Paul Johnson – Fordham Now https://now.fordham.edu The official news site for Fordham University. Mon, 28 Apr 2025 16:42:39 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://now.fordham.edu/wp-content/uploads/2015/01/favicon.png Paul Johnson – Fordham Now https://now.fordham.edu 32 32 232360065 Empowering Women in Finance: Fordham Launches Student-Managed Value Investing Fund https://now.fordham.edu/business-and-entrepreneurship/empowering-women-in-finance-fordham-launches-student-managed-value-investing-fund/ Thu, 24 Apr 2025 14:17:40 +0000 https://now.fordham.edu/?p=204095 Students at the Gabelli School of Business will soon have a new way to gain hands-on experience in portfolio management.

This semester, the Gabelli Center for Global Security Analysis worked with the Fordham investment office to establish a $500,000 fund to be managed and invested exclusively by the Fordham chapter of Smart Woman Securities, a student club whose mission is to educate undergraduate women on finance through weekly seminars, mentoring initiatives, and exposure to successful professionals and businesses. 

The fund is the result of a generous gift to the University’s endowment from Mario Gabelli, a 1965 graduate of the Fordham business school that now bears his name.

“We are deeply grateful to Mario Gabelli for his generosity in creating this opportunity for our students,”said Lerzan Aksoy, Ph.D., dean of the Gabelli School of Business. “By entrusting our undergraduate students with real investment decisions, this fund enhances our value investing program and empowers future women leaders in finance.”

The Smart Woman Securities Value Fund is distinct from Fordham’s Student Managed Investment Fund (SMIF)—a global fund that encompasses stocks, bonds, and alternative assets. The new fund is designed to be an equity fund and, unlike SMIF, a two-semester undergraduate course, will be managed through the Smart Woman Securities (SWS) club. Both funds complement the Gabelli School’s academic concentration in value investing, giving students an opportunity to put classroom learning into action.

Paul Johnson, a faculty member and executive director of the Gabelli Center for Global Security Analysis, championed the Fordham club for its track record of excellence and growth.

“Getting to know the SWS women well, I recognized that they have earned the opportunity and are the right home for the fund,” Johnson said. “The more time I spent with them, the more I was amazed. They are completely bootstrapped, completely self-managed, with almost no outside support—the women that run SWS are incredibly impressive.”

The fund was introduced at an April 1 networking reception at the Lincoln Center campus that brought together students and alumni of SMIF and SWS. Since 2010, SMIF has helped many Fordham graduates launch careers in finance

This spring, SWS leadership is focused on building the infrastructure for executing the fund, Johnson said. That includes drafting an investment memorandum with input and guidance from the Fordham investment office and faculty advisors, finalizing investment criteria, choosing analysts and portfolio managers, and training students to source and pitch investment ideas. 

“We are so proud to launch the SWS investment fund, an incredible milestone for our chapter,” said Raimy Little, the club’s chief executive officer. “While other SWS chapters nationwide do have funds, the significance for the club at Fordham is profound.”

She said the club is aiming to finish developing its training curriculum in the summer, with an eye toward investing money by the end of the year. 

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Blockchain Could Become the New Standard for Banking, Expert Says https://now.fordham.edu/fordham-magazine/blockchain-could-become-the-new-standard-for-banking-expert-says/ Tue, 05 Jun 2018 18:08:00 +0000 https://news.fordham.sitecare.pro/?p=90973 Blockchain technology has “explosive” potential to become the new standard for business transactions and even lay the groundwork for a completely new banking industry in developing nations, according to a May 23 presentation at Fordham.

“We could have the banking industry—which is incomplete in a lot of developing countries—skip some of the steps we went through in the West, and go right to blockchain technology,” said Paul Johnson, a 35-year veteran of the investment community and an adjunct professor at the Gabelli School of Business.

Johnson, a senior advisor with the financial services firm Harbor Peak, spoke to 140 students and alumni of diverse academic and professional backgrounds at the Lincoln Center campus as part of the Fordham at the Forefront lecture series.

In the lecture, titled “Bitcoin, Blockchain, and the Future of Business,” he described the new capabilities brought about by blockchain, a dispersed online system in which transactions are made both more secure and more transparent because information about them is open and stored across the network.

In the developed world, blockchain will take costs and layers out of all sorts of transactions, such as real estate and importing and exporting, Johnson said. Much of its impact will be behind the scenes, he said.

And in the developing world, “it’s quite possible [blockchain]it will become the backbone to a new banking institution,” he said. “Much of its capabilities are yet to be seen.”

He added that it’s too soon to translate blockchain into money-making opportunities, and noted that some aspects of blockchain—such as how to resolve disputes—still need to be ironed out.

“There’s a difference between recognizing its importance and then trying to monetize the trend,” Johnson said.

Bitcoin Risks

Acknowledging the buzz around bitcoin, a digital currency used for blockchain transactions, Johnson advised investors to be cautious, referring to it as a “cultural artifact—a collectible like a Jackson Pollock painting”—rather than a currency.

“It has value because the community has given it value,” he said. “But it’s hard to determine the value of these things that have cultural appeal.”

Johnson offered similar advice about ICOs, or initial coin offerings, which are created through blockchain technology. Like an initial public offering, an ICO is a fundraising tool in which a company sells digital tokens to raise capital rather than issuing shares of ownership. So instead of acquiring equity in a company, purchasing ICOs is like buying a voucher for something that has a finite economic value—“a haircut, a movie ticket, or a ride on a ferris wheel,” for example.

“You can actually buy them, they look like bitcoin and are based on the idea that blockchain is really important,” he said. “That’s where ICOs are in the sweet spot of sucking people in. That causes me concern.”

Johnson attributed the bitcoin rage to “FOMO,” or the fear of missing out, a powerful emotional driver that moves many to make investment decisions without fully understanding what they are buying.

“It’s not some sort of magical currency,” he said, “and if you don’t know what you’re buying, you have the potential to lose a lot of money.”

One attendee, attorney Mike Krieger, LAW ’77, noted that blockchain could cut out the intermediaries in personal and business transactions, bringing “huge cost savings” but also “major declines in certain jobs related to work now done by these intermediaries.”

At the Gabelli School, Johnson teaches courses on digital currency, blockchain technology, and value investing. His students are working on a project called Jesuit Token that will use blockchain technology to promote community service University-wide. The goal, he said, is to incentivize and reward 25 million hours of community service in the next 20 years.

-Claire Curry

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