Roman L. Weil

Roman Lee Weil, Jr. (born May 22, 1940)[1] is an American economist, accountant, consultant, and Emeritus faculty member of Booth School of Business at the University of Chicago, especially known for his work on bond duration.[2][3]

Biography

Roman L. Weil was born in 1940 in Montgomery, Alabama, to Roman L. Weil, Sr. and Charlotte Alexander Weil (the sister of architect Cecil Alexander).[1] He graduated from Sidney Lanier High School in Montgomery in 1958.[4] Weil obtained in 1962 his BA in economics and mathematics from Yale University, in 1965 his MA in industrial administration, and in 1966 his PhD in economics both at the 1966 from the Tepper School of Business at Carnegie Mellon University. In 1973 he became a Certified Public Accountant, and in 1974 a Certified Management Accountant.[5]

Weil started his academic career at the Booth School of Business in 1965, and worked there until his retirement in 2008. Since then he teaches at Princeton University and the University of California, San Diego.[5] Weil also serves on several boards.[5]

Selected publications

  • Weil, Roman L. Handbook of modern accounting. Ed. Sidney Davidson. McGraw-Hill, 1977.
  • Davidson, Sidney, Clyde P. Stickney, and Roman L. Weil. Financial accounting: An introduction to concepts, methods, and uses. Dryden Press, 1979.
  • Davidson, Sidney, Clyde P. Stickney, and Roman L. Weil. Accounting: The language of business. (1987).

Articles, a selection:

  • Fisher, Lawrence, and Roman L. Weil. "Coping with the risk of interest-rate fluctuations: returns to bondholders from naive and optimal strategies." Journal of Business (1971): 408-431.
  • Weil, Roman L. "Macaulay's duration: An appreciation." Journal of Business (1973): 589-592.
  • Ingersoll, Jonathan E., Jeffrey Skelton, and Roman L. Weil. "Duration forty years later." Journal of Financial and Quantitative Analysis 13.04 (1978): 627-650.

References

  1. "Personals". Montgomery Advertiser. 24 May 1940. p. 9.
  2. Ibbotson, Roger G., and Rex A. Sinquefield. "Stocks, bonds, bills, and inflation: year-by-year historical returns (1926-1974)." Journal of Business (1976): 11-47.
  3. Vasicek, Oldrich A., and H. Gifford Fong. "Term structure modeling using exponential splines." The Journal of Finance 37.2 (1982): 339-348.
  4. "Montgomery Man Earns PhD Degree". Montgomery Advertiser-Journal. Montgomery, Ala. 5 June 1966. p. 5B.
  5. Roman L. Weil, biography. Accessed 16.12.2014.
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