Top finance academic
joins faculty
Andrew Metrick ’89, ’89MA,
an associate professor at the University of Pennsylvania's Wharton School, has
been named professor of finance at SOM and will begin his new position on January
1, 2008. Metrick joined the faculty at Wharton in 1999; before that he spent
five years teaching economics at Harvard University. He has been honored with
more than a dozen teaching awards and distinctions, including two years (2003
and 2007) as the highest-rated professor in the Wharton MBA program. In 1998,
he received the highest teaching honor at Harvard College, and in 2005 he
received the highest teaching honor at the University of Pennsylvania. Metrick
is considered a rising star in finance. In his most recent research, he created
a method that makes it easier for venture capitalists to calculate realistic
valuations of start-ups, high-growth companies, and IPOs. The model is outlined
in his book Venture Capital and the Finance of Innovation (John Wiley & Sons, 2006). Dean Joel M. Podolny
commented, "Andrew is an exceptional scholar, with important, creative
contributions in a number of areas of finance. I am delighted that he is
joining our distinguished finance faculty."
Two professors to be New
York Times columnists
The New York Times named Bob Shiller, Stanley B. Resor Professor of
Economics, and Judith Chevalier ’89, William S. Beinecke Professor of Finance
and Economics, as rotating columnists for The Economic View. The column runs on
Sundays in the business section and covers a variety of economic subjects. The
two will be part of an eight-economist group that will write the column.
New faculty in varied
disciplines
New assistant
professors bring to SOM their expertise in organizational behavior, accounting,
economics, and marketing. Daylian Cain, assistant professor of organizational
behavior, joins Yale from Harvard University's economics department, where he
was the Russell Sage Fellow of Behavioral Economics. He holds master's degrees
in philosophy, ethics, and organizational behavior, and received a PhD in
organizational behavior from Carnegie Mellon University's Tepper School of
Business. Merle Ederhof, assistant professor of accounting, is from the
doctoral program in accounting at the Stanford Graduate School of Business. Her
research focuses on managerial accounting issues, executive compensation,
incentive contracts, and corporate governance. Ahmed Mushfiq Mobarak, assistant
professor of economics, taught development economics at the University of
Colorado-Boulder. He has also held positions at the World Bank and the
International Monetary Fund. He received an MA and PhD in economics from the
University of Maryland-College Park. Oliver Rutz, assistant professor of
marketing, joins Yale from the doctoral program in marketing at the UCLA Anderson
School of Management, where he also received his MBA. His current research focuses
on Internet advertising and search engine marketing.