goldman Sachs Business Book of the Year Award. He has also written several other books on the financial sector, including his latest, Power Failure. He is a former Wall Street M&A investment banker with 17 years of experience at prestigious firms like Lazard Frères & Co., Merrill Lynch, and JPMorgan Chase. William is also a former special correspondent at Vanity Fair and a founding partner of Puck, a daily digital news and opinion publication focused on business. His writing has appeared in The Financial Times, Bloomberg BusinessWeek, and The Atlantic, among others. Connect with William: William's Website: https://williamcohan.com/ William's LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/williamdcohan/ Resources Mentioned: William's Book, Power Failure: The Rise and Fall of an American Icon: https://www.amazon.com/Power-Failure-Rise-Fall-American/dp/0593084160/
BIO: William D. Cohan, a former senior Wall Street M&A investment banker for 17 years at Lazard Frères & Co., Merrill Lynch, and JPMorgan Chase, is the New York Times bestselling author of seven nonfiction narratives, including his most recent book, Power Failure: The Rise and Fall of An American Icon.STORY: William discusses lessons from his most recent book, which is a story of General Electric (GE), a former global company with facilities worldwide. In his book, William focuses on former GE CEO Jack Welch, who took over the company in 1981 and increased its market value from $12 billion to $650 billion. This company became one of the world's most valuable and respected companies, and then it all fell apart.LEARNING: Leadership matters. You are not always right. Achieve the numbers in an ethical manner. “I try to write books that I like to read, with great characters and great stories. And, yes, it's a long book, but I think it's a great story and worth your time.”William Cohan Guest profileWilliam D. Cohan, a former senior Wall Street M&A investment banker for 17 years at Lazard Frères & Co., Merrill Lynch, and JPMorgan Chase, is the New York Times bestselling author of seven nonfiction narratives, including his most recent book, Power Failure: The Rise and Fall of An American Icon.William is a former guest on the show on episode 739: Get the Numbers Right Before You Invest. Today, he's back to discuss lessons from his most recent book, which is a story of General Electric (GE), a former global company with facilities worldwide. In his book, William focuses on former GE CEO Jack Welch, who took over the company in 1981 and increased its market value from $12 billion to $650 billion. This company became one of the most valuable and respected companies in the world, and then it kind of all fell apart.Leadership mattersThe ability of a company to adapt and flexibly evolve in response to market changes is crucial for sustained success. This is vividly illustrated through the leadership tenures of Jack Welch and Jeff Immelt at General Electric (GE), where Welch's strategic boldness and Immelt's subsequent decisions markedly impacted the company's fortunes. The two leaders demonstrate the importance of getting the right man on the right job.Welch was among five candidates vying to become CEO in 1981. He was picked as the CEO because he was potentially the most disruptive—he was going to be this change agent, there was no doubt about it. Welch had pledged to disrupt things to change how GE was run, and he was frankly a fantastic leader. People loved working for him, and he got more out of people than they thought possible. Welch was beloved, feared, respected, and delivered.When choosing a successor, Welch gravitated towards Immelt because he went to Dartmouth and Harvard Business School, got his Ph.D. from the University of Illinois, and was generally intelligent. However, Immelt didn't understand GE Capital. He didn't understand finance well or know the dangers of borrowing short and lending long.Borrowing in the commercial paper market is like a 30-day liability, and lending out 7-10 years means that if something happens and dries up your source of capital, you're toast. This saw him make wrong decisions, which significantly impacted the company.In comparison, when Jack Welch made...
BIO: William D. Cohan, a former senior Wall Street M&A investment banker for 17 years at Lazard Frères & Co., Merrill Lynch, and JPMorgan Chase, is the New York Times bestselling author of seven non-fiction narratives, including his most recent book called Power Failure: The Rise and Fall of an American Idol.STORY: In 1990, William asked a trader to buy him 10 shares in Berkshire Hathaway, thinking a share was selling at $1,200, only to be told it was $12,000. He decided to keep two shares and sold the other eight. Had William invested $120,000 for the 10 shares in Berkshire Hathaway in 1990, they would be worth $7.4 million today.LEARNING: Get the numbers right before you invest. “I decided to write this book for people who wanted to know about how Wall Street works but were afraid to ask how things work.”William Cohan Guest profileWilliam D. Cohan, a former senior Wall Street M&A investment banker for 17 years at Lazard Frères & Co., Merrill Lynch, and JPMorgan Chase, is the New York Times bestselling author of seven non-fiction narratives, including his most recent book called Power Failure: The Rise and Fall of an American Idol.Worst investment everIn 1990, William was interested in buying some Berkshire Hathaway stock. The company he was working for at the time, Lazard, had a Quotron machine on each floor. William used the machine to get Berkshire's stock price of the day and got $1,200 a share. William went down to the company's trader and told him that he wanted to buy 10 shares of Berkshire Hathaway. William figured 1,200 x 10, that's $12,000, and as a first-year associate, he didn't have much money but figured he had 12,000 extra dollars to invest in Warren Buffett's Berkshire Hathaway shares.Twenty minutes later, the trader called William back, and he said the trade was done and to pay $120,000. William was in shock because he thought he was supposed to pay $12,000 and not $120,000. The trader explained that the Quotron machine only goes to four decimal points, so he'd gotten $1,200.William didn't have $120,000, so he decided to keep only two shares at $24,000. The trader sold the other eight back into the market. Now, 33 years later, the Berkshire Hathaway stock is trading for something like $540,000 a share. William's two shares are now worth over a million dollars, and he only paid $24,000 for them, which is nice. But he also let go of eight shares. Had he invested $120,000 for the 10 shares in Berkshire Hathaway in 1990, they would be worth $7.4 million today.Lessons learnedGet the numbers right before you invest.William's recommendationsWilliam recommends his books because he believes they're great resources for learning about important events and companies on Wall Street.No.1 goal for the next 12 monthsWilliam's number one goal for the next 12 months is to continue writing his new book and the weekly writing assignments for POC.Parting words “Enjoy your life as much as you can. No one gets out alive.”William Cohan Connect with William CohanLinkedIn
William Cohan worked as an investment banker for 17 years at some of the most prestigious firms on Wall Street. But after he lost his job at JPMorgan Chase in his mid-forties, he decided to pivot to writing, and he's now one of the world's premier financial journalists. In today's episode, William shares his journey on and off Wall Street, provides his insights on some of the most influential business leaders in history, and breaks down the rise and fall of one of America's most influential companies, General Electric. William Cohan is the author of multiple New York Times bestselling books. A former longtime special correspondent at Vanity Fair, he is also a founding partner of Puck, a daily digital news and opinion publication. His most recent book is Power Failure: The Rise and Fall of an American Icon, which is about the astounding rise and precipitous fall of General Electric. In this episode, Hala and William will discuss: - His journey from journalist to investment banker and back - Working on Wall Street in the 1980s - How not to get hoodwinked by the Street - Why it's never too late to change careers - Creating a new business model for journalism at Puck - The rise and fall of General Electric - Channeling the energy of GE's legendary CEO Jack Welch - Why you don't need to be a founder or inventor to make it big - And other topics… William Cohan was a senior Wall Street M&A investment banker for 17 years at Lazard Frères & Co., Merrill Lynch and JPMorgan Chase. He is the New York Times bestselling author of three non-fiction narratives about Wall Street: Money and Power: How Goldman Sachs Came to Rule the World; House of Cards: A Tale of Hubris and Wretched Excess on Wall Street; and The Last Tycoons: The Secret History of Lazard Frères & Co. A former longtime special correspondent at Vanity Fair, he is also a founding partner of Puck, a daily digital news and opinion publication. His most recent book is Power Failure: The Rise and Fall of an American Icon, which is about the astounding rise and precipitous fall of General Electric, once the world's most valuable and respected companies. Resources Mentioned: William's Website: https://williamcohan.com/ William's LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/williamdcohan/ William's Twitter: https://twitter.com/WilliamCohan William's Newsletter (Dry Powder): https://puck.news/newsletters/dry-powder/ William Cohan's most recent book is Power Failure: The Rise and Fall of an American Icon: https://www.amazon.com/Power-Failure-Rise-General-Electric/dp/0593084160/ LinkedIn Secrets Masterclass, Have Job Security For Life: Use code ‘podcast' for 30% off at yapmedia.io/course. Sponsored By: Justworks - Learn more about Justworks by visiting youngandprofiting.co/justworks More About Young and Profiting Download Transcripts - youngandprofiting.com Get Sponsorship Deals - youngandprofiting.com/sponsorships Leave a Review - ratethispodcast.com/yap Watch Videos - youtube.com/c/YoungandProfiting Follow Hala Taha LinkedIn - linkedin.com/in/htaha/ Instagram - instagram.com/yapwithhala/ TikTok - tiktok.com/@yapwithhala Twitter - twitter.com/yapwithhala Learn more about YAP Media Agency Services - yapmedia.io/ Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
