Jeremy Siegel (born November 14, 1945) is the Russell E. Palmer Professor of Finance at the Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Siegel comments extensively on the economy and financial markets. He appears regularly on networks including CNN, CNBC and NPR, and writes regular columns for Kiplinger’s Personal Finance and Yahoo! Finance. Siegel’s paradox is named after him.
He has been a frequent guest on the business TV program Kudlow & Company on CNBC, where supply-side economics fan Lawrence Kudlow hosts. He is a supply-sider like Kudlow. Siegel is also a lifelong friend of Robert Shiller, an economist at the Yale School of Management, whom Siegel has known since their MIT graduate school days. Siegel and Shiller have frequently debated each other on TV about the stock market and its future returns, and have become financial media celebrities, regularly appearing on CNBC.
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Awards
1994: Best Business School Professor in worldwide ranking, Business Week
2002: Lindback Award for outstanding university teaching
1996, 2005: Helen Kardon Moss Anvil Award for outstanding MBA teaching
2005: 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.”
Jeremy Siegel’s books on E4T
- The Future for Investors: Why the Tried and the True Triumph Over the Bold and the New (2005).
- Revolution on Wall Street: The Rise and Decline of the New York Stock Exchange (1993).