NYU Conference on Chinese Capital Markets

Transcription

NYU Conference on Chinese Capital Markets
NYU Conference on Chinese Capital Markets
Kimmel Center, 60 Washington Square South, New York, May 31, 2011
Registration:
8:30 AM
Opening Remarks:
9:00 AM
Panel 1:
9:15 – 10:30
Rosenthal Pavilion, 10th Floor, Kimmel Center
Panel 3:
2:00 -3:15
Prof. Paul Wachtel, Stern School, NYU
“Synchronicity in Chinese Equity Markets”
John Sexton, President, NYU
David Denoon, Director, NYU Center for U.S.-China Relations
Honoring Mr. Wenliang Wang, Chairman, Rilin Group
Mr. Minjian Bi, Head, CICC Investment Bank, “Trends in the
Chinese Equity and Bond Markets”
Chinese Commercial and Government Banks Moderator: Amb. J. Stapleton Roy, former U.S. Ambassador to
China and Director, Kissinger Center, Smithsonian Institution
Carl Walter, JP Morgan, “How Do the Distinctive Features
of the Chinese Capitalism Affect Equity Markets?”
Dr. Zuzana Fungacova, Transition Economies
Research, Bank of Finland, “What Is the Future for
Chinese Commercial Banks?”
Coffee Break
3:15-3:30
Profs. David Backus & Thomas Cooley, Stern School, NYU,
“Demographic Change and Savings Rates: the U.S. and China”
Panel 4:
3:30-4:45
Mr. Xiaojun Huang, First V.P. and Head of Research, New York
Branch, Bank of China, “Issues Ahead For Chinese Banks”
Chinese Non-Bank Financial Institutions Moderator: Amb. Nicolas Platt, former President of
the Asia Society
Mary W. Darby, Chazen Institute, Columbia University,
“What Role Will Foreign Firms Play in China’s Financial
Future?”
Prof. Wei Xiong, Princeton University, “Likely Future
Patterns in Derivative Use in China”
Prof. Yingmao Tang, Peking Univ. Law School, “The Legal
Framework for Foreign Investment in Chinese Financial
Institutions”
Xuan Wang, Chief N.Y. Representative, China Continent
Insurance Co., “Trends in the Chinese Insurance Industry”
Anla Cheng, CEO, Sino-Century China Private Equity,
“Recent Patterns in China’s Private Equity Market”
Luncheon
12:00-2:00
Capital Flows and Foreign Investment in Chinese
Financial Institutions Moderator, Jerome Cohen, Co-Director, Asia Law Institute,
NYU School of Law
Prof. Yiping Huang and Xun Wang, Economics Dept.,
Peking Univ. “Capital Controls & Deregulation of Chinese
Financial Markets”
Coffee Break
10:30-10:45
Panel 2:
10:45-12:00
Chinese Equity and Bond Markets –
Moderator, Francis Zou, Partner, White and Case
Keynote Speaker Peter G. Peterson, Former Chairman, Blackstone Group,
Chairman, Peter G. Peterson Foundation, “Global Debt
and Its Implications” To be introduced by Amb. Winston Lord,
former U.S. Ambassador to China
Closing Remarks
4:45-4:50
Closing Reception
5:00-6:00
David Denoon “Next Steps in Research on Chinese
Capital Markets”
Rm 914, Kimmel Center
DAVID BACKUS
David Backus is the Heinz Riehl Professor in the
economics group of New York University's Stern
School of Business. His interests include international
capital flows and markets, fixed income and currency
derivatives, and Asian and Latin American economic
history. Prior to joining Stern in 1990, he studied at
Hamilton College (BA, 1975) and Yale University
(PhD, 1981), taught at Queen's University and the
University of British Columbia, and served at the
Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. He is currently
an editor of the Review of Economic Dynamics and a
research associate of the National Bureau of Economic
Research. He grew up in Pittsburgh and remains an avid follower of the Pirates
and Steelers.
MINGJIAN BI
Mr. Bi is Senior Advisor of the firm’s US office and is
currently in charge of the CICC’s North American
investment banking operations based in New York.
Mr. Bi was co-head of Investment Banking and a
member of CICC’s management committee from 1999
to 2005. Mr. Bi has led many landmark transactions
including equity and debt offerings, M&A and
corporate restructuring. Before joining CICC, Mr. Bi
worked in the area of agriculture and rural
development in the World Bank in Washington D.C.
and in China’s Ministry of Agriculture.