On this episode of Closed! we chat with New York Times best selling author William Cohan about the current state of the commercial real estate market. The conversation focuses on how the dual blows of the pandemic and rapidly rising rates have put the squeeze on owners of class B real estate, and the holders of office focused REITs. Cohan also shares his thoughts on the what future looks like for this asset class, and how building owners are likely to respond. It's an extremely informative conversation and we hope you give it a listen. William D. Cohan, a former senior Wall Street M&A investment banker for 17 years at Lazard Frères & Co., Merrill Lynch and JPMorganChase, is the New York Times bestselling author of three non-fiction narratives about Wall Street: Money and Power: How Goldman Sachs Came to Rule the World; House of Cards: A Tale of Hubris and Wretched Excess on Wall Street; and, The Last Tycoons: The Secret History of Lazard Frères & Co., the winner of the 2007 FT/Goldman Sachs Business Book of the Year Award. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Today's Flashback Friday is from episode 394, published last August 1, 2014. William D. Cohan is a columnist for Bloomberg View and Vanity Fair and author of the new book, "The Price of Silence: The Duke Lacrosse Scandal, the Power of the Elite, and the Corruption of Our Great Universities." He previously authored, "The Last Tycoons: The Secret History of Lazard Frères & Co." and "House of Cards: A Tale of Hubris and Wretched Excess on Wall Street." Cohan characterizes the state of the American university system and talks about the elitist bad-boy attitude that plagues many campuses across the nation. So many people who fit the stereotype he describes end up on Wall Street. William D. Cohan is the New York Times bestselling author of three non-fiction narratives about Wall Street: Money and Power: How Goldman Sachs Came to Rule the World; House of Cards: A Tale of Hubris and Wretched Excess on Wall Street; and The Last Tycoons: The Secret History of Lazard Freres & Co., which won the 2007 FT/Goldman Sachs Business Book of the Year Award. He is a contributing editor at Vanity Fair and writes a weekly column for Bloomberg View. Mr. Cohan also writes for the Financial Times, Bloomberg Business Week, The Atlantic, Art News, the Irish Times, the Washington Post and the New York Times Magazine. He appears regularly on MSNBC, Bloomberg TV, CNN, Current TV, and the BBC. He has also been a guest on the Charlie Rose Show and the News Hour. Over the course of 17 years Mr. Cohan was a senior Wall Street Mergers & Acquisitions investment banker at Lazard Freres & Co., Merrill Lynch and JPMorgan Chase. He is a graduate of Duke University, Columbia University School of Journalism, and the Columbia Graduate School of Business. Read William D. Cohan's work on Bloomberg View at www.bloombergview.com. Visit his work on Vanity Fair at www.vanityfair.com. Key Takeaways: 1:19 William D. Cohan's background and introduction 3:29 The elitist attitude on college campuses 5:53 The college admissions process 10:38 The value of a liberal arts education 14:12 The changing job market and the need for a broader education 18:14 The role of universities in preparing students for the workforce 21:10 The connection between elite colleges and Wall Street 25:18 The importance of character in business 27:54 The impact of technology on the workforce and higher education 30:16 The future of higher education and the role of technology Follow Jason on TWITTER, INSTAGRAM & LINKEDIN Twitter.com/JasonHartmanROI Instagram.com/jasonhartman1/ Linkedin.com/in/jasonhartmaninvestor/ Call our Investment Counselors at: 1-800-HARTMAN (US) or visit: https://www.jasonhartman.com/ Free Class: Easily get up to $250,000 in funding for real estate, business or anything else: http://JasonHartman.com/Fund CYA Protect Your Assets, Save Taxes & Estate Planning: http://JasonHartman.com/Protect Get wholesale real estate deals for investment or build a great business – Free Course: https://www.jasonhartman.com/deals Special Offer from Ron LeGrand: https://JasonHartman.com/Ron Free Mini-Book on Pandemic Investing: https://www.PandemicInvesting.com
In today's episode, The Mentors Host Tom Loarie talks with William D. Cohan, a business writer, former investor banker, and best-selling author of “Power Failure: The Rise and Fall of an American Icon," which chronicles the strengths and weaknesses of influentical General Electric CEOs Jack Welch and Jeff Immelt, and the the rise and fall of General Electric (GE) over 36 years. The lessons learned are legendary in their impact on anyone's business—large, mid-sized or small—and legendary in understanding what to really look for when evaluating whether (or not) your or another business is one in which it could be worth investing. Ethics play a role for sure. At its peak, GE was an industrial empire worth nearly $600 billion. For almost a century its logo branded "just about everything, from wind turbines to submarine detectors, fridges, televisions, toasters and lightbulbs," as a Nov 2022 article in The Guardian described. In 2001, GE was considered to be one of the most valuable companies in the world, boasting a rare, triple-A credit score. A mere 20 years later, GE announced it would be broken up into smaller fragments. Its employees numbered less than half those of 20 years earlier. In the 2000s, the company had begun sourcing its lightbulbs from Chinese contractors and branding them as GE products. In 2020, GE sold off it's lighting business for good. What went so wrong? Find out in this episode of THE Mentors RADIO. Listen below (podcast posted after Saturday's radio airing), or listen on ANY podcast device or platform here. SHOW NOTES: William D. Cohan ("Bill"): BIO: https://williamcohan.com/about/ WEBSITE: WilliamCohan.com BOOKS: Power Failure: The Rise and Fall of An American Icon, by William D. Cohan Four Friends: Promising Lives Cut Short, by William D. Cohan Why Wall Street Matters, by William D. Cohan The Price of Silence: The Duke Lacrosse Scandal, Wall Street Journal and the Power of the Elite, by William D. Cohen Money and Power: How Goldman Sachs Came to Rule the World, by William D. Cohan House of Cards: A Tale of Hubris and Wretched Excess on Wall Street, by William D. Cohan The Last Tycoons: The Secret History of Lazard Fréres & Company, by William D. Cohan ARTICLES: Power Failure by William D Cohan review – pulling the plug - by Hettie O'Brien, The Guardian
The Interview Discusses: The rise and fall of GE.What could have been done to save General Electric.Who is to blame for GE's demise.His in-depth interviews with both Jack Welch and Jeff Immelt. The fundamental error that Jack Welch made that tarnished his legacy.How GE capital almost filed for bankruptcy during the financial crisis.What Disney can learn from GE's succession issues.The mistake GE made by selling NBC Universal to Comcast (and one thing about the deal you probably never knew).His latest media venture called Puck.And much more…William D. Cohan, a former senior Wall Street M&A investment banker for 17 years at Lazard Frères & Co., Merrill Lynch and JPMorganChase, is the New York Times bestselling author of three non-fiction narratives about Wall Street: Money and Power. His new book Power Failure: The Rise and Fall of an American Icon, about the rise and fall of GE, once the world's most powerful, valuable and important company, was published in November 2022 by Penguin Random House. He is a founding partner of Puck, a digital publication owned and operated by journalists, and a writer-at-large for Air Mail. For 13 years, he was a special correspondent at Vanity Fair. The Boyar Value Group's mission is to search for value on behalf of our clients. Since 1975, the Boyar family of companies has been relentlessly focused on discovering value for our clients. For more than four decades we have navigated through fads, gimmicks and market volatility. Utilizing value investing to try to create and preserve wealth has and always will be our sole focus. Our experienced team of analysts looks for diamonds in the rough, companies passed over by the rest of the investment community, but whose true value, in our opinion, significantly exceeds their current stock price. In essence, we are trying to buy a dollar for fifty cents. To find out more about the Boyar Value Group, please visit www.boyarvaluegroup.com
Ryan speaks with William D. Cohan about his new book Power Failure: The Rise and Fall of an American Icon, the link between Marcus Aurelius and the “imperial CEO” of General Electric Jack Welch, the legacy of Thomas Edison and GE, the egos of powerful CEOs, and more.William D. Cohan is a business writer and former investigative reporter. He is a graduate of Phillips Academy, Duke University, and Columbia University Journalism and Business schools. Prior to his career as a writer, he worked on Wall street in mergers and acquisitions banker, having spent spent six years at Lazard Frères in New York, then Merrill Lynch, and later at JP Morgan Chase. His books include House of Cards: A Tale of Hubris and Wretched Excess on Wall Street, Four Friends: Promising Lives Cut Short, and The Price of Silence: The Duke Lacrosse Scandal, the Power of the Elite, and the Corruption of Our Great Universities.✉️ Sign up for the Daily Stoic email: https://dailystoic.com/dailyemail
Bloomberg Radio host Barry Ritholtz speaks with financial journalist William D. Cohan, who is the bestselling author of Money and Power: How Goldman Sachs Came to Rule the World, House of Cards: A Tale of Hubris and Wretched Excess on Wall Street, and The Last Tycoons: The Secret History of Lazard Frères & Co., among other books. A former Wall Street M&A investment banker for 17 years, Cohan is also a founding partner at the media company Puck. His latest book, Power Failure: The Rise and Fall of an American Icon, was released in November. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Ce mardi 3 janvier, Cédric Decoeur a reçu Sarah Thirion, stratégiste actions chez TP ICAP Europe, Sébastien Korchia, directeur des gestions collectives chez UBS La Maison de gestion, et Régis Bégué, directeur de la gestion actions chez Lazard Frères Gestion, Romain Daubry, membre de la cellule Infos d'Experts de Bourse Direct, Thaline Melkonian, responsable de l'ingénierie patrimoniale de Degroof Petercam, et Sarah Saldmann, avocate au Barreau de Paris, dans l'émission BFM Patrimoine sur BFM Business. Retrouvez l'émission du lundi au vendredi et réécoutez la en podcast.
Ce mardi 3 janvier, Cédric Decoeur a reçu Charles De Sivry, analyste/co-gérant chez Indépendance et Expansion AM, Romain Daubry, membre de la cellule Infos d'Experts chez Bourse Direct, Jean-Louis Cussac, trader pour compte propre chez Perceval Finance Conseil, Frédéric Puzin, président de Corum, Delphine Pasquier, directrice du développement de Prepar Assurance, filiale du groupe BRED, Chauncey Schmitt, chef de projet patrimonial chez Netinvestissement.fr, Sarah Thirion, stratégiste actions chez TP ICAP Europe, Sébastien Korchia, directeur des gestions collectives chez UBS La Maison de gestion, Régis Bégué, directeur de la gestion actions chez Lazard Frères Gestion, Thaline Melkonian, responsable de l'ingénierie patrimoniale de Degroof Petercam, et Sarah Saldmann, avocate au Barreau de Paris, dans l'émission BFM Patrimoine sur BFM Business. Retrouvez l'émission du lundi au vendredi et réécoutez la en podcast.
Consumer prices dominate headlines, but tight labor markets and upward pressure on wages might be better indicators of where the European Central Bank and Federal Reserve are currently heading. Host Ronald Temple discusses with Matthieu Grouès, CIO of Lazard Frères Gestion (LFG), the fascinating global macroeconomic picture: the potential for higher-than-expected interest rates and mild recessions in the United States and Europe, the uncertain outlook for spending in Europe next year, the complicated growth picture in China—and in the face of everything, the markets' stubborn “optimism.”
Ce mardi 27 septembre, Cédric Decoeur a reçu Eric Lewin, rédacteur en chef des publications Agora, Irina Topa-Serry, économiste senior chez AXA IM, Romain Daubry, membre de la cellule Infos d'Experts chez Bourse Direct, Jean-Louis Cussac, trader pour compte propre chez Perceval Finance Conseil, Philippe Crevel, directeur du Cercle de l'Épargne, Géraldine Métifeux, associée fondatrice chez Alter Égale, Olivier Dubs, gérant de JP Morgan Banque Privée, Régis Bégué, directeur de la gestion actions chez Lazard Frères Gestion, Isabelle Fauchon, ingénieur patrimonial chez Neuflize OBC, Sarah Thirion, stratégiste actions chez TP ICAP Europe, et Marie-Christine Sonkin, rédactrice en chef Patrimoine de Les Echos, dans l'émission BFM Patrimoine sur BFM Business. Retrouvez l'émission du lundi au vendredi et réécoutez la en podcast.
