Ian Carnegie Brown
Managing Director, Investment Banking division
Credit Suisse
Ian Carnegie-Brown is based in London. He is a member of the UK Investment Banking coverage team and has responsibility for a number of consumer products companies including Imperial Tobacco Group and Associated British Foods.
Mr. Carnegie-Brown joined Credit Suisse in 2008 from Citigroup, where he worked for eight years and was most recently European Head of the Consumer Group. Prior to this he worked at Schroders for 13 years in the UK, Japan and Asia-Pacific until the acquisition of the Investment Banking Division by Citigroup in 2000.
Mr. Carnegie-Brown holds a degree in Jurisprudence/Law from Exeter College Oxford and is a Chartered Accountant. |
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Jeremy Large
Researcher
AHL
Jeremy Large does research in the field of finance called market microstructure, which studies the details of how offers to trade are made and accepted on financial exchanges. In addition to doing research in Oxford, he also lectures on Financial Econometrics (MFE) and Market Microstructure in the Saïd Business School.
Large held a Fellowship at All Souls College from October 2005 until March 2008, when he became a Research Economist at the hedge fund AHL, part of Man Group.
Large has worked as a consultant at the Boston Consulting Group, and has also served as an academic consultant to the Bank of England and to the FSA. He was awarded his DPhil in 2006 from Nuffield College, Oxford, winning the univerisity's Edgeworth Prize for best thesis in Economics. He has also held Fulbright and Entente Cordiale Scholarships to study, respectively, at Princeton and at HEC Paris, from where he holds the Diplôme |
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Jamie Whyte
Head of Research and Publishing
Oliver Wyman
Jamie Whyte is from New Zealand. He is a former lecturer of Philosophy at Cambridge University and winner of Analysis journal’s prestigious ‘best article by a philosopher under 30’ award. He has published numerous articles - mainly on the subject of truth - in journals such as Analysis and the British Journal of the
Philosophy of Science Jamie Whyte is from New Zealand. He is a former lecturer of Philosophy at Cambridge University and winner of Analysis journal’s prestigious ‘best article by a philosopher under 30’ award. He has published numerous articles - mainly on the subject of truth - in journals such as Analysis and the British Journal of the Philosophy of Science |
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Andrew Payne
Director, Credit Portfolio Management group
Barclays Capital
Andrew Payne is based in London. He actively manages the firm’s term credit exposures on a global basis. Prior to his role in Portfolio Management, Andrew has held positions in banking and risk management in London and New York for Barclays Capital and its predecessor firm.
Mr. Payne holds a BA (Hons) Chemistry from St. Catherine’s College, Oxford and an MBA from London Business School.
Andrew’s interests include golf, hill walking, rugby and wine. He is married with two children. |
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Giles Harrison
Managing Director and Co-Head of Financial Institutions
Nomura International plc
Based in London, Mr. Harrison graduated from Mansfield College, Oxford in 1989 where he read Geography. After working as an investment banking analyst in New York, he attended Harvard Business School and graduated as a Baker Scholar in 1994. Mr. Harrison worked in the Financial Institutions Groups at Deutsche Bank and Lehman Brothers in New York, covering the insurance and reinsurance sectors, advising on corporate transactions, capital raising and risk management. In 2007 he moved to London to co-head the European Financial Institutions Group with Lehman Brothers, and continued in that role with Nomura International starting in 2008 after the acquisition of the Asian and European businesses of Lehman Brothers. Nomura's Financial Institutions Group is a leading advisor to banks, insurers and asset managers, providing M&A, capital advisory, risk management and financing on a global basis. |
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St. John
Business Manager, Global Market Sales
HSBC
St. John joined HSBC in October 2006 as the COO/Business Manager for the Head of Global Markets Sales, EMEA from Bank of America where he worked for the COO in Global Markets. Prior to joining Bank of America he spent twenty years in the Army in a variety of appointments. He holds an Economics degree and two Masters (including an MBA), and was a Research Fellow at King’s College, London.
Married with three children, he lives in Wiltshire and his interests include fives, sailing and encouraging his children to broaden their horizons. Since leaving the military St John has been actively involved in raising money for service charities. |
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Dr Richard Mash,
Fellow in Economics
New College, Oxford
Dr Mash’s research is focused on the implications for monetary policy of different ways of modelling firms’ pricing decisions in terms of how the prices they set respond to changed levels of spending prompted by central bank interest-rate decisions. He has shown that a model calibrated using microeconomic evidence on firm behaviour does a much better job of replicating aggregate data than the somewhat ad hoc formulations in current widespread use. |
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Bob Janjuah,
Chief Markets Strategist
The Royal Bank of Scotland plc
After studying Law at the University of Warwick, Bob has spent 20 years in the credit markets. After several years in the loan markets, Bob joined SBC/UBS where he became Global Head of Credit Research in the mid-90s, including a 3 years stint in Hong Kong, and subsequently Bob has held a number of senior research and proprietary credit trading positions in the credit markets, including Head of Credit Trading, Europe, at Hypovereinsbank and Head of Proprietary Credit Trading at ABN Amro in Europe. Since 2003, Bob has focused on macro credit strategy, at ABN, at Bear Stearns and at RBS, where Bob held the role of Chief Credit Strategist from May 2006 till May 2009. Since early 2009, Bob's role was expanded and he is now the Chief Markets Strategist, covering global markets on a cross asset basis, for RBS. |
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Jeremy Hale
Global Market Strategy Group
Citigroup
Jeremy Hale joined Citi in October 2005 as Managing Director of a new Global Macro Strategy Product aimed at macro hedge funds and other leveraged or macro oriented investors capable of cross market positioning. Jeremy’s group offers regular Global Macro Strategy Trade Ideas, Market Commentary and Weekly Summary notes and irregular and more detailed Focus pieces. These develop broad macro themes and consider investment opportunities across asset classes, including fixed income, forex, equities, credit, EM and commodities.
More recently, Jeremy’s Global Macro Strategy Group has been given responsibility for the production and coordination of Citi’s foreign exchange forecasts and commodity price forecasts working in conjunction with other strategists and economists in the firm.
Jeremy Hale has over 26 years of experience working in financial markets as a macro-economist, trader and strategist. A little over half of that time has been spent on the sell side and the rest on the buy side working within macro hedge funds and trading groups, including Tiger Management when it was the single largest macro hedge fund in the mid-1990s.
In a previous research role in the early 1990s, Jeremy was regularly voted top research economist for Global Bonds and for Foreign Exchange in Extel and Institutional Investor surveys of London based investors and was part of a team that was regularly voted top for analysis of International economies. |
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Professor Beaudry
Fellow and Professor in Economics
All Souls College, University of Oxford
Professor Beaudry is currently Professor of Economics and Fellow at All Souls College, University of Oxford. He has previously held faculty position at the University of British Columbia, Université de Montréal and Boston University, and has been a visiting faculty member at MIT Boston, Paris Sorbonne and Universite de Toulouse.
Professor Beaudry has published widely in the areas of macroeconomics, monetary policy, labour economics, income inequality and technical change. He is a frequent contributor at national and international conferences. He is a Fellow of the Royal Society of Canada, a Fellow of the Bank of Canada, and a Research Associate at the U.S. National Bureau of Economic Research.
Professor Beaudry has received a number of awards and grants, including the 2008 Rae Prize for best research in economics in Canada over the 2003-2008 period, the Canada Research Chair at the University of British Columbia, the Killam Research Prize, and the Petro Canada Young Innovator Award.
Professor Beaudry received a BA from Laval University (1983), an MA in Economics from the University of British Columbia (1984), and a PhD in Economics from Princeton University (1989). |
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