ANLA CHENG
As founder and partner of Centenium Capital Partners,
LLC, Ms. Cheng runs an Asian Hedge and Alternative
Strategy Fund of Funds under Centenium Asia Fund,
acts as financial advisor to multi-strategy Asian funds
and conducts investment banking activities for Asian
financial institutions. Centenium fund of funds invests
in alternative funds (hedge funds, private equity and
arbitrage) throughout the Asia Pacific region including
Japan, India and China. Centenium also raises funds
from US institutional investors, US endowments, and
family offices for direct investment in Asian hedge and
alternative funds. . In addition, Ms. Cheng is partner of
Centenium-Pinetree China Private Equity with offices in Shanghai and Beijing.
Prior to founding Centenium Capital Partners, LLC, Ms. Cheng founded Cheng
Capital which specialized in Asian hedge fund of funds. Previous to this, she
worked at Robert Fleming, New York as SVP and head of Japan/Taiwan/Korea
Institutional Sales Group. She started her career at Goldman Sachs on the
GNMA bond desk, moved onto Citgroup, first as an Pacific Basin analyst, then
later, as Asian portfolio manager. Ms. Cheng graduated from Wharton Graduate
School of Business, MBA, and Pratt Institute, magna cum laude. She speaks,
English, Chinese and Japanese. She is a trustee of the following Boards: China
Institute; Facing History and Ourselves; The Riverdale Country Day School; The
Committee of 100 and Museum of Chinese in Americas. She has been past Board
Chair of ThinkQuest, and Trustee of The Browning School and the New York
Community Trust.
JEROME COHEN
Of counsel in the Corporate Department, Jerome A.
Cohen concentrates in business law relating to Asia
and has long represented foreign companies in contract
negotiations and dispute resolution in China, Vietnam
and other countries in East Asia. He is also a law
professor at New York University School of Law and a
senior fellow for Asia Studies at the Council on
Foreign Relations.
At NYU, he teaches courses on "Legal Problems of
Doing Business With China and East Asia" and
"International Law - East and West." He has published
several books and articles on Chinese law as well as a general book, China Today,
co-authored with his wife, Joan Lebold Cohen. In 1990 he published Investment
Law and Practice in Vietnam.
Mr. Cohen was visiting law professor at Doshisha University in Kyoto in 1971-72
and an honorary law professor at the University of Hong Kong in 1979. From
1979 to 1981, he took part in various trade and investment contract negotiations
and taught a course on international business law, in the Chinese language, for
Beijing officials. Mr. Cohen has been advisor to the Government of Sichuan
Province, China; chairman of the American Arbitration Association's China
Conciliation Committee; a member of the Panel of Arbitrators of both the China
International Economic and Trade Arbitration Commission and the China
Securities Regulatory Commission in Beijing; a trustee of the China Institute in
America; a trustee of the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace; and a
director of the National Committee on U.S.-China Relations. He also formerly
served as chairman of the New York/Beijing Friendship (Sister City) Committee,
a trustee of The Asia Society, a corporate director of the Japan Society, the vice
chairman of the Advisory Council for The Johns Hopkins-Nanjing University
Joint Center in China and a member of the Board of Editors of both the China
Quarterly and the American Journal of International Law. He continues to serve
on the Advisory Board of Human Rights Watch - Asia.
THOMAS COOLEY
Thomas F. Cooley is the Paganelli-Bull Professor of
Economics at the Leonard N. Stern School of Business
at New York University, as well as a Professor of
Economics in the NYU Faculty of Arts and Science.
He served as Dean of the Stern School from 2002 to
January 2010. Before joining Stern, he was a Professor
of Economics at the University of Rochester,
University of Pennsylvania, and UC Santa Barbara.
Prior to his academic career, he was a systems engineer
for IBM Corporation. He is a Research Associate of
the National Bureau of Economic Research and a
member of the Council on Foreign Relations. He is
also the former President of the Society for Economic Dynamics, a Fellow of the
Econometric Society and holds an honorary doctorate from the Stockholm School
of Economics. He is a widely published scholar in the areas of macroeconomic
theory, monetary theory and policy and the financial behavior of firms. He also
writes a weekly opinion column for Forbes.com.