Ce mardi 27 septembre, Cédric Decoeur a reçu Olivier Dubs, gérant de JP Morgan Banque Privée, Régis Bégué, directeur de la gestion actions chez Lazard Frères Gestion, Isabelle Fauchon, ingénieur patrimonial chez Neuflize OBC, Sarah Thirion, stratégiste actions chez TP ICAP Europe, Romain Daubry, membre de la cellule Infos d'Experts chez Bourse Direct, et Marie-Christine Sonkin, rédactrice en chef Patrimoine de Les Echos, dans l'émission BFM Patrimoine sur BFM Business. Retrouvez l'émission du lundi au vendredi et réécoutez la en podcast.
Ce mardi 30 août, Cédric Decoeur a reçu Régis Bégué, directeur de la gestion actions de Lazard Frères Gestion, Christopher Dembik, directeur de la recherche macroéconomique chez Saxo Bank, Romain Daubry, membre de la cellule infos d'Experts chez Bourse Direct, Barbara Thomas-David, notaire à Paris, et Sarah Saldmann, avocate au barreau de Paris, dans l'émission BFM Patrimoine sur BFM Business. Retrouvez l'émission du lundi au vendredi et réécoutez la en podcast.
Ce mardi 30 août, Cédric Decoeur a reçu Éric Lewin, rédacteur en chef des publications Agora, François Cabau, économiste senior chez AXA IM, Thierry Vignal, cofondateur de Masteos, Romain Daubry, membre de la cellule Infos d'Experts chez Bourse Direct, Stéphane Ceaux-Dutheil, reponsable du site technibourse.com, Philippe Crevel, secrétaire général du Cercle de l'Épargne, Laure Varastet, ingénieur patrimonial chez Oddo BHF, Régis Bégué, directeur de la gestion actions de Lazard Frères Gestion, Christopher Dembik, directeur de la recherche macroéconomique chez Saxo Bank, Barbara Thomas-David, notaire à Paris, et Sarah Saldmann, avocate au barreau de Paris, dans l'émission BFM Patrimoine sur BFM Business. Retrouvez l'émission du lundi au vendredi et réécoutez la en podcast.
Ce mardi 5 juillet, Cédric Decoeur a reçu Régis Bégué, directeur de la gestion actions chez Lazard Frères Gestion, Laurent Denize, co-CIO chez Oddo BHF Asset Management, Eric Cosserat, président de Penal AM, et Sarah Saldmann, avocate au barreau de Paris, dans l'émission BFM Patrimoine sur BFM Business. Retrouvez l'émission du lundi au vendredi et réécoutez la en podcast.
Ce mardi 5 juillet, Cédric Decoeur a reçu Irina Topa-Serry, économiste senior Axa AM, Jean-Louis Cussac, trader pour compte propre chez Perceval Finance Conseil, Benoît Lombard, président du groupe Laplace, Barbara Thomas-David, notaire à Paris, Régis Bégué, directeur de la gestion actions chez Lazard Frères Gestion, Laurent Denize, co-CIO chez Oddo BHF Asset Management, Eric Cosserat, président de Penal AM, et Sarah Saldmann, avocate au barreau de Paris, dans l'émission BFM Patrimoine sur BFM Business. Retrouvez l'émission du lundi au vendredi et réécoutez la en podcast.
Ce mardi 24 mai, Cédric Decoeur a reçu Sarah Thirion, stratégiste actions chez TP ICAP Europe, Régis Bégué, directeur de la gestion actions chez Lazard Frères Gestion, Romain Daubry, membre de la cellule Infos d'Experts chez Bourse Direct, Franck Inghels, directeur de la distribution d'Inter Gestion REIM, et Aurélie Blondel, responsable adjointe du Monde-Argent, dans l'émission BFM Patrimoine sur BFM Business. Retrouvez l'émission du lundi au vendredi et réécoutez la en podcast.
Ce mardi 24 mai, Cédric Decoeur a reçu Henry Buzy-Cazaux, président de l'IMSI, Éric Doutrebente, président du Comité de surveillance chez Tiepolo, Irina Topa-Serry, économiste senior chez Axa IM, Romain Daubry, membre de la cellule Infos d'Experts chez Bourse Direct, Jean-Louis Cussac, trader pour compte propre chez Perceval Finance Conseil, Marie-Christine Sonkin, rédactrice en chef au Patrimoine des Echos, Philippe Crevel, SG du Cercle de l'Epargne, Jean-Philippe Dubosc, rédacteur en chef toutsurmesfinances.com, Sarah Thirion, stratégiste actions chez TP ICAP Europe, Régis Bégué, directeur de la gestion actions chez Lazard Frères Gestion, Franck Inghels, directeur de la distribution d'Inter Gestion REIM, et Aurélie Blondel, responsable adjointe du Monde-Argent, dans l'émission BFM Patrimoine sur BFM Business. Retrouvez l'émission du lundi au vendredi et réécoutez la en podcast.
William D. Cohan, a former senior Wall Street M&A investment banker for 17 years at Lazard Frères & Co., Merrill Lynch and JPMorganChase, is the "New York Times" bestselling author of three non-fiction narratives about Wall Street: "Money and Power: How Goldman Sachs Came to Rule the World," "House of Cards: A Tale of Hubris and Wretched Excess on Wall Street" and "The Last Tycoons: The Secret History of Lazard Frères & Co.," the winner of the 2007 FT/Goldman Sachs Business Book of the Year Award. His book, "The Price of Silence," about the Duke lacrosse scandal was published in April 2014 and was also a "New York Times" bestseller. His book, "Why Wall Street Matters," was published by Random House in February 2017. His most recent book, "Four Friends," about four of his friends from high school and what happened to them in their lives, was published in July 2019 by Flatiron Press. His new book, to be published in November 2022, is titled "Power Failure: The Rise and Fall of an American Icon." It is about the astounding rise and precipitous fall of the General Electric Company, once the world's most valuable and respected company.A former longtime special correspondent at “Vanity Fair,” he is a founding partner of “Puck,” a daily digital news and opinion publication. His focus at “Puck” is on Wall Street and the business world, writ large. He is a former columnist for the DealBook section of the “The New York Times.” He also writes for “The Financial Times,” “The New York Times,” “Air Mail,” “Barron's,” “Bloomberg BusinessWeek,” “The Atlantic,” “Town & Country,” “The Nation,” “Fortune,” “The Hollywood Reporter,” and “Politico,”among other publications. He previously wrote a bi-weekly opinion column for “The New York Times” and an opinion column for “BloombergView.” He also appears regularly on CNN, on CNBC, where is a contributor, on MSNBC and the BBC-TV. He has also appeared three times as a guest on the Daily Show, with Jon Stewart, The NewsHour, The Charlie Rose Show, The Tavis Smiley Show, and CBS This Morning as well as on numerous NPR, BBC and Bloomberg radio programs. He was formerly a contributing editor on Bloomberg TV.He is a graduate of Phillips Academy, Duke University, Columbia University School of Journalism and the Columbia University Graduate School of Business. He grew up in Worcester, Massachusetts and now lives in New York City and upstate New York with his wife and, on occasion these days, their two sons.
Jeudi 5 mai, Guillaume Sommerer a reçu Hervé Goulletquer, senior Economic Advisor chez Accuracy, Sabrina Quagliozzi, correspondante BFM Business à New York, Régis Bégué, directeur de la gestion actions à Lazard Frères Gestion, Edwin Faure, directeur de la gestion de Philippe Hottinguer & Cie Gestion, dans l'émission BFM Bourse sur BFM Business. Retrouvez l'émission du lundi au vendredi et réécoutez la en podcast.
Jeudi 5 mai, Guillaume Sommerer a reçu Aurélien Hotton, gérant senior chez Swiss Life Banque Privée, Gilles Moëc, chef économiste du Groupe AXA, Sylvain Lévy-Valensi, directeur associé de Radio Immo, Frédéric Rozier, gérant pour Mirabaud France, Yannick Lopez, directeur de la gestion taux chez OFI AM, Jean-Louis Dell'Oro, journaliste de BFM Business, Jean-Louis Cussac, trader pour compte propre chez Perceval Finance Conseil, Gregori Volokhine, président de Meeschaert Financial Services, Jocelyn Jovène, analyste financier chez Morningstar, Rodolphe Steffan, trader et associé chez Interactive Trading, Raphaël Bloch, co-fondateur et rédacteur en chef de The Big Whale, Rémi Bourgeot, économiste et chercheur associé à l'IRIS, Hervé Goulletquer, senior Economic Advisor chez Accuracy, Sabrina Quagliozzi, correspondante BFM Business à New York, Régis Bégué, directeur de la gestion actions à Lazard Frères Gestion, ainsi qu'Edwin Faure, directeur de la gestion de Philippe Hottinguer & Cie Gestion, dans l'émission BFM Bourse sur BFM Business. Retrouvez l'émission du lundi au vendredi et réécoutez la en podcast.
Bill Cohan is the New York Times bestselling author of three non-fiction books about Wall Street money and power, How Goldman Sachs Came to Rule the World, House of Cards: A Tale of Hubris and Wretched Excess on Wall Street and The Last Tycoons: The Secret History of Lazard Frères & Co., which also won the financial times Goldman Sachs business book of the year.His book, The Price of Silence, about the Duke lacrosse scandal was yet another New York Times bestseller. And he's also the author of the books Why Wall Street Matters and Four Friends' Promising Lives Cut Short. One of America's most respected financial journalists, Bill is a special correspondent at and a founding partner of Puck, a new digital publication owned and operated by journalists.More on Bill at https://williamcohan.com/
¿Se encuentra Europa ante una crisis energética sin precedentes? Régis Bégué, analista y gestor de renta variable europea en Lazard Frères Gestion analiza la situación
Social capital and internship experiences are crucial to finding opportunities in the labor market and building a successful career. However, many students from disadvantaged backgrounds often lack the networks that can help them find and successfully navigate early work experiences. First Workings is a non-profit organization that seeks to create access and support by connecting youth from disadvantaged New York City communities to paid internships, training, and mentors at firms looking for young, talented, diverse workers. In this episode, Kevin Davis, Founder and Chairman of First Workings, describes his career in finance and his vision for helping young people find the first rung of career ladders. Together, we discuss the inequalities in opportunity for the young people he serves, and the importance of social capital, relationships at work, diversity in the workplace, and vocation. Mentioned in the Episode https://firstworkings.org/ (First Workings) https://firstworkings.org/internship-partners/ (First Workings partners) https://firstworkings.org/impact/alumni-stories/ (First Workings alumni network) https://as.nyu.edu/faculty/kevin-davis.html (Kevin Davis Biography) https://www.cmegroup.com/ (Chicago Board of Trade) (merged with the Chicago Mercantile Exchange in 2007) https://corporatefinanceinstitute.com/resources/knowledge/finance/futures-contract/ (Financial Futures) https://edfman.com/ (ED&F Man) (Commodities division) https://www.man.com/ (Man Group) https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MF_Global (Man Financial) (Man Group brokerage division which was separated from Man Group in 2007) https://www.londonstockexchange.com/ (London Exchange) https://thehedgefundjournal.com/the-last-days-of-refco/ (Refco's bankruptcy) https://www.nyse.com/index (NY Stock Exchange) http://large.stanford.edu/courses/2018/ph240/smith1/ (Enron Corporation) https://www.nyu.edu/ (New York University (NYU)) https://www.bls.gov/cps/demographics.htm (U.S. Workforce Demographics) https://www.lazard.com/ (Lazard Frères & Co.) https://www.morganstanley.com/ (Morgan Stanley) https://www.mountsinai.org/ (Mount Sinai) https://lenoxhill.northwell.edu/ (Lenox Hill Hospital) https://educationdata.org/number-of-college-graduates (U.S. College graduation rates) and https://educationdata.org/college-dropout-rates (Drop-Out rates)
Mercredi 30 mars, Stéphane Pedrazzi a reçu Régis Bégué, directeur de la gestion actions chez Lazard Frères Gestion, Rachid Medjaoui, directeur adjoint de la gestion privée de BPE, Étienne Bracq, journaliste de BFM Business, Franck Morel, président de ZoneBourse, et Éric Lewin, rédacteur en chef des Publications Agora, dans l'émission BFM Bourse sur BFM Business. Retrouvez l'émission du lundi au vendredi et réécoutez la en podcast.
