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American academic From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Zvi Bodie (born April 27, 1943[2]) is an American economist, author and professor. He was the Norman and Adele Barron Professor of Management at Boston University, teaching finance at Questrom for 43 years before retiring in 2015.[3] His textbook, Investments, (with Kane and Marcus) is the market leader and is used in the certification programs of the CFA Institute and the Society of Actuaries.[4] Bodie's work has centered on pension finance and investment strategy.[5] He continues to do consulting work and media interviews.[3]
Zvi Bodie | |
---|---|
Born | April 27, 1943 |
Citizenship | U.S. |
Education | Brooklyn College (BA) Hebrew University of Jerusalem (MA) Massachusetts Institute of Technology (PhD) |
Academic career | |
Doctoral advisor | Stanley Fischer[1] |
Bodie holds a Ph.D. in economics (1975) from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, a M.A. in economics (1970) from the Hebrew University, and a B.A. with Honors in philosophy (1965) from Brooklyn College.[2][4]
He has served on the finance faculty at the Harvard Business School and MIT Sloan School of Management.[6] Bodie was on the editorial board of the Journal of Pension Economics and Finance, and served as an advisory member to the World Bank Project on Old Age Security.[7] He was also a consultant to the State of Israel concerning reform of their pension system.[3]
In 2007 the Retirement Income Industry Association gave Bodie their Lifetime Achievement Award for applied research,[8] and in 2019 he received the Plan Sponsor Council of America's Lifetime Achievement Award.[9] He also won the Financial Analysts Journal Graham and Dodd Scroll in 1985 and 1996.[4]
Bodie, an expert on retirement and financial economics, is a long-time advocate of diversity and "safety-first investing."[3][10] In 1995 he offered a warning about the risks of investing heavily in stocks, in a journal article: On the Risk of Stocks in the Long Run.[11]
In 2003, he spoke again, about investing too heavily in the stock market, saying "people who have been following conventional investment advice are probably taking more risk than they should and don't even know it. They've been told not to worry about the stock market going down because in the long-run, stocks are going to beat everything else. That's a fundamental fallacy."[12]
After the stock market crash of 2007--2008, in a 2009 interview, he advised:
"Unless you have the heart of a high stakes gambler, get out of stocks now and put your retirement money in inflation protected government bonds and similar instruments. These investments are immune to the kind of calamity Wall Street experienced last year, and they are guaranteed to keep pace with inflation, a potential problem in the future."
Bodie added "he follow[ed] his own advice and did not lose a penny in the recent market meltdown."[13]
Prior to, and during, the 2020 COVID-19 pandemic, he offered advice on how people can use the principles of risk management to protect their investments, and plan for unforeseen risks.[3][10] Bodie prescribes a diversified portfolio that includes products with guaranteed returns such as government bonds and traditional retirement plans that assure a minimum interest rate.[3]
His investment strategy consists of a five-step process to analyze and evaluate what kinds of risks one faces, and how to determine the best way to implement an investment plan.[10]
Bodies' five-step plan consists of Risk identification, Risk assessment, Selection of risk-management techniques, Implementation, and Review; the five steps are then followed by a four-step process[10]of:
Bodie has promoted his system of investment and retirement planning in numerous interviews on PBS, CNN and other media outlets over the years.[14][15][16][17]
Bodie has authored and co-authored multiple books and textbooks,[18] and his written works have focused on pension finance and investment strategy. Some of his work is listed below.[5][18]
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