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Martin J. Gruber
American professor of financial economics, focusing on investments. From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Martin Jay Gruber is professor emeritus of finance and scholar in residence at the Stern School of Business, New York University, where he was previously Nomura professor of finance (1987-2010) and chair of the finance department (1989-1997).[1]
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He was elected president of the American Finance Association[2] in 1995. He is director emeritus of the National Bureau of Economic Research,[3] where he was on the investment committee.
His research studies mutual funds, pension funds, and expectations in the process of security price formation.[1] He has been honored for his research by several academic and industry organizations[4][5][6][7]
With Edwin Elton, he wrote Modern Portfolio Theory and Investment Analysis (Wiley), now in its 9th edition,[8] a standard textbook in the field of modern portfolio theory.
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Early life and education
He graduated from MIT with an SB in chemical engineering, and received an MBA in production management and a PhD in finance and economics from Columbia University.
Career
He joined the Stern School of Business as assistant professor of finance in 1965, and spent his academic career there except for a two year visiting position at the International Institute of Management, Berlin.[1]
He was chairman of the board of directors of the Japan Equity Fund,[9] chairman of the board of trustees of CREF and later TIAA-CREF,[10] and a director at DWS Scudder,[11] the Singapore Equity Fund,[12] TIAA, and the S.G. Cowen Mutual Funds.[13]
Among other editorships, he was editor of the Journal of Finance from 1983-1988.[14]
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Publications
He has written seven books and over 100 articles in scholarly journals, several with his longtime coauthor Edwin Elton.[1]
His pre-1996 articles are collected in a book published by MIT Press, "Investments" in two volumes.[15] His post-1996 articles are collected in a book published by World Scientific, "Investments and portfolio performance".[16]
Honors
- Docteur "honoris causa", University of Liege, Belgium [1]
- Fellow of the American Finance Association [4]
- Fellow of the Financial Management Association[5]
- Fellow of the Institute for Quantitative Research in Finance[6]
- James Vertin Award of the CFA Institute, 2004. The Vertin Award recognizes individuals producing a corpus of research that is valuable to investment professionals[7]
Personal life
He is the father of Jonathan Gruber, professor of health economics at MIT.[17]
References
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