MARY WADSWORTH DARBY
Mary Wadsworth Darby is Founder and Managing
Director of Peridot Asia Advisors. Peridot Asia
Advisors is a business strategy consulting and financial
advisory firm tht assist clients dealing with greater
China and other countries in Asia. Ms.Darby has lived
and worked in Asia for more than 25 years focussing
primarily in the financial services industry and with
several Fortune 100 companies. She has developed
strategic business plans for many companies, advised
on market opening strategies and negotiated numerous
significant and complex transactions in excess of $5bn
with her Chinese counterparts. She was in the first
group of US business to travel to China after the historic Nixon-Kissinger opening
and has been conducting business in China since then. Before founding Peridot,
Mary Wadsworth Darby worked for Morgan Stanley in Firm Management in New
York City and for Morgan Stanley Investment Management in Hong Kong. She
was also Executive Director of the America-China Society, an organization
devoted to the promotion of relations between the US and China chaired by Henry
A. Kissinger and the late Cyrus R. Vance.
Ms. Darby is also a Senior Research Scholar , Jerome A. Chazen Institute,
Columbia Business School and she has lectured on multi-cultural negotiations
and" how to negotiate with the Chinese"and researches Chinese capital markets.
Mary Wadsworth Darby serves on a number of educational and non-profit
Boards and she is a member of the Council on Foreign Relations. She
has an excellent command of Mandarin.
DAVID DENOON
David Denoon is Professor of Politics and Economics
at New York University and Director of the NYU
Center on U.S.-China Relations. He has a B.A. from
Harvard, an M.P.A. from Princeton, and a Ph.D. from
M.I.T.; and has served in the Federal Government in
three positions: Program Economist for USAID in
Jakarta, Vice President of the U.S. Export-Import Bank,
and Deputy Assistant Secretary of Defense.
Professor Denoon is a member of the Council on
Foreign Relations, the National Committee on U.S.China Relations, the International Institute for Strategic
Studies (London), the Asia Society, the U.S.-Indonesia Society, and is CoChairman of the New York University Asia Policy Seminar.
He is also Chairman of the Editorial Advisory Board of Great Decisions. He is
the author and editor of seven books, including Real Reciprocity - Balancing
U.S. Economic and Security Policy in the Pacific Basin. He has two recent
books, a monograph titled The Economic and Strategic Rise of China and India
(Palgrave-Macmillan) and an edited volume, China: Contemporary Political,
Economic, and International Affairs (NYU Press).
ZUZANA FUNGACOVA
Zuzana Fungacova has been an economist with the
Bank of Finland Institute for Economies in Transition
in Helsinki since 2007. She completes research
projects concerning the financial sector in emerging
markets.
XIAOJUN HUANG
Dennis Huang is the First Vice President and Head of
Research at Bank of China New York. He is also the
director of BOC Group’s New York Training Center, a
member of its Asset/Liability Committee, Credit
Review Committee and New Product Development
Committee, and has participated in the strategic
planning process for the bank’s U.S. business
expansion. Prior to his career in Bank of China, Mr.
Huang worked in both the Chinese and U.S. securities
industries and was involved in the pioneering work of
launching the Shenzhen Stock Exchange in China. Mr.
Huang is an elected board member of China’s Society
of International Finance. He has co-authored and published three financial books
in Chinese, and Euromoney Yearbook used his article as a reference for
institutional investors. Mr. Huang completed graduate work in Wuhan University
focusing on the modern Chinese economy and received his Master degree of
Finance in the Baruch College, CUNY. He also has obtained Portfolio
Management Certificate and Bank Strategies Certificate from NYU and Wharton,
U Penn, respectively.
YIPING HUANG
Yiping Huang is professor of economics at the
National School of Development, Peking University.
Before returning to academia in June 2009, he was a
managing director and chief
Asia economist for
Citigroup, based in Hong Kong. And previously he
was the General Mills International Visiting Professor
at the Columbia Business School, Director of the
China Economy Program at the Australian National
University and a policy analyst with the Research
Center for Rural Development of the State Council of
China. His current research focuses on
macroeconomic policy and international finance issues.
He has been consultant to various departments of the Chinese government and
several international organizations such as the World Bank, the IMF, the ADB
and the OECD. He has published numerous books and journal articles, including
'Growth without miracles' (Oxford University Press) and 'Agricultural reform in
China' (Cambridge University Press). Yiping received his master of economics
from the Renmin University of China and phd in economics from the Australian
National University.
PETER G. PETERSON
Peter G. Peterson is Founder and Chairman of the
Peter G. Peterson Foundation whose mission is
focused on “undeniable, unsustainable and
untouchable” threats to the nation’s fiscal and
economic future and to future generations of
Americans. He is Chairman Emeritus and Co-founder
of The Blackstone Group, a private investment
banking firm. He is the Chairman Emeritus of the
Council on Foreign Relations (having served as
Chairman from 1985-2007). He is also founding
Chairman of the Peterson Institute for International
Economics (Washington, D.C.) and founding President
of The Concord Coalition. Mr. Peterson was the Co-Chair of The Conference
Board Commission on Public Trust and Private Enterprise (Co-Chaired by John
Snow, formerly Secretary of the Treasury). He was also Chairman of the Federal
Reserve Bank of New York from 2000 to 2004.
