Author: Marie LeBlanc


Parting Thoughts from 2018 Business Grads

Lauren Consoli '18 MSA  - School of Business, Master of Science in Accounting

Lauren Consoli

Master of Science in Accounting

What advice would you give to new/incoming students?

I can remember being very intimidated as a Freshman. UConn is a big school so my advice would be to get involved early on! I met most of my close friends through organizations I joined as a Freshman.

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Awojulu Receives Program Access Scholarship

UConn’s risk management programs team would like to congratulate Adegbenro Awojulu, for receiving a 2017 CFA Program Access Scholarship from the CFA Institute.

The CFA Access Scholarship significantly reduces the enrollment and exam registration fees for the CFA Program (originally $930 for Standard Registration), as well as provide the CFA program eBook.

The UConn MS in Financial Risk Management (MSFRM) program is one of less than 275 universities in the world whose curriculum has been distinguished by the CFA Institute as being closely tied to professional practice and can help students prepare for the CFA exams.


AACSB board member, John A. Elliott, dean of the UConn School of Business rings the closing bell of the New York Stock Exchange

Representatives of AACSB International—the Association to Advance Collegiate Schools of Business, including board member John A. Elliott, dean of the UConn School of Business (far left) rang the closing bell of the New York Stock Exchange on Monday, June 13th in celebration of the organization’s 100th anniversary. The longest serving global association dedicated to advancing management education worldwide, AACSB accredits 761 of the world’s best business schools across 52 countries and territories. The UConn School of Business has been accredited since 1958.
Representatives of AACSB International—the Association to Advance Collegiate Schools of Business, including board member John A. Elliott, dean of the UConn School of Business (far left) rang the closing bell of the New York Stock Exchange on Monday, June 13th in celebration of the organization’s 100th anniversary. The longest serving global association dedicated to advancing management education worldwide, AACSB accredits 761 of the world’s best business schools across 52 countries and territories. The UConn School of Business has been accredited since 1958.

Women on Corporate Boards

Experts to Discuss Ways to Increase Numbers to Improve Bottom Line

“Women in the Corporate Boardroom: A Business Imperative for American Companies,’’ is the topic of a Sept. 16 program at the Bushnell Center for the Performing Arts in Hartford, sponsored by the University of Connecticut School of Business, the Connecticut State Treasurer’s Office and the Connecticut Forum.

Mika Brzezinski, co-host of MSNBC’s Morning Joe, will moderate a panel of experts who will discuss various viewpoints, enhanced by their own experiences and research, in addressing the shortage of women in the boardroom.Continue Reading


Nobel Prize Winner Shares Business Wisdom at Commencement

Nobel Prize Winner Shares Business Wisdom at Commencement

Working in business is a noble profession, and its success should be measured not exclusively by profit but in helping others meet their goals.

That was the wisdom shared by undergraduate Commencement speaker Robert J. Shiller, a Yale University professor and the winner of the 2013 Nobel Prize in Economic Sciences.

Shiller discussed the perceived contradiction between profit and corporate benevolence. But that need not be the case, he said, urging the new graduates to conduct themselves with personal and professional integrity and to never lose sight of the communities they serve.Continue Reading




Avoiding Crisis

This article first appeared in the UConn Business magazine, Volume 3, Issue 2 (Spring 2013)

Risk management gains growing interest

At the forefront of risk management education, the University of Connecticut School of Business introduced its first annual Risk Management Conference last fall, attracting over 160 participants including over 100 corporate attendees.

The conference, Risk Management: New Challenges and Opportunities, was organized by the Master of Science in Financial Risk Management (MSFRM) program and sponsored by several multinational corporations in the greater Stamford and Hartford, Connecticut areas. David Fourqurean, Senior Vice President and Operational Risk Manager at Wells Fargo, participated in the conference as both an attendee and a panelist.

“Based on the discussions we had that day, I believe it was one of the most valuable conferences I’ve attended in recent years,” says Fourqurean. “While similar events target a narrow slice of industry participants, the Challenges and Opportunities conference promoted a well-rounded dialog by providing a forum across industry, government, and academia. I particularly appreciated the fresh insights provided by the students,” he adds.

The conference agenda emphasized the common forces affecting a wide range of institutions, including banking, insurance, and investment management, as well as regulators, industrial firms and accounting/consulting firms. Topics included:

  • Measuring and Managing ERM Effectiveness
  • New Perspectives on Risk Appetite and Hedging Policies
  • Moving Towards a More Integrated Approach to Risk Management
  • Risk Management from a Legal/Regulatory Perspective
  • Risk Management: Advancing Stakeholder Mandates. What are the implications and practical application in insurance, banking, and asset management?
  • Emerging Risks – Identifying and Managing Over-the-Horizon Risk Events.

“These are topics that you don’t see in books, partly because the industry has so recently become increasingly relevant, and partly because these are the stories and experiences that you can only truly understand from people who have gone through a crisis first-hand and learned from it,” explains Rodrigo Toledo ’13 MSFRM, a current graduate student who attended the event. He particularly enjoyed the variety of topics and noted a high level of interaction between professors, practitioners and students: “It was a wonderful forum to learn from each other,” he says.