Mercredi 30 mars, Stéphane Pedrazzi a reçu Sabrina Quagliozzi, correspondante de BFM Business à New York, Étienne Bracq, journaliste de BFM Business, Julien Quistrebert, directeur des investissement chez Montségur Finance, Patrice Gautry, chef économiste de l'Union Bancaire Privée, Marc Sartori, fondateur de Deeptinvest, John Plassard, spécialiste en investissement de Mirabaud, Renaud Ramette, gérant chez Promepar AM, Olivier Rozenfeld, président de Fidroit, Gregori Volokhine, président de Meeschaert Financial Services, Inès Segueni, analyste Gérante chez La Financière Responsable, Romain Daubry, membre de la cellule Infos d'Experts chez Bourse Direct, Emmanuel Grimaud, président de Maximis Retraite, Régis Bégué, directeur de la gestion actions chez Lazard Frères Gestion, Rachid Medjaoui, directeur adjoint de la gestion privée de BPE, Étienne Bracq, journaliste de BFM Business, Franck Morel, président de ZoneBourse, et Éric Lewin, rédacteur en chef des Publications Agora, dans l'émission BFM Bourse sur BFM Business. Retrouvez l'émission du lundi au vendredi et réécoutez la en podcast.
Vendredi 25 février, Vincent Touraine a reçu Aude Kersulec, journaliste BFM Business, Alain Pitous, Senior Advisor ESG, Régis Bégué, directeur de la gestion actions chez Lazard Frères Gestion, Guillaume Bayre, journaliste BFM Business, et Arnaud Girod, co-responsable de la recherche institutionnelle de Kepler Cheuvreux, dans l'émission BFM Bourse sur BFM Business. Retrouvez l'émission du lundi au vendredi et réécoutez la en podcast.
Vendredi 25 février, Vincent Touraine a reçu Aude Kersulec, journaliste BFM Business, Bertrand Lamielle, directeur général de Portzamparc Gestion, Nadia Gharbi, économiste Senior chez Pictet Wealth Management, Sonia Fasolo, Portfolio Manager Impact & ESG chez Eleva Capital, Sandrine Colas-Jacomme, directrice Gestion de Fortune chez Balthazar Gestion Privée, John Plassard, spécialiste en investissement de Mirabaud, Jean-Jacques Ohana, consultant indépendant et membre du Board de Ai For Alpha, Vincent Ganne, analyste technique des marchés financiers, cofondatrice de Blockchain Partner et directrice Blockchain & Cryptos chez KPMG France, Owen Simonin, CEO de Just Mining et fondateur de la chaîne YouTube Hasheur, Alain Pitous, Senior Advisor ESG, Régis Bégué, directeur de la gestion actions chez Lazard Frères Gestion, Guillaume Bayre, journaliste BFM Business, et Arnaud Girod, co-responsable de la recherche institutionnelle de Kepler Cheuvreux, dans l'émission BFM Bourse sur BFM Business. Retrouvez l'émission du lundi au vendredi et réécoutez la en podcast.
Face à la flambée des prix de l'électricité en Europe, certains plaident pour une refonte du système européen d'électricité. Pour « La Story », le podcast d'actualité des « Echos », Pierrick Fay et ses invités reviennent sur ce système qui a permis de maintenir des prix bas et d'éviter les black-out. Un système qui trouve ses limites face à la menace du changement climatique. La Story est un podcast des « Echos » présenté par Pierrick Fay. Cet épisode a été enregistré en février 2022. Rédaction en chef : Clémence Lemaistre. Invités : Enrique Moreira (journaliste au service entreprise des Echos) et Régis Bégué (directeur de la gestion actions chez Lazard Frères gestion). Réalisation : Willy Ganne. Musique : Théo Boulenger. Identité graphique : Upian. Photo : Shutterstock. Sons : Europe 1, Dr Who (Thème musical), INA, BFM.TV. Voir Acast.com/privacy pour les informations sur la vie privée et l'opt-out.
Ce mardi 7 décembre, Cédric Decoeur a reçu Harry Wolhandler, directeur de la Gestion Actions chez Meeschaert Amilton AM, Irina Topa-Serry, économiste senior chez AXA IM, Séverine Amate, directrice des relations médias et publiques du Groupe SeLoger, Romain Daubry, membre de la cellule Infos d'Experts chez Bourse Direct, Jean-Louis Cussac, trader pour compte propre chez Perceval Finance Conseil, Philippe Crevel, secrétaire général du Cercle de l'Epargne, et Jean-Philippe Dubosc, rédacteur en chef de ToutSurMesFinances.com, Sarah Thirion, stratégiste actions chez TP ICAP Europe, Régis Bégué, directeur de la gestion actions chez Lazard Frères Gestion, Vincent Juvyns, global market strategist chez JP Morgan Asset Management, Valérie Montel, responsable de l'ingénierie patrimoniale chez Lombard Odier, dans l'émission BFM Patrimoine sur BFM Business. Retrouvez l'émission du lundi au vendredi et réécoutez la en podcast.
Ce mardi 7 décembre, Cédric Decoeur a reçu Sarah Thirion, stratégiste actions chez TP ICAP Europe, Régis Bégué, directeur de la gestion actions chez Lazard Frères Gestion, Vincent Juvyns, global market strategist chez JP Morgan Asset Management, Romain Daubry, membre de la cellule Infos d'Experts chez Bourse Direct, Valérie Montel, responsable de l'ingénierie patrimoniale chez Lombard Odier, Jean-Philippe Dubosc, rédacteur en chef de ToutSurMesFinances.com, dans l'émission BFM Patrimoine sur BFM Business. Retrouvez l'émission du lundi au vendredi et réécoutez la en podcast.
Mercredi 1er décembre, Vincent Touraine a reçu Etienne Bracq, journaliste BFM Business, Sabrina Quagliozzi, correspondante BFM Business à New York, Marc Touati, économiste et président du cabinet ACDEFI, Régis Bégué, directeur de la gestion actions de Lazard Frères Gestion, Julien Quistrebert, directeur des investissements chez Montségur Finance, et Franck Morel, président de ZoneBourse, dans l'émission BFM Bourse sur BFM Business. Retrouvez l'émission du lundi au vendredi et réécoutez la en podcast.
Mercredi 1er décembre, Vincent Touraine a reçu Etienne Bracq, journaliste BFM Business, Julien Quistrebert, directeur des investissements chez Montségur Finance, Philippe Gudin, senior economiste chez Barclays, Marie Coeurderoy, journaliste IMMO BFM Business, Sabrina Quagliozzi, correspondante BFM Business à New York, Philippe Brossard, directeur recherche, ISR et développement cgez Ag2R La Mondiale, Bastien Jallet, gérant chez Eiffel Investment Group, et Saïd Belbachir, responsable développement réseaux et CGPI chez Aviva Investors, Gregori Volokhine, président de Meeschaert Financial Services à New York, Alain Pitous, Senior Advisor ESG, Romain Daubry, membre de la cellule Infos d'Experts de Bourse Direct, Benoît Berchebru, directeur de l'ingénierie patrimoniale chez Nortia, Marc Touati, économiste et président du cabinet ACDEFI, Régis Bégué, directeur de la gestion actions de Lazard Frères Gestion et Franck Morel, président de ZoneBourse, dans l'émission BFM Bourse sur BFM Business. Retrouvez l'émission du lundi au vendredi et réécoutez la en podcast.
Mercredi 1er décembre, Vincent Touraine a reçu Etienne Bracq, journaliste BFM Business, Julien Quistrebert, directeur des investissements chez Montségur Finance, Philippe Gudin, senior economiste chez Barclays, Marie Coeurderoy, journaliste IMMO BFM Business, Sabrina Quagliozzi, correspondante BFM Business à New York, Philippe Brossard, directeur recherche, ISR et développement cgez Ag2R La Mondiale, Bastien Jallet, gérant chez Eiffel Investment Group, et Saïd Belbachir, responsable développement réseaux et CGPI chez Aviva Investors, Gregori Volokhine, président de Meeschaert Financial Services à New York, Alain Pitous, Senior Advisor ESG, Romain Daubry, membre de la cellule Infos d'Experts de Bourse Direct, Benoît Berchebru, directeur de l'ingénierie patrimoniale chez Nortia, Marc Touati, économiste et président du cabinet ACDEFI, Régis Bégué, directeur de la gestion actions de Lazard Frères Gestion et Franck Morel, président de ZoneBourse, dans l'émission BFM Bourse sur BFM Business. Retrouvez l'émission du lundi au vendredi et réécoutez la en podcast.
Ce mardi 19 octobre, Cédric Decoeur a reçu Sarah Thirion, stratégiste actions chez TP ICAP Europe, Régis Bégué, directeur de la gestion actions chez Lazard Frères Gestion, Vincent Juvyns, Global Market Strategist chez JP Morgan Asset Management, Romain Daubry, membre de la cellule Infos d'Experts chez Bourse Direct, David Liebmann, directeur du marché français chez Lombard International Assurance, Mathieu Duballet, président de LIA Patrimoine, et Marie-Christine Sonkin, rédacteur en chef Patrimoine chez Les Echos, dans l'émission BFM Patrimoine sur BFM Business. Retrouvez l'émission du lundi au vendredi et réécoutez la en podcast.
