Jeremy Siegel

Finance Professor and Author

Jeremy is a top finance keynote speaker, author, and award-winning professor. In December 2001, Forbes named Professor Siegel’s website as one of the “Best Business School Professor” websites and in 1994. Professor Siegel received the highest teaching rating in a worldwide ranking of business school professors conducted by Business Week magazine.

  • Jeremy Siegel Keynote Speaker Fee Fee range is for U.S. events, depending on location and organization type

    $30,001 - $40,000

  • Languages Spoken

    English

  • Travels From

    Pennsylvania, USA

  • Jeremy Siegel Keynote Speaker Fee Fee range is for U.S. events, depending on location and organization type

    $30,001 - $40,000

  • Languages Spoken

    English

  • Travels From

    Pennsylvania, USA

Suggested Keynote Speaker Programs

What Goes Down, Will Come Back Up: What?s Ahead for the Markets Now?

The notion that falling stocks are penance for an economy built on indebtedness is overblown. There is nothing intrinsic in the world economy that has lost its productivity. Prof. Siegel diagnoses the causes of the current crisis and the prospects for recovery. Jeremy Siegel, ...

The notion that falling stocks are penance for an economy built on indebtedness is overblown. There is nothing intrinsic in the world economy that has lost its productivity. Prof. Siegel diagnoses the causes of the current crisis and the prospects for recovery. Jeremy Siegel, a renowned professor of finance at the Wharton School and a regular commentator on major network and cable news and regular columnist for major financial publications encourages investors to take heart. Called the “Wizard of Wharton” and one of the world’s keenest financial minds, Siegel has an unshakable belief that brighter days are ahead for Wall Street. He shares his incredible insights on today’s latest financial news and what is ahead for not only Wall Street, but for investors and business.

Learn More

Investing In A Global Marketplace

As the global marketplace blossoms into a reality, investors need to understand its perils and pitfalls. Is Asia becoming an economic powerhouse, or merely a paper tiger? How do quickly growing countries trap investors into poor returns? Jeremy Siegel gives an overview of what...

As the global marketplace blossoms into a reality, investors need to understand its perils and pitfalls. Is Asia becoming an economic powerhouse, or merely a paper tiger? How do quickly growing countries trap investors into poor returns? Jeremy Siegel gives an overview of what lies ahead for international investors as the borderless economy begins to emerge.

Learn More

Are Stocks Still Right for the Long Run?

Given the current market, doubt in the soundness of the stock market has crept in among investors. Siegel takes a critical look at current and future earnings of the S&P 500 Index and reviews historical returns and what investors should expect from their investments today...

Given the current market, doubt in the soundness of the stock market has crept in among investors. Siegel takes a critical look at current and future earnings of the S&P 500 Index and reviews historical returns and what investors should expect from their investments today.

Learn More

What are Stocks Really Worth?

How should we value stocks in today?s market? What level of PE can current companies justify? Siegel examines warranted price-to-earnings ratios by looking back at the original Nifty-Fifty.

About Keynote Speaker Jeremy Siegel

Jeremy Siegel is the Russell E. Palmer Professor of Finance at the Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania. He graduated from Columbia University in 1967, received his Ph.D. in Economics from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in 1971, and spent one year as a National Science Foundation Post-Doctoral Fellow at Harvard University. Prof. Siegel taught for four years at the Graduate School of Business of the University of Chicago before joining the Wharton faculty in 1976.

Professor Siegel has written and lectured extensively about the economy and financial markets, and appeared frequently on CNN, CNBC, NPR and others networks.  He is a regular columnist for Kiplinger’s and has contributed articles to The Wall Street JournalBarron’sThe Financial Times and other national and international news media. Professor Siegel served for 15 years as head of economics training at JP Morgan and is currently the academic director of the U.S. Securities Industry Institute.

Professor Siegel is the author of numerous professional articles and two books.  His best known, Stocks for the Long Run, which published its third edition in 2002, was named by the Washington Post as one of the ten-best investment books of all time. His next book, The Future for Investors:  Why the Tried and the True Triumph over the Bold and New, was published by Crown Business.

Professor Siegel has received many awards and citations for both his research and excellence in teaching. In November 2003, he was presented the Distinguished Leadership Award by the Securities Industry Association and in May 2005 he was presented the Nicholas Molodovsky Award by the Chartered Financial Analysts Institute to “those individuals who have made outstanding contributions of such significance as to change the direction of the profession and to raise it to higher standards of accomplishment.”

Other awards include the Graham and Dodd Award for the best article published in The Financial Analysts Journal and in 2000 was awarded the Peter Bernstein and Frank Fabozzi Award for the best article published in The Journal of Portfolio Management.

In December 2001, Forbes named Professor Siegel’s website as one of the “Best Business School Professor” websites and in 1994. Professor Siegel received the highest teaching rating in a worldwide ranking of business school professors conducted by Business Weekmagazine.

Close

My Catalog

PDF

    This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

    Submit Clear All

    You have not added any speakers yet.