Risk ManagementSetting the stage for the conference, Frank Minerva ’01 MBA, Managing Director and COO of UBS bank, delivered the welcoming address, presenting the audience with a discussion on preparing for unexpected risks, such as Hurricane Sandy.

Keynote speaker James B. Comey, Jr. shared with the crowd his many experiences as the former Deputy Attorney General of the United States, and currently as the General Counsel at Bridgewater Associates. In his current position, Mr Comey oversees the legal, compliance, and security departments.

The next risk management conference shows great promise for once again bringing together financial and accounting professionals, faculty and graduate students to discuss key issues and challenges in risk management. The conference is best suited for those working in the financial/regulatory sectors, in a financial position, or anyone who is part of the accounting or consulting communities which deal with risk management.

MSFRM: Practical Focus

One of the newer graduate programs at the School of Business, the MS in Financial Risk Management (MSFRM) has placed emphasis on the growing needs of the business community. “In putting the degree program together, we took input from corporations and listened to what was of interest to them. What they told us was that we needed to keep the program focused on the practical, not the theoretical,” says Jud Saviskas, Executive Director for the School of Business at UConn Stamford.

Students are in agreement with the importance of practical experience. Rodrigo Toledo researched risk management programs at other universities but found UConn to be unique: “Risk Management is a very young profession so there are only a few schools that offer this type of program, and I found many of them to be very theoretical. The MSFRM [at UConn] incorporates interaction with professionals. That is one of the most important aspects of the program,” he says.

Kashif Ali, ’13 MSFRM, a Fulbright scholar from Pakistan, agrees. “I transferred from a very academic program in Nebraska. UConn is faster-paced and everyone has industry experience, from the professors to speakers in the classroom.” As part of their course requirements, students work on company-sponsored team projects and interact with guest speakers from organizations such as IBM, UBS, GE Capital, the Connecticut State Controller’s Office, the City of Hartford, and Atlantic Asset Management.

In addition to guest speakers during class, the MSFRM program offers optional pre-class dinner discussions, providing a friendly, PowerPoint-free environment for open discussion and Q&A. The initiative has brought in a broad range of key executives from RBS, Morgan Stanley, Nomura, Country Risk Solutions, GE Energy Financial Services, and The Hartford, with one or two topics as the focus for each meeting. “One of our pre-class dinner discussions featured a professional with over forty years in the financial industry,” says Toledo. “It was completely amazing.”

With enrollment increasing each year since its inception, the MSFRM program now operates as a two-cohort system in Stamford and Hartford. With Hartford’s insurance and manufacturing industries demanding preparation for operational risk leadership roles, and Stamford’s financial sector requiring skills as they pertain to investment risk, the program is tailored to industry needs in each location. Distance learning technology has helped facilitate interaction between cohorts for courses that overlap, with a class physically taught at Stamford one week and virtually projected to the Hartford cohort, and vice versa the following week.

The MSFRM program has attracted a range of students, from recent graduates to professionals with as many as twenty-five years of risk management experience, though nearly all have some financial background. With approximately half of the students from countries across the globe including Canada, Chile, China, India, Oman, Pakistan, Turkey, and Vietnam, the program has a strong international presence.

Working in the commercial banking industry in Chile, Toledo wanted to study in the United States to learn about bigger financial markets, improve his knowledge, and seek new opportunities. “I was very surprised at how open the professors and directors are to everyone, asking for feedback from students and immediately open to new ideas,” he says.

Toledo is grateful for the support for international students as well: “There are so many opportunities to interact with other students and learn about other cultures from our peers. For instance, we had a party to celebrate the Chinese New Year.” Despite the distance, there is occasional opportunity for the Stamford and Hartford cohorts to interact—both groups found time among their work and studies to attend a women’s basketball game in Storrs.

Commenting on his transition as an international student, Ali shares a similar sentiment: “I feel like family here. We socialize and know what we want to do, so all of us are helping each other to get ahead.”


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GARP Interview: Prof. Chinmoy Ghosh of UConn Launches New Risk Management Master’s Program, Set to Commence this Fall

GARP Interview: Prof. Chinmoy Ghosh of UConn Launches New Risk Management Master’s Program, Set to Commence this Fall
CT Indian Life, Vol. 4, No. 1

The UConn MSFRM program will place more emphasis on practical applications, and operational and behavioral issues in risk management. Through collaboration with the financial services industry in the State of Connecticut, the program will provide a forum for interaction of academics and practitioners to focus on the practice of creating economic value by managing exposure to risk.


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UConn Unveils Degree of Risk

Stamford Advocate

With the public skittish about the the nation’s financial markets, the University of Connecticut believes the time couldn’t be better to introduce its new master’s degree program in financial risk management. The UConn School of Business this fall will start offering the 16-month program at the Stamford branch through a series of night and weekend classes. The UConn-Stamford campus hosted a reception to unveil the program Wednesday evening. READ MORE


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