Ce mardi 19 octobre, Cédric Decoeur a reçu Antoine Larigaudrie, journaliste de BFM Business, Charles François, gérant de portefeuilles chez Flornoy, Irina Topa-Serry, économiste senior chez AXA IM, Marie Coeurderoy, chroniqueuse de BFM Business, Stéphane Desquartiers, PDG de Lamaisondelinvestisseur.com, Jean-Louis Cussac, trader pour compte propre chez Perceval Finance Conseil, Romain Daubry, membre de la cellule Infos d'Experts chez Bourse Direct, Nicolas Doze, éditorialiste éco de BFM Business, Laurent Benoudiz, associé chez Bewiz, Sarah Thirion, stratégiste actions chez TP ICAP Europe, Régis Bégué, directeur de la gestion actions chez Lazard Frères Gestion, Vincent Juvyns, Global Market Strategist chez JP Morgan Asset Management, David Liebmann, directeur du marché français chez Lombard International Assurance, Mathieu Duballet, président de LIA Patrimoine, et Marie-Christine Sonkin, rédacteur en chef Patrimoine chez Les Echos, dans l'émission BFM Patrimoine sur BFM Business. Retrouvez l'émission du lundi au vendredi et réécoutez la en podcast.
Mercredi 29 septembre, Guillaume Sommerer a reçu Étienne Bracq, journaliste de BFM Business, Sabrina Quagliozzi, correspondante de BFM Business à New York, Julien Quistrebert, directeur des investissements chez Montségur Finance, Patrice Gautry, chef économiste chez Union Bancaire Privée, Marie Coeurderoy, journaliste de BFM Business, Matthieu Charpentier, fondateur et président du groupe Coysevox, Arnaud Faller, directeur général délégué en charge des investissements de CPR AM, Aymeric Lang, gérant chez Erasmus Gestion, Frédéric Durand-Bazin, directeur adjoint de la rédaction du magazine Le Particulier, Léa Dunand-Chatellet, responsable de l'investissement responsable chez DNCA Finance, Romain Daubry, membre de la cellule Infos d'Experts de Bourse Direct, François-Xavier Chauchat, économiste et membre du comité d'investissement de Dorval AM, Gregori Volokhine, président de Meeschaert Financial Services à New York, Régis Bégué, directeur de la gestion actions chez Lazard Frères Gestion, Frédéric Plisson, gérant sous mandat chez Kiplink Finance, et Franck Morel, président de ZoneBourse, dans l'émission BFM Bourse sur BFM Business. Retrouvez l'émission du lundi au vendredi et réécoutez la en podcast.
Mercredi 29 septembre, Guillaume Sommerer a reçu Régis Bégué, directeur de la gestion actions chez Lazard Frères Gestion, Gregori Volokhine, président de Meeschaert Financial Services à New York, Étienne Bracq, journaliste de BFM Business, Franck Morel, président de ZoneBourse, et Frédéric Plisson, gérant sous mandat chez Kiplink Finance, dans l'émission BFM Bourse sur BFM Business. Retrouvez l'émission du lundi au vendredi et réécoutez la en podcast.
Bill and I discuss his latest article on Cathie Wood, the Fed's excess, the future of monetary policy and faults in the world of financial journalism. William D. Cohan, a former senior Wall Street M&A investment banker for 17 years at Lazard Frères & Co., Merrill Lynch and JPMorganChase, is the New York Times bestselling author of three non-fiction narratives about Wall Street: Money and Power: How Goldman Sachs Came to Rule the World; House of Cards: A Tale of Hubris and Wretched Excess on Wall Street; and, The Last Tycoons: The Secret History of Lazard Frères & Co., the winner of the 2007 FT/Goldman Sachs Business Book of the Year Award. He is a special correspondent at Vanity Fair and a columnist for the DealBook section of the New York Times. He also writes for The Financial Times, The New York Times, Bloomberg BusinessWeek, The Atlantic, The Nation, Fortune, and Politico. YouTube does not let me monetize my videos on the site and the podcast is full time work which will never have ads in the middle of it. If you enjoy the content, please support the QTR Podcast in any or all of the following ways: A small recurring donation via: Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/QTRResearch One time donations can also be sent via: Paypal: https://www.paypal.me/qtrresearch QTR MERCH is available here. You can also follow me on YouTube, and Twitter. And check out my new column, FRINGE FINANCE, at Substack. THANK YOU TO ALL OF MY KIND PATRONS. Please show love to those who support the QTR Podcast: JM Bullion - where QTR buys gold & silver - Twitter: @JMBullion The Doomberg Terminal - Subscribe 100% free - Twitter: @DoomburgT George Gammon - Rebel Capitalist Pro - Twitter: @GeorgeGammon Sang Lucci & Wall St. Jesus — The Steamroom — Twitter: @wallstjesus and @sanglucci Corvus Gold - http://www.corvusgold.com Investors Underground - day trading community - Twitter: @investorslive Ken R Chris Bede - Twitter: @cbede Nicholas Parks Matthew Zimmer J Mintzmyer - Twitter: @mintzmyer Russ Valenti - Twitter: @russellvalenti Creighton Titus Camila Sol Longest Running Supporters Max Mulvihill - Since 2/2018 Mark Heywood - Since 3/2018 Kyle Thomas - Since 4/2018 Chris Bede - Since 5/2018 Dariusz Kordonski - Since 5/2018 Chris Gerrard - Since 5/2018 Shear Luck - Since 5/2018 Founding Members Of My "FRINGE FINANCE" Column Kashumba - Since 8/2021 Randy Carder - Since 8/2021 T Gaggiotti - Since 8/2021 All podcast content is subject to this disclaimer. Chris is not an investment adviser. QTR is long gold and silver. Listeners should always speak to their personal financial advisers. Please leave me alone.
Vendredi 23 juillet, Guillaume Sommerer a reçu Thomas Costerg, économiste senior US chez Pictet Wealth Management; Florian Roger, responsable de la recherche d'Exane Solutions; Maxime Camus, directeur général de Grisbee; Etienne Bracq, journaliste BFM Business; Pierre-David Quenu, gérant de portefeuille chez GSD Gestion; Paul Bourdois, cofondateur de France SCPI; Alexandre Baradez, chef analyste IG; Tommy Douziech, analyste chez Zone Bourse; Gregori Volokhine, président de Meeschaert Financial Services; Vincent Ganne, analyste senior chez TradingView France; Owen Simonin, créateur de la chaîne YouTube "Hasheur"; Claire Balva, cofondatrice Blockchain Partner, directrice blockchain chez KPMG France; Julien-Pierre Nouen, directeur des études économiques de Lazard Frères Gestion; Rachid Medjaoui, directeur adjoint de la gestion de la Banque Postale AM; Bruno Kus, rédacteur en chez de "Mieux Vivre Votre Argent", dans l'émission BFM Bourse sur BFM Business. Retrouvez l'émission du lundi au vendredi et réécoutez la en podcast.
Vendredi 23 juillet, Guillaume Sommerer a reçu Thomas Costerg, économiste senior US chez Pictet Wealth Management; Florian Roger, responsable de la recherche d'Exane Solutions; Maxime Camus, directeur général de Grisbee; Etienne Bracq, journaliste BFM Business; Pierre-David Quenu, gérant de portefeuille chez GSD Gestion; Paul Bourdois, cofondateur de France SCPI; Alexandre Baradez, chef analyste IG; Tommy Douziech, analyste chez Zone Bourse; Gregori Volokhine, président de Meeschaert Financial Services; Vincent Ganne, analyste senior chez TradingView France; Owen Simonin, créateur de la chaîne YouTube "Hasheur"; Claire Balva, cofondatrice Blockchain Partner, directrice blockchain chez KPMG France; Julien-Pierre Nouen, directeur des études économiques de Lazard Frères Gestion; Rachid Medjaoui, directeur adjoint de la gestion de la Banque Postale AM; Bruno Kus, rédacteur en chez de "Mieux Vivre Votre Argent", dans l'émission BFM Bourse sur BFM Business. Retrouvez l'émission du lundi au vendredi et réécoutez la en podcast.
Vendredi 23 juillet, Guillaume Sommerer a reçu Thomas Costerg, économiste senior US chez Pictet Wealth Management; Florian Roger, responsable de la recherche d'Exane Solutions; Maxime Camus, directeur général de Grisbee; Etienne Bracq, journaliste BFM Business; Pierre-David Quenu, gérant de portefeuille chez GSD Gestion; Paul Bourdois, cofondateur de France SCPI; Alexandre Baradez, chef analyste IG; Tommy Douziech, analyste chez Zone Bourse; Gregori Volokhine, président de Meeschaert Financial Services; Vincent Ganne, analyste senior chez TradingView France; Owen Simonin, créateur de la chaîne YouTube "Hasheur"; Claire Balva, cofondatrice Blockchain Partner, directrice blockchain chez KPMG France; Julien-Pierre Nouen, directeur des études économiques de Lazard Frères Gestion; Rachid Medjaoui, directeur adjoint de la gestion de la Banque Postale AM; Bruno Kus, rédacteur en chez de "Mieux Vivre Votre Argent", dans l'émission BFM Bourse sur BFM Business. Retrouvez l'émission du lundi au vendredi et réécoutez la en podcast.
Jeudi 22 juillet, Guillaume Sommerer a reçu Wilfrid Galand, directeur stratégiste chez Montpensier Finance, Régis Begue, directeur de la gestion actions de Lazard Frères Gestion, Étienne Bracq, journaliste de BFM Business, Renaud Ramette, gérant chez Promepar AM, et Gwenaël Lessard, gérant senior chez Swiss Life Gestion Privée, dans l'émission BFM Bourse sur BFM Business. Retrouvez l'émission du lundi au vendredi et réécoutez la en podcast.
