
Robert W. Vishny
Myron S. Scholes Distinguished Service Professor of Finance and Neubauer Faculty Director of the Davis Center
Myron S. Scholes Distinguished Service Professor of Finance and Neubauer Faculty Director of the Davis Center
Robert Vishny鈥檚 area of expertise is behavioral and institutional finance. He currently teaches a course titled Behavioral and Institutional Finance. Vishny previously taught Cases in Financial Management and Corporation Finance at Booth over a 20 year period while he held the titles of Assistant Professor through the Eric J. Gleacher Distinguished Service Professor of Finance.
Amongst the areas that Vishny studied in the past were the market for corporate control, corporate governance around the world, privatization and the role of government in the economy, investor sentiment, and the limits of arbitrage.
Past professional experiences for Vishny include Founding Partner of LSV Asset Management; Trustee of College Retirement Equity Fund (CREF); Director of Program in Corporate Finance, National Bureau of Economic Research; Director of American Finance Association; and Advisor of Russian Privatization Ministry.
Vishny earned an A.B. with highest distinction in economics, mathematics, and philosophy from the University of Michigan and a Ph.D. from Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
With A. Shleifer, 鈥淟arge Shareholders and Corporate Control,鈥听Journal of Political Economy听(1986).
With A. Shleifer, 鈥淭he Limits of Arbitrage,鈥听Journal of Finance听(1997).
With A. Shleifer, 鈥淎 Survey of Corporate Governance,鈥听Journal of Finance听(1997).
With R. La Porta, F. Lopez-de-Silanes, and A. Shleifer, 鈥淟aw and Finance,鈥听Journal of Political Economy听(1998).
With A. Shleifer, 鈥淯nstable Banking,鈥听Journal of Financial Economics听(forthcoming).
Number | Course Title | Quarter |
---|---|---|
Behavioral and Institutional Finance | 2024 (Autumn) | |
Leadership Effectiveness and Development (LEAD) Lab | 2025 (Spring) |
A Q&A with Chicago Booth鈥檚 Robert W. Vishny on the legacy of the common-law tradition.
{PubDate}Researchers postulate that many people, lacking the skills and knowledge to invest on their own, hire money managers they trust, which reduces their anxiety about taking investment risks.
{PubDate}The enormous growth has both infuriated industry critics and perplexed economic researchers.
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