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PRINCIPALS
HIGHLIGHTS:
  • Provides leadership to FIA's investment process
  • Unique and insightful approach to generating credit investment ideas
  • Over 25 years in credit markets
  • Institutional investor's top-ranked high yield strategist for 9 straight years
  • Youngest person inducted into Fixed Income Analysts' Hall of Fame

Martin Fridson

Martin Fridson is "perhaps the most well-known figure in the high yield world," according to Investment Dealers' Digest. Over a 25-year span with brokerage firms including Salomon Brothers, Morgan Stanley, and Merrill Lynch, he became known for his innovative work in credit analysis and investment strategy. For nine consecutive years through 2002, participants in the Institutional Investor All-America research survey ranked Fridson number-one in his category. The magazine's editors dubbed him "the dean of the high yield bond market." The Financial Management Association International named Fridson the Financial Executive of the Year in 2002. In 2000, he became the youngest person ever inducted into the Fixed Income Analysts Society Hall of Fame. According to Barron's, "No one brings more insight or a better reputation for integrity to the junk-bond market than Marty Fridson." The New York Times called him "one of Wall Street's most thoughtful and perceptive analysts" and Grant's Interest Rate Observer labeled him "indispensable." Investment manager Michael McAdams described Fridson as "a hybrid of Stephen Hawking and Studs Terkel." Pensions & Investments called his satirical writing on financial markets "worthy of Jonathan Swift." Fridson received his B.A. cum laude in history from Harvard College and his M.B.A. from Harvard Business School. He has been a guest lecturer at the graduate business schools of Babson, Columbia, Dartmouth, Duke, Fordham, Georgetown, Harvard, MIT, New York University, Notre Dame, Rutgers and Wharton, as well as the Amsterdam Institute of Finance. In January 1990, Institutional Investor selected Martin Fridson for its list of "The Next Generation of Financial Leaders." The New York Society of Security Analysts, in July 1994, called Fridson "one of our best known members." In 1997, Worth Magazine included Fridson's Investment Illusions among the 22 books published since 1841 constituting its investor's core library. Library Journal named Fridson's It Was A Very Good Year one of the best business books of 1998. Ross Perot wrote that Fridson's 2000 book, How to Be a Billionaire, "offers fascinating insight into the subject of building wealth." In 2000, The Green Magazine called Fridson's Financial Statement Analysis "one of the most useful investment books ever." The Boston Globe said that Fridson's 2006 book, Unwarranted Intrusions: The Case against Government Intervention in the Marketplace, merits inclusion in the short list of best business books of the decade.

Should the U.S. Forget about Private-Company GAAP?
CFO Blog, Marie Leone
March 3, 2010
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CREDIT MARKETS: Economic Data Support Recovery Hopes
WSJ Romy Varghese
February 18, 2010
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CREDIT MARKETS: Sentiment Better, Sovereign Debt Fears Fade
WSJ Anusha Shrivastava
February 22, 2010
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