Jeudi 22 juillet, Guillaume Sommerer a reçu Étienne Bracq, journaliste de BFM Business, Mary-Sol Michel, directrice de la gestion sous mandat chez Swiss Life Gestion Privée, Gilles Moëc, chef économiste du Groupe AXA, Philippe Taboret, directeur général délégué de Cafpi, Jean-Louis Cussac, trader pour compte propre chez Perceval Finance Conseil, Benjamin Thomas, directeur des investissements chez Lynceus Partners, Sébastien Barthélémi, directeur de la recherche crédit chez Kepler Cheuvreux, Mathieu Berthaud, directeur général de MonPartenairePatrimoine.com, Gregori Volokhine, président de Meeschaert Financial Services à New York, Vincent Auriac, président d'Axylia, Wilfrid Galand, directeur stratégiste chez Montpensier Finance, Régis Begue, directeur de la gestion actions de Lazard Frères Gestion, Étienne Bracq, journaliste de BFM Business, Renaud Ramette, gérant chez Promepar AM, et Gwenaël Lessard, gérant senior chez Swiss Life Gestion Privée, dans l'émission BFM Bourse sur BFM Business. Retrouvez l'émission du lundi au vendredi et réécoutez la en podcast.
Ce jeudi 1er juillet, Stéphane Pedrazzi a reçu Sébastien Faijean, directeur associé chez iDMidCaps, Christopher Dembik, directeur de la recherche et de la stratégie chez Saxo Bank, Jean-Marc Torrollion, président de la FNAIM, Marie Coeurderoy, chroniqueuse BFM Business, Alexandre Baradez, chef analyste chez IG, Jean-Louis Cussac, trader et formateur de Perceval Finance Conseil, Angélique de Lencquesaing, directrice générale déléguée d'iDealwine, Alexandre Hezez, directeur de la gestion financière de Richelieu, Régis Bégué, directeur de la gestion actions de Lazard Frères Gestion, Yvan Vaillant, directeur de l'Ingénierie patrimoniale d'Edmond de Rothschild, et Jean-François Filliatre, directeur de Marchesgagnants.com, dans l'émission BFM Patrimoine sur BFM Business. Retrouvez l'émission du lundi au vendredi et réécoutez la en podcast.
Ce jeudi 1er juillet, Stéphane Pedrazzi a reçu Alexandre Hezez, directeur de la gestion financière de Richelieu, Régis Bégué, directeur de la gestion actions de Lazard Frères Gestion, Jean-Louis Cussac, trader pour compte propre chez Perceval Finance Conseil, Yvan Vaillant, directeur de l'Ingénierie patrimoniale d'Edmond de Rothschild, et Jean-François Filliatre, directeur de Marchesgagnants.com, dans l'émission BFM Patrimoine sur BFM Business. Retrouvez l'émission du lundi au vendredi et réécoutez la en podcast.
Ce mardi 25 mai, Cédric Decoeur a reçu Sarah Thirion, stratégiste actions chez TP ICAP Europe, Vincent Juvyns, stratégiste macro global chez JP Morgan AM, Régis Bégué, directeur de la gestion actions chez Lazard Frères Gestion, Benoît Berchebru, directeur Ingénierie Patrimoniale, et Séverine Amate, directrice des relations médias et publiques du Groupe SeLoger, dans l'émission BFM Patrimoine sur BFM Business. Retrouvez l'émission du lundi au vendredi et réécoutez la en podcast.
Ce mardi 25 mai, Cédric Decoeur a reçu Harry Wolhandler, DGD et Directeur de la Gestion Actions d'Amilton AM, Christopher Dembik, économiste, Romain Daubry, membre de la cellule Infos d'Experts chez Bourse Direct, Jean-Louis Cussac, trader pour compte propre chez Perceval Finance Conseil, Philippe Crevel, secrétaire général du Cercle de l'Epargne, Jean-Philippe Dubosc, rédacteur en chef de toutsurmesfinances.com, Sarah Thirion, stratégiste actions chez TP ICAP Europe, Vincent Juvyns, stratégiste macro global chez JP Morgan AM, Régis Bégué, directeur de la gestion actions chez Lazard Frères Gestion, Benoît Berchebru, directeur Ingénierie Patrimoniale, et Séverine Amate, directrice des relations médias et publiques du Groupe SeLoger, dans l'émission BFM Patrimoine sur BFM Business. Retrouvez l'émission du lundi au vendredi et réécoutez la en podcast.
Mercredi 5 mai, Guillaume Sommerer a reçu Régis Bégué, directeur de la gestion actions chez Lazard Frères Gestion, Emmanuel Sales, président de La Financière de la Cité, Aude Kersulec, journaliste de BFM Business, Franck Morel, président de Zone Bourse, et Frédéric Plisson, gérant chez Kiplink Finance, dans l'émission BFM Bourse sur BFM Business. Retrouvez l'émission du lundi au vendredi et réécoutez la en podcast
Mercredi 5 mai, Guillaume Sommerer a reçu Sabrina Quagliozzi, correspondante de BFM Business à New York, Aude Kersulec, journaliste de BFM Business, Julien Quistrebert, directeur des investissements chez Montségur Finance, François Cabau, chef économiste France chez Barclays, Olivier Marin, rédacteur en chef de Propriétés Le Figaro, Alexandre Baradez, chef analyste chez IG, Frédéric Durand-Bazin, rédacteur en chef du magazine Le Particulier, Gregori Volokhine, président de Meeschaert Financial Services, Axel Pierron, associate director chez Sustainalytics, Romain Daubry, membre de la cellule Infos d'Experts de Bourse Direct, Benoît Huguet, cofondateur du Journal du Coin, Régis Bégué, directeur de la gestion actions chez Lazard Frères Gestion, Emmanuel Sales, président de la Financière de la Cité, et Frédéric Plisson, gérant chez Kiplink Finance, dans l'émission BFM Bourse sur BFM Business. Retrouvez l'émission du lundi au vendredi et réécoutez la en podcast.
William Cohan is a former senior Wall Street M&A investment banker at Lazard Frères & Co., Merrill Lynch and JPMorganChase, is the New York Times bestselling author of three non-fiction narratives about Wall Street. He is a special correspondent at Vanity Fair and is hard at work on his new book about the rise and fall of GE. Bill led an unforgettable interview at SALT Las Vegas with Magic Johnson in 2014. “People love to bask Wall Street,” frequently without fully recognizing what it is Wall Street does and how it keeps the economy going as we know it. Without Wall Street providing capital to businesses around the world, opportunities to create new companies and industries wouldn't be possible. On the flip side, more needs to be done to support companies like mom-and-pop shops that cannot gain access to this capital, especially during economically distressing times. ————————————————————————— To learn more about this episode, including podcast transcripts and show notes, visit *salt.org/talks* ( http://salt.org/talks ) Moderated by Anthony Scaramucci.
Ce mardi 9 mars, Cédric Decoeur a reçu Charles François, gérant de portefeuilles chez Flornoy, Hervé Goulletquer, senior economic advisor chez Accuracy, Stéphane Desquartiers, PDG de La Maison de l'Investisseur, Giovanni Filippo, membre de la cellule Infos d'experts chez Bourse Direct, Jean-Louis Cussac, trader pour compte propre chez Perceval Finance Conseil, Valérie Bentz, responsable des études patrimoniales de l'UFF, Gilles Bösiger, associé chez Stengelin, Sarah Thirion, stratégiste actions chez TP ICAP Europe, Régis Bégué, directeur de la gestion actions à Lazard Frères Gestion, Jacques Sapir, économiste et directeur d'études à EHESS, Giovanni Filippo, membre de la cellule "Infos d'experts" chez Bourse Direct, Thaline Melkonian, responsable de l'ingénierie patrimoniale de Degroof Petercam, et Joël Morio, responsable chez Le Monde Argent, dans l'émission BFM Patrimoine sur BFM Business. Retrouvez l'émission du lundi au vendredi et réécoutez la en podcast.
Ce mardi 9 mars, Cédric Decoeur a reçu Sarah Thirion, stratégiste actions chez TP ICAP Europe, Régis Bégué, directeur de la gestion actions à Lazard Frères Gestion, Jacques Sapir, économiste et directeur d'études à EHESS, Giovanni Filippo, membre de la cellule "Infos d'experts" chez Bourse Direct, Thaline Melkonian, responsable de l'ingénierie patrimoniale de Degroof Petercam, et Joël Morio, responsable chez Le Monde Argent, dans l'émission BFM Patrimoine sur BFM Business. Retrouvez l'émission du lundi au vendredi et réécoutez la en podcast.
Jeudi 4 mars, Guillaume Sommerer a reçu Sabrina Quagliozzi, correspondante BFM Business, Éric Bleines, directeur de la gestion actions chez Swiss Life Banque Privée, Marc Julien, fondateur de Pierre Invest et président d'Agences Réunies, Aymeric Diday, directeur de la gestion de Pergam, Sébastien Barthélémi, responsable de la recherche crédit chez Kepler Cheuvreux, Aurélie Fardeau, journaliste indépendante, experte des questions patrimoniales, Gilles Moëc, chef économiste du Groupe AXA, Étienne Bracq, journaliste de BFM Business, Gregori Volokhine, président de Meeschaert Financial Services, Bruno Demontrond, gérant chez La Financière de la Cité, Vincent Auriac, président d'Axylia, Jean-Louis Cussac, trader pour compte propre chez Perceval Finance Conseil, Nuno Teixeira, directeur gestion "cross asset" de Dynamic Solutions chez Natixis IM, Régis Bégué, directeur de la gestion actions chez Lazard Frères Gestion, Renaud Ramette, gérant chez PromeparAM, et Gwenaël Lessard, gérant senior chez Swiss Life Banque Privée, dans l'émission BFM Bourse sur BFM Business. Retrouvez l'émission du lundi au vendredi et réécoutez la en podcast.
Lundi 1er mars, Guillaume Sommerer a reçu Bertrand Puiffe, gérant de fonds chez Fidelity, Julien-Pierre Nouen, directeur des études économiques de Lazard Frères Gestion, Étienne Bracq, journaliste de BFM Business, Éric Lewin, rédacteur en chef des Publications Agora, et Bertrand Lamielle, directeur général de Portzamparc Gestion, dans l'émission BFM Bourse sur BFM Business. Retrouvez l'émission du lundi au vendredi et réécoutez la en podcast.
Lundi 1er mars, Guillaume Sommerer a reçu Sabrina Quagliozzi, correspondante de BFM Business à New York, Étienne Bracq, journaliste de BFM Business, Bertrand Lamielle, directeur de Portzamparc Gestion, John Plassard, spécialiste en investissement de Mirabaud, Sophie Desmazières, présidente de Bureauxlocaux, Nicolas Goetzmann, responsable de la recherche et de la stratégie macroéconomique chez la Financière de la Cité, William Pichon, responsable du département grands comptes et personnes morales chez Haussmann Patrimoine, Gregori Volokhine, président de Meeschaert Financial Services, Cécile Aboulian, responsable de l'analyse financière chez Euroland, Guillaume Chaloin, responsable des gestions actions chez Meeschaert AM, Mikaël Jacoby, responsable du trading Europe continentale chez Oddo BHF, Christian Fontaine, directeur de la rédaction adjoint du magazine Le Revenu, Bertrand Puiffe, gérant de fonds chez Fidelity, Julien-Pierre Nouen, directeur des études économiques de Lazard Frères Gestion, et Éric Lewin, rédacteur en chef des Publications Agora, dans l'émission BFM Bourse sur BFM Business. Retrouvez l'émission du lundi au vendredi et réécoutez la en podcast.
