Jeremy J. Siegel Faculty Profile

Jeremy J. Siegel
Russell E. Palmer Professor of Finance

PhD, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1971; BA, Columbia University, 1967

Research Areas
Macroeconomics; financial markets, long-run asset returns; demographics

Academic Positions Held
Wharton: 1976-present (named Russell E. Palmer Professor of Finance, 1998). Previous appointment: Graduate School of Business, University of Chicago, 1972-76

Other Positions
Academic Director, Securities Industry Association Institute; Senior Investment Strategy Advisor, Wisdom Tree Investments, Inc.; Investment Advisory Committee, Zeneca Inc.

Career and Recent Professional Awards; Teaching Awards
Best Business School Professor in worldwide ranking, Business Week, 1994; Lindback Award (outstanding university teaching), 2002; Helen Kardon Moss Anvil Award (outstanding MBA teaching),1996, 2005; David W. Hauck Award for Outstanding Teaching (Wharton Undergraduate); Best Article, Graham and Dodd Award, Financial Analysts Journal, 1993; Best Article, Peter Bernstein and Frank Fabozzi Award, The Journal of Portfolio Management, 2000; The prestigious 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,” in May 2005

Representative Publications
Stocks for the Long Run. 3rd ed., McGraw Hill, 2002. Named by Washington Post as one of the ten best investment books of all time.

The Future for Investors. Crown Business, 2005. Named as one of the ten best business books of 2005 by Barron’s, Financial Times, and Business Week.

“Perspectives on the Equity Premium Puzzle.” Financial Analysts Journal (Nov/Dec 2005); reprinted in Bold Thinking on Investment Management (2005).

(with J. Schwartz)
“Long-Term Returns on the Original S&P 500 Companies.” Financial Analysts Journal, (Jan/Feb 2006).

(with M. Blume)
Revolution on Wall Street. W.W. Norton, 1993.