News
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February 12, 2019Meet Notre Dame Mendoza’s MBA Class of 2020Poets & Quants profiles a few of Mendoza's outstanding students from the class of 2020.
Poets & Quants -
February 12, 2019If Howard Schultz wins in 2020, would he be a good president?The Guardian quoted assistant professor Tim Hubbard in a story about former Starbucks CEO Howard Schultz's 2020 presidential run.
The Guardian -
February 12, 2019Starbucks : If Howard Schultz wins in 2020, would he be a good president?Howard Schultz’s tenure as Starbucks CEO is unlike others in the Fortune 100, according to Timothy Hubbard, assistant professor of management at the University of Notre Dame. “I believe he was able to show himself that companies can be financially successful while being socially responsible. That’s quite a different experience than other CEOs.”
Market Screener -
February 11, 2019From Gina to ‘The Machine-a’At some point, someone shared with ND MBA student Gina Guzzardo this piece of wisdom from boxing legend and unwitting business professor Mike Tyson: “Everybody has a plan until they get punched in the mouth.” You laugh because it’s true, and you figure when it happens you’ll know what to do, she says. “And then someone’s punching you.” And you forget everything.
John Nagy -
February 7, 2019The ring around the ‘white’ collarL. Christopher Knight, an FBI forensic accountant, will discuss what “white-collar crime” means from a law enforcement viewpoint during a talk at the University of Notre Dame’s Mendoza College of Business at 5 p.m. Feb. 28 in Mendoza’s Jordan Auditorium.
Carol Elliott -
February 5, 2019Notre Dame Ethics Week 2019 examines the effects of economic inequalityNotre Dame Ethics Week 2019 will examine the economic gap during its annual event held Feb. 12 to Feb. 15 (Tuesday to Friday) at the Stayer Center for Executive Education Commons C. “Economic Inequality: On Campuses, in Communities and at Companies” will feature both Notre Dame and outside experts with diverse professional experience and backgrounds to discuss some of the underlying causes of economic inequality and its impact on specific segments of society, as well as related emerging issues such as technology and CEO pay.
Carol Elliott -
February 4, 2019Award-winning paper uses EDGAR IP data to track correlation to portfolioAssistant professor of finance Huaizhi Chen and his co-authors have won this year's Richard A. Crowell prize for their paper "IQ from IP: Simplifying Search in Portfolio Choice," which links performance with portfolio managers' EDGAR searches.
Pensions & Investments -
February 4, 2019CEOs profit from issuing negative news releases ahead of stock option grant dates, study showsSome CEOs are profiting from releasing more negative news releases leading up to their executive stock option grant date, according to new research from the University of Notre Dame. The […]
Shannon Roddel -
February 3, 2019Tax Talk: Don’t get bowled over this tax season as there is plenty of filing assistance availableAccounting professor Ken Milani and Saint Mary's accounting professor Claude Renshaw wrote a column for the South Bend Tribune, listing options available for filing assistance this tax season. Milani and Renshaw are involved in the Vivian Harrington Gray Notre Dame-Saint Mary’s College Tax Assistance Program (TAP) staffed by accounting majors from both schools with a corps of local CPAs, college professors and other IRS certified volunteers.
South Bend Tribune -
February 1, 2019Super Bowl stadium scam stops in Atlanta“They’re dealing with the NFL, which has a long history of pitting city against city,” said Richard Sheehan, a professor of finance at Notre Dame and author of “Keeping Score: The Economics of Big-Time Sports.”
AP News