Mercredi 3 février, Guillaume Sommerer a reçu Jean-Marie Mercadal, directeur général délégué en charge des gestions chez OFI AM, Régis Bégué, directeur de la gestion actions chez Lazard Frères Gestion, Étienne Bracq, journaliste de BFM Business, Julien Quistrebert, directeur des investissements chez Montségur Finance, et Franck Morel, président de Zone Bourse, dans l'émission BFM Bourse sur BFM Business. Retrouvez l'émission du lundi au vendredi et réécoutez la en podcast.
Mercredi 3 février, Guillaume Sommerer a reçu Sabrina Quagliozzi, correspondante de BFM Business à New York, Étienne Bracq, journaliste de BFM Business, Julien Quistrebert, directeur des investissements chez Montségur Finance, Patrice Gautry, chef économiste chez Union Bancaire Privée, Paul Bourdois, co-fondateur de France SCPI, Malik Haddouk, responsable de la gestion diversifiée chez CPR AM, Bertrand Tourmente, fondateur de Althos-invest.com, Gregori Volokhine, président de Meeschaert Financial Services, Émilie Da Silva, gérante chez Eiffel IG, Pierre Miramont, responsable de l'analyse des fonds chez Quantalys, Romain Daubry, membre de la cellule Infos d'experts de Bourse Direct, Régis Bégué, directeur de la gestion actions de Lazard Frères Gestion, Jean-Marie Mercadal, directeur général délégué en charge des Gestions chez OFI AM, et Franck Morel, président de ZoneBourse, dans l'émission BFM Bourse sur BFM Business. Retrouvez l'émission du lundi au vendredi et réécoutez la en podcast.
Ce mardi 19 janvier, Cédric Decoeur a reçu Sarah Thirion, stratégiste actions chez TP ICAP Europe, Jacques Sapir, économiste, directeur à l'EHESS, Régis Bégué, directeur de la gestion actions chez Lazard Frères Gestion, Giovanni Filippo, membre de la cellule "Infos d'experts" de Bourse Direct, Valérie Montel, responsable de l'ingénierie patrimoniale chez Lombard Odier, et Mireille Weinberg, journaliste indépendante, dans l'émission BFM Patrimoine sur BFM Business. Retrouvez l'émission du lundi au vendredi et réécoutez la en podcast.
Ce mardi 19 janvier, Cédric Decoeur a reçu Antoine Larigaudrie, éditorialiste BFM Business, Harry Wolhandler, DGD et directeur de la Gestion Actions d'Amilton AM, Irina Topa-Serry, économiste senior chez AXA AM, Jean-Louis Cussac, trader pour compte propre chez Perceval Finance Conseil, Giovanni Filippo, membre de la cellule "Infos d'experts" de Bourse Direct, Séverine Amate, directrice des relations médias et publiques du Groupe SeLoger, Benoist Lombard, associé-gérant chez Witam MFO, Mireille Weinberg, journaliste indépendante, Sarah Thirion, stratégiste actions chez TP ICAP Europe, Jacques Sapir, économiste, directeur à l'EHESS, Régis Bégué, directeur de la gestion actions chez Lazard Frères Gestion, et Valérie Montel, responsable de l'ingénierie patrimoniale chez Lombard Odier,dans l'émission BFM Patrimoine sur BFM Business. Retrouvez l'émission du lundi au vendredi et réécoutez la en podcast.
William D. Cohan is a special correspondent for Vanity Fair, and through his work there and other writings, Bill has proven himself to be one of the most meticulous and intrepid journalists working today. A former senior Wall Street M&A investment banker for 17 years at Lazard Frères & Co., Merrill Lynch and JPMorganChase, Bill is a New York Times bestselling author covering the important intersection between Wall Street and Washington. Bill is the author of 6 books:The Last Tycoons: The Secret History of Lazard Frères & Co. House of Cards: A Tale of Hubris and Wretched Excess on Wall StreetMoney and Power: How Goldman Sachs Came to Rule the World The Price of Silence: The Duke Lacrosse ScandalWhy Wall Street MattersFour Friends: Promising Lives Cut Short Follow Bill on Twitter: @WilliamCohan See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
En cas de gros coup de froid, RTE s’inquiète d’une demande d’électricité supérieure aux gigawatts disponibles. Pour « La Story », le podcast d’actualité des « Echos » Pierrick Fay et ses invités révèlent la conjonction des raisons qui font peser des risques sur les capacités électriques dans l’Hexagone cet hiver.Spécial La Story : abonnez-vous à -50% et accédez à nos enquêtes, éditos, newsletters en exclusivité et en avant-première. https://abonnement.lesechos.fr/?origin=WO60APROP&utm_source=ancrage&utm_medium=site&utm_campaign=podcastLa Story est un podcast des « Echos » présenté par Pierrick Fay. Cet épisode a été enregistré en décembre 2020. Rédaction en chef : Clémence Lemaistre. Invités : Régis Bégué (directeur de gestion chez Lazard Frères gestion, auteur de « Fatales Négligences », éditions Lucien Souny Plumes noires) et Sharon Wajsbrot (spécialiste de l’énergie aux « Echos »). Réalisation : Willy Ganne. Musique : Théo Boulenger. Identité graphique : Upian. Photo : iStock. Sons : Météo-France, RTL, France 24, Universal-Soundbank, France 2. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Todd Ofenloch is a Managing Director in the Boston office of H.I.G. Capital. Since joining the firm in 2009, he has been responsible for evaluating and executing new investment opportunities, as well as working with certain existing portfolio companies. Todd has over 15 years of experience investing in middle market private equity transactions and has worked on investments in a broad range of industries, including building products, business services, enterprise software, food and consumer products, hospitality and travel services, and media and marketing services. He currently serves on the boards of several H.I.G. portfolio companies. Prior to H.I.G., Todd was an investment professional at Parthenon Capital Partners, GTCR, and The Halifax Group. He began his career as an investment banker at Lazard Frères, specializing in mergers & acquisitions advisory services. Todd graduated with Bronze Tablet honors from the University of Illinois with a B.S. in Accountancy (CPA) and received an M.B.A. with honors from Columbia Business School. 00000377 00000376 0000507E 000051E2 00043FC1 00043FC1 00007EAE 00007F1E 000488EB 000488EB
Francois-Marc Durand, président de Lazard Frères Gestion et créateur de la fondation L’Or du Rhin, qui soutient des artistes en début de carrière
When stocks are soaring and sports bloggers like Dave Portnoy of Barstool Sports and talking about how easy it is to make money in the stock market, it might be time to worry. Dan opens this week's episode by reminding listeners, "this is exactly what it sounds like at the top." Then on this week's interview, Dan welcomes guest William Cohan on to the show. Will started his career as an investigative reporter for the Raleigh Times before eventually setting his sights on Wall Street. He quickly began a successful career as a mergers and acquisitions banker, eventually becoming a managing director at JPMorgan Chase. Will and Dan discuss a wide range of topics including Will's latest book, The Last Tycoons: The Secret History of Lazard Frères & Co. Will says, "That's why I wanted to write this book... to share with people what it was like to work at this firm, which had this soaring reputation and was filled with, as you pointed out directly, Great Men but was utterly dysfunctional, utterly chaotic." Will gives Dan all of the fascinating details about what goes on behind the scenes at some of Wall Street's biggest firms. And finally on the mailbag, one listener asks Dan... if inflation occurs and interest rates rise, could we see a period where real estate prices suffer? And another listener asks some in depth questions about asset swaps at the Fed. Dan gives the listener a long and detailed answer here on this week's episode.
When stocks are soaring and sports bloggers like Dave Portnoy of Barstool Sports and talking about how easy it is to make money in the stock market, it might be time to worry. Dan opens this week's episode by reminding listeners, "this is exactly what it sounds like at the top." Then on this week's interview, Dan welcomes guest William Cohan on to the show. Will started his career as an investigative reporter for the Raleigh Times before eventually setting his sights on Wall Street. He quickly began a successful career as a mergers and acquisitions banker, eventually becoming a managing director at JPMorgan Chase. Will and Dan discuss a wide range of topics including Will's latest book, The Last Tycoons: The Secret History of Lazard Frères & Co. Will says, "That's why I wanted to write this book... to share with people what it was like to work at this firm, which had this soaring reputation and was filled with, as you pointed out directly, Great Men but was utterly dysfunctional, utterly chaotic." Will gives Dan all of the fascinating details about what goes on behind the scenes at some of Wall Street's biggest firms. And finally on the mailbag, one listener asks Dan... if inflation occurs and interest rates rise, could we see a period where real estate prices suffer? And another listener asks some in depth questions about asset swaps at the Fed. Dan gives the listener a long and detailed answer here on this week's episode.
