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Carol Loomis

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Nationality
  
United States

Education
  
University of Missouri

Role
  
Journalist

Name
  
Carol Loomis

Years active
  
1954-2014


Carol Loomis Warren Watch Retired Fortune writer Carol Loomis still

Born
  
June 25, 1929 (age 94) (
1929-06-25
)

Occupation
  
Journalist and retired senior editor-at-large at Fortune

Books
  
Tap Dancing to Work: Warren Buffett on Practically Everything, 1966-2012: A Fortune Magazine Book

Carol Junge Loomis (born June 25, 1929) is an American financial journalist, who retired in 2014 as senior editor-at-large at Fortune magazine.

Contents

Carol Loomis Charlie Rose39s Full Hour With Warren Buffett And Legendary

Carol loomis advice for future journalists


Education

Carol Loomis John Huey Photos Party For Tap Dancing To Work Warren

Carol Junge Loomis attended Drury College, and graduated from the University of Missouri, with a Bachelor of Journalism degree in 1951.

Career

Carol Loomis Andrew Serwer and Carol Loomis Photos Zimbio

Loomis had the longest tenure of any employee in Fortune magazine's history, having joined the staff in 1954 as a research associate and retired on July 1, 2014.

Carol Loomis Warren Buffet Sings to Carol Loomis39 Success

In 1966, she coined the term "hedge fund". for a hitherto little known strategy that took off as a result. That year Carol Loomis wrote an article called "The Jones Nobody Keeps Up With." Published in Fortune, Loomis' article lionized Jones and his approach. The article's opening line summarizes the results at A.W. Jones & Co.: "There are reasons to believe that the best professional money manager of investors' money these days is a quiet-spoken seldom photographed man named Alfred Winslow Jones."[14] Coining the term 'hedge fund' to describe Jones' fund, it pointed out that his hedge fund had outperformed the best mutual fund over the previous five years by 44 percent, despite its management-incentive fee. On a 10-year basis, Mr. Jones's hedge fund had beaten the top performer Dreyfus Fund by 87 percent. This led to a flurry of interest in hedge funds and within the next three years at least 130 hedge funds were started, including George Soros's Quantum Fund and Michael Steinhardt's Steinhardt Partners.[15]

Carol Loomis newcanaanitecomwpcontentuploads201504carol

In 1976, she was appointed to the Advisory Committee on Federal Consolidated Financial Statements.

Carol Loomis Party For Tap Dancing To Work Warren Buffett On

In 1980, Loomis was one of six panelists at the presidential debates of Ronald Reagan and John B. Anderson.

She retired from Time/Fortune magazine in July 2014 after a tenure of over 60 years with the company.

Carol was met with sexism at the Economic Club, after the Economic Club black tie event called Fortune to send someone to the dinner. They refused Carol's attendance as they "didn't allow women". She still went, and later sued them. It was a private club so she lost the case.

Carol was later invited to the Economic Club and she turned down the invite.

Personal life

Loomis is a "longtime friend of Warren Buffett's, the pro bono editor of his annual letter to shareholders, and a shareholder in Berkshire Hathaway."

Awards

  • 1993 Gerald M. Loeb Lifetime Achievement Award
  • 2000 Women's Economic Round Table award for print journalists
  • 2001 Time Inc.'s Henry R. Luce Award
  • 2006 Distinguished Achievement Award, Society of American Business Editors and Writers
  • Works

  • "A conversation with Warren Buffett", Fortune, June 25, 2006
  • "Warren Buffett's Wild Ride at Salomon", October 27, 1997 (website of the Los Angeles Chinese Learning Center)
  • "The 15% Delusion", Fortune, February 5, 2001 (website of a McDonough School of Business faculty member)
  • Tap Dancing to Work: Warren Buffett on Practically Everything, 1966-2012: A Fortune Magazine Book, December 31, 2013
  • Bard college s john j curran 75 lectures in journalism series presents carol loomis


    References

    Carol Loomis Wikipedia