Sharmin mossavar-rahmani biography of william
Sharmin Mossavar-Rahmani
4 Appearances
Chief Investment Officer, Goldman Sachs
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The Capital Region Chamber is pleased to host our annual signature event, Economic Outlook Breakfast, featuring Sharmin Mossavar-Rahmani.
Sharmin Mossavar-Rahmani is head of Goldman Sachs’ Investment Strategy Group and chief investment officer of Wealth Management, responsible for the overall strategic asset allocation and tactical investment strategy. She joined Goldman as a partner in
Economic and Financial Markets Outlook
- Investment Strategy: US Preeminence & Should You Stay Invested in US Equities
- Macroeconomic Outlook on growth, inflation, central bank policy, and recession odds
- Prospective returns across asset classes
- China
- Risks including, geopolitical, US elections and US government debt)
Join us on Wednesday, December 4th at the Events Center at Rivers Casino & Resort to gain new perspective on key economic trends to best position your business for and beyond.
Registration for individual tickets will end on Monday, December 2nd at noon. To reserve a table, please email lcognato@
Agenda
- am Check-In & Networking
- am Breakfast Served
- am Program Begins
- am Event Concludes
Presenting Sponsors
Hosted by
Parking & Entrance The mission of the Mossavar-Rahmani Center for Business and Government is to advance the state of knowledge and policy analysis concerning some of society’s most challenging problems at the interface of the public and private sectors. The scope of its work ranges from the local to the global. Drawing on the unparalleled intellectual resources of the Kennedy School and Harvard University, and bringing together thought leaders from both business and government, the center conducts research, facilitates dialogue, and seeks answers that are at once intellectually rigorous and policy relevant. The Mossavar-Rahmani Center for Business and Government traces its history to the late s. Several individuals figure prominently in the center’s founding—Harvard President Derek Bok, Kennedy School Dean Graham Allison, Harvard alumnus Frank Weil (AB’53; JD’56), and Lamont University Professor John Dunlop being chief among them. John Dunlop advocated for the creation of the center in essays and writings appearing in Dunlop had served as Dean of the Faculty of Arts and Sciences (–) and as Secretary of Labor in the Ford Administration (–). He returned to Harvard as the Lamont University Professor to teach at both the Business School and the Kennedy School of Government and launched an examination of the University’s role in promoting a better understanding of the relationship between business and government. One result of that effort was his proposal for Harvard to hire new professors and support staff so that the Business School and the Kennedy School could pursue convergent work on business-government relations. It was these initial explorations that led, a few years later, to the founding of the Center for Business and Government. Dunlop’s proposal appeared about the same time that President Bok and Dean Allison presented their new vision for the Kennedy School as it moved from its cramped quarters in the Littauer Building near Harvard Yard to its present-day locati A crypto enthusiast approached Sharmin Mossavar-Rahmani a couple of years ago, asking why she was so negative about digital currencies. Mossavar-Rahmani was accustomed to defending her stance. As the chief investment officer of Goldman Sachs Wealth Management for the past 23 years, she has guided thousands of wealth advisers, clients and traders and regularly appears on television. This time, she was being questioned by a Goldman Sachs intern who said she owned cryptocurrencies. Mossavar-Rahmani dismissed investing in crypto as nothing more than a means of speculation. The intern didn’t give much of an answer. She also didn’t seem eager to sell her crypto. So it goes for Mossavar-Rahmani, a high-profile market prognosticator who has gotten a lot right over the past few years. Since the global financial crisis, she has urged clients to stay fully invested in U.S. stocks and minimize their exposure to China and other emerging-market countries, advice that has made investors money amid the market’s climb since that perilous period. When it comes to crypto, Mossavar-Rahmani remains skeptical, even as bitcoin has soared 64% this year to nearly $70, Her position puts her at risk of costing Goldman clients potential gains while appearing out of step with markets. Wall Street giants including BlackRock and Fidelity have embraced bitcoin, launching funds in January that make it easy for everyday investors to invest in it. Some financial advisers have also begun advising clients to include crypto in their portfolios. Mossavar-Rahmani couldn’t care less what the others do. “We do not think it is an investment asset class,” she said in an interview, comparing the recent crypto enthusiasm to the tulip mania of the s. “We’re not believers in crypto.” She says clients are well aware of her team’s crypto criticisms and haven’t asked about jumping in. Mossavar-Rahmani’s view is based on the fact that it is nearly impossible to accurately value cryptocurrencies, which
Please park in the free parking garage at Rivers, take the elevator down (press the button labelled "Casino,") and bear left when leaving the elevator to get to the Event Center (located across from the Starbucks within the building.) Please note that there will be approximately guests all arriving at the same time, so please plan accordingly and arrive a