Lars Kroijer is the author of Money Mavericks - Confessions of a Hedge Fund Manager Mr. Kroijer is the founder and managing director of Alliedcrowds.com – the leading directory and aggregator of alternative capital into the world's 132 lower and middle income countries. He is the author of "Money Mavericks - Confessions of a Hedge Fund Manager" and “Investing Demystified – How to Invest without Speculation and Sleepless Nights”. Mr. Kroijer currently serves on the advisory board of alternative investment funds in London, New York, and Hong Kong. He has frequently appeared as a finance expert on a broad range of media, including BBC, CNN, CNBC, FT, Bloomberg, Reuters, NY Times, Forbes, etc. Previously Mr. Kroijer was the CIO of Holte Capital Ltd, a London-based market neutral special situations hedge fund which he founded in 2002 before returning external capital in the spring of 2008. Prior to establishing Holte Capital, Mr. Kroijer served in the London office of HBK Investments focusing on special situations investing. In addition, he previously worked at SC Fundamental, a value-focused hedge fund, and the investment banking division of Lazard Frères, both in New York. While in graduate school Mr. Kroijer held internships with the private equity firm Permira Advisors (then Schroder Ventures) and management consulting firm McKinsey & Co. Mr. Kroijer graduated Magna cum Laude from Harvard University with a degree in economics and received a MBA from Harvard Business School. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/incubatorhedgefund/message
William D. Cohan is the bestselling author of The Last Tycoons, an inside history of Lazard Frères & Co., one of the country's most venerable investment banks. A former longtime Wall Street mergers and acquisitions banker, the topics of his other books range from the financial improprieties of Bear Stearns and Goldman Sachs to the Duke lacrosse scandal. He is a regular contributor to news outlets including the New York Times, the Financial Times, and CNBC. A portrait of four of his fellow Andover boarding school graduates, Cohan's new book is a group portrait of four vastly dissimilar men linked by the poignancy of their untimely demises. Pine Tree Foundation Endowed Lecture (recorded 12/5/2019)
William D. Cohan is a special correspondent for Vanity Fair and is one of the most meticulous and intrepid journalists working today – a truly great reporter covering the intersection between Wall Street and Washington.Bill has also written for The Financial Times, The New York Times, Bloomberg BusinessWeek, The Atlantic, The Nation, Fortune, and Politico.In addition, Bill is the author of: The Last Tycoons: The Secret History of Lazard Frères & Co., House of Cards: A Tale of Hubris and Wretched Excess on Wall Street; about the last days of Bear Stearns, Wall Street Money and Power: How Goldman Sachs Came to Rule the World; The Price of Silence: the Duke Lacrosse Scandal; And Why Wall Street Matters.Bill joins us today to talk his latest book – Four Friends: Promising Lives Cut Short See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
William D. Cohan, a former senior Wall Street M&A investment banker for 17 years at Lazard Frères & Co., Merrill Lynch and JPMorganChase, is the New York Times bestselling author of three non-fiction narratives about Wall Street: Money and Power: How Goldman Sachs Came to Rule the World; House of Cards: A Tale of Hubris and Wretched Excess on Wall Street; and, The Last Tycoons: The Secret History of Lazard Frères & Co., the winner of the 2007 FT/Goldman Sachs Business Book of the Year Award. His book, The Price of Silence, about the Duke lacrosse scandal was published in April 2014 and was also a New York Times bestseller. His new book, Why Wall Street Matters, was published by Random House in February 2017. He is a special correspondent at Vanity Fair and a columnist for the DealBook section of the New York Times. He also writes for The Financial Times, The New York Times, Bloomberg BusinessWeek, The Atlantic, The Nation, Fortune, and Politico. He previously wrote a bi-weekly opinion column for The New York Times and an opinion column for BloombergView. He also appears regularly on CNN, on Bloomberg TV, where he is a contributing editor, on MSNBC and the BBC-TV. He has also appeared three times as a guest on the Daily Show, with Jon Stewart, The NewsHour, The Charlie Rose Show, The Tavis Smiley Show, and CBS This Morning as well as on numerous NPR, BBC and Bloomberg radio programs.http://williamcohan.com
Ce vendredi 2 mars 2018, Alexandre Baradez, chef analyste chez IG, Alain Pitous, président de Talence Gestion, Régis Bégué, stratégiste chez Lazard Frères Gestion, Jérôme Fauvel, responsable Small Caps de La Française AM, et Christopher Dembik, responsable de la recherche économique chez Saxo Banque, étaient les invités de C'est votre argent, sur BFM Business.
(Bloomberg)--A Closer Look With Arthur Levitt. Arthur Levitt, former chairman of the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, interviews Vernon Jordan, senior managing director of Lazard Frères & Co. LLP, on "A Closer Look With Arthur Levitt." To contact the producer and editor: Michael Lysak +1-212-617-5560 or acloserlook@bloomberg.net
William D. Cohan is a columnist for Bloomberg View and Vanity Fair and author of the new book, "The Price of Silence: The Duke Lacrosse Scandal, the Power of the Elite, and the Corruption of Our Great Universities." He previously authored, "The Last Tycoons: The Secret History of Lazard Frères & Co." and "House of Cards: A Tale of Hubris and Wretched Excess on Wall Street." Cohan characterizes the state of the American university system and talks about the elitist bad-boy attitude that plagues many campuses across the nation. So many people who fit the stereotype he describes end up on Wall Street. William D. Cohan is the New York Times bestselling author of three non-fiction narratives about Wall Street: Money and Power: How Goldman Sachs Came to Rule the World; House of Cards: A Tale of Hubris and Wretched Excess on Wall Street; and The Last Tycoons: The Secret History of Lazard Freres & Co., which won the 2007 FT/Goldman Sachs Business Book of the Year Award. He is a contributing editor at Vanity Fair and writes a weekly column for Bloomberg View. Mr. Cohan also writes for the Financial Times, Bloomberg Business Week, The Atlantic, Art News, the Irish Times, the Washington Post and the New York Times Magazine. He appears regularly on MSNBC, Bloomberg TV, CNN, Current TV, and the BBC. He has also been a guest on the Charlie Rose Show and the News Hour. Over the course of 17 years Mr. Cohan was a senior Wall Street Mergers & Acquisitions investment banker at Lazard Freres & Co., Merrill Lynch and JPMorgan Chase. He is a graduate of Duke University, Columbia University School of Journalism, and the Columbia Graduate School of Business. Read William D. Cohan's work on Bloomberg View at www.bloombergview.com. Visit his work on Vanity Fair at www.vanityfair.com.
L'environnement semble toujours favorable aux actifs risqués pour les investisseurs. Revue de détails des actifs, des zones de croissance et des questions qui se posent aujourd'hui sur les marchés actions, et sur les autres classes d'actifs. Avec Julien-Pierre Nouen Economiste - Stratégiste Lazard Frères Gestion.
Jason Hartman interviews author, former Wall Street senior banker, and best-selling investigative journalist, William (Bill) D. Cohan on the events that led up to the current economic crisis. Bill explains the choices that the big firms, such as Goldman Sachs, JP Morgan, etc, made regarding what type of institution they were going to be, the path of these firms that led up to the current crisis, and how they used the bailout money gifted to them. He said it was one big party on Wall Street, during which brokers were to bring in revenue using a lot of whacky products, until everything came crashing down. Huge bonuses were paid out from the revenue collected from unsuspecting clients. For more details, listen at: www.JasonHartman.com. Bill and Jason also discuss the Occupy Wall Street Movement. Bill expressed disappointment in the message of the movement, saying it isn't clear and they need to learn how Wall Street really works so that they can be more effective in bringing about reform. Wall Street has been influencing what goes on in Washington and paying lobbyists and donating to congressional coffers so that they can get the regulations, or lack thereof, that they want, i.e. the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act. Bill talks about how the expansion of Wall Street into Middle Class America was not an accident, using the example of Merrill Lynch being a public company. This ultimately led to broken trust between Wall Street and Main Street, as people have now shied away from risk taking. To solve the problems, Bill suggests changing the incentive system on Wall Street, in that it can no longer be okay to take huge risks with people's money or get paid big bonuses whether they lose money for the firms or not, as well as going back to having to use their partner's capital to operate. William D. Cohan offers audiences a unique, close-up perspective of the greatest financial crisis since the Great Depression. He combines deep knowledge of the investment banking world with the fine storytelling skills of an award-winning investigative journalist. Bill's new book is titled Money and Power: How Goldman Sachs Came To Rule The World, a revelatory history of Goldman Sachs. His previous book, House of Cards: A Tale of Hubris and Wretched Excess on Wall Street, lays out in gory detail how the financial crisis began with the collapses of Bear Stearns and Lehman Brothers. The Last Tycoons: The Secret History of Lazard Frères & Co. won the 2007 Financial Times/Goldman Sachs Business Book of the Year Award for its candid revelations about how Wall Street works. He should know; he spent six years at the firm. Bill Cohan has a long-time insider's in-depth knowledge of investment banking—he was a Wall Street banker for 17 years. In addition to his years as Associate and then Vice President at Lazard Frères, he was a Director in the Mergers & Acquisitions Group at Merrill Lynch and a Managing Director at JPMorgan Chase. He left JPMorgan to write The Last Tycoons, which appeared on the bestseller lists of The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal and USA Today. It edged out Alan Greenspan's Age of Turbulence to win the FT/Goldman Sachs award. Bloomberg.com and The Evening Standard named it Book of the Year. William D. Cohan writes regularly for The New York Times, Vanity Fair, Fortune, The Daily Beast, ArtNews, and The Financial Times. His columns have also appeared in The Washington Post. He is a contributing editor for Bloomberg TV and is a contributor to Bloomberg View. His series of articles on the controversy of the ‘recently discovered' Degas plaster casts in ARTNews won the Silurians 2011 Excellence in Journalism Award. Be sure to check out our prior shows with Richard Kiyosaki, G. Edward Griffin, Peter Schiff, Doug Casey, Chris Mayer, T. Harv Ecker, Denis Waitley, John Stapleford, Addison Wiggin, Thomas E. Woods, and many more.
Jason Hartman interviews author, former Wall Street senior banker, and best-selling investigative journalist, William (Bill) D. Cohan on the events that led up to the current economic crisis. Bill explains the choices that the big firms, such as Goldman Sachs, JP Morgan, etc, made regarding what type of institution they were going to be, the path of these firms that led up to the current crisis, and how they used the bailout money gifted to them. He said it was one big party on Wall Street, during which brokers were to bring in revenue using a lot of whacky products, until everything came crashing down. Huge bonuses were paid out from the revenue collected from unsuspecting clients.Bill and Jason also discuss the Occupy Wall Street Movement. Bill expressed disappointment in the message of the movement, saying it isn't clear and they need to learn how Wall Street really works so that they can be more effective in bringing about reform. Wall Street has been influencing what goes on in Washington and paying lobbyists and donating to congressional coffers so that they can get the regulations, or lack thereof, that they want, i.e. the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act. Bill talks about how the expansion of Wall Street into Middle Class America was not an accident, using the example of Merrill Lynch being a public company. This ultimately led to broken trust between Wall Street and Main Street, as people have now shied away from risk taking.To solve the problems, Bill suggests changing the incentive system on Wall Street, in that it can no longer be okay to take huge risks with people's money or get paid big bonuses whether they lose money for the firms or not, as well as going back to having to use their partner's capital to operate. William D. Cohan offers audiences a unique, close-up perspective of the greatest financial crisis since the Great Depression. He combines deep knowledge of the investment banking world with the fine storytelling skills of an award-winning investigative journalist. Bill's new book is titled Money and Power: How Goldman Sachs Came To Rule The World, a revelatory history of Goldman Sachs. His previous book, House of Cards: A Tale of Hubris and Wretched Excess on Wall Street, lays out in gory detail how the financial crisis began with the collapses of Bear Stearns and Lehman Brothers. The Last Tycoons: The Secret History of Lazard Frères & Co. won the 2007 Financial Times/Goldman Sachs Business Book of the Year Award for its candid revelations about how Wall Street works.