Prior to founding Blackstone, Mr. Peterson was Chairman and CEO of Lehman
Brothers (1973-1977) and later Chairman and CEO of Lehman Brothers, Kuhn,
Loeb Inc. (1977-1984). He was Chairman and CEO of Bell and Howell
Corporation from 1963 to 1971. In 1971, President Richard Nixon named Mr.
Peterson Assistant to the President for International Economic Affairs. He was
named Secretary of Commerce by President Nixon in 1972. Mr. Peterson
graduated from Northwestern University with a B.S. (summa cum laude) in
1947. He received his Masters in Business Administration with honors in 1951
from the University of Chicago.
Mr. Peterson is the author of several books, including Running On Empty: How
the Democratic and Republican Parties are Bankrupting Our Future and What
Americans Can Do About It; Gray Dawn: How the Coming Age Wave Will
Transform America – and the World; Will America Grow Up Before It Grows
Old?; Facing Up: How to Rescue the Economy from Crushing Debt and Restore
the American Dream; and, his recently published memoir, The Education of an
American Dreamer: How a Son of Greek Immigrants Learned His Way from a
Nebraska Diner to Washington, Wall Street and Beyond.
AMBASSADOR NICHOLAS PLATT
AMBASSADOR J. STAPLETON ROY
After a 34 year Foreign Service career, Nicholas Platt
served for twelve years at the helm of the Asia Society
before becoming President Emeritus on July 1, 2004.
Trained in Chinese (Mandarin) at the State Department
Language School 1962-63, he began his career in Asia
as a China Analyst at the U.S. Consulate General in
Hong Kong from 1964-68. In 1972 he accompanied
President Nixon on the historic trip to Beijing that
signaled the resumption of relations between the
United States and China. He was one of the first
members of the U.S. Liaison Office in Beijing when
the United States established a mission there in 1973.
He served in Canada and Japan, and as U.S. Ambassador to Zambia
(1982-1984), the Philippines (1987-91) and Pakistan (1991-92). Educated at
Harvard College and Johns Hopkins SAIS, he is a member of the New York
Council on Foreign Relations, a board member of Scenic Hudson and of the
Friends of China Heritage Fund Limited, as well as Chair of the US-China
Education Trust Advisory Board. Ambassador Platt and his wife Sheila have
three grown sons: Adam, a writer; Oliver, an actor and Nicholas Jr., an
investment banker; and eight grandchildren. His memoir China Boys was
published in March 2010.
Ambassador J. Stapleton Roy is Director of the
Kissinger Institute on China and the United States at
the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars
in Washington, DC. He retired from the Foreign
Service in January 2001 after four and a half decades
with the U.S. Department of State. Mr. Roy served as
the U.S. ambassador to Singapore (1984-86), the
People’s Republic of China (1991-95), and Indonesia
(1996-99). In 1996, he was promoted to the rank of
Career Ambassador, the highest rank in the Foreign
Service. Ambassador Roy’s final post with the State
Department was as Assistant Secretary for Intelligence
and Research. He joined the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars
in September 2008 to head the newly created Kissinger Institute. He is also a
Senior Adviser to the consulting firm Kissinger Associates, Inc. In 2001 he
received Princeton University’s Woodrow Wilson Award for Distinguished
Public Service.
JOHN SEXTON
John Sexton, the fifteenth President of New York
University, also is the Benjamin Butler Professor of
Law and NYU Law School's Dean Emeritus, having
served as Dean for 14 years. He joined the Law
School's faculty in 1981, was named the School's Dean
in 1988, and was designated the University's President
in 2001.
Before coming to NYU, President Sexton served as
Law Clerk to Chief Justice Warren Burger of the
United States Supreme Court (1980-1981), and to
Judges David Bazelon and Harold Leventhal of the
United States Court of Appeals (1979-1980). For ten years (1983-1993), he
served as Special Master Supervising Pretrial Proceedings in the Love Canal
Litigation. From 1966 - 1975, he was a Professor of Religion at Saint Francis
College in Brooklyn, where he was Department Chair from 1970-1975.
President Sexton is passionate about teaching; indeed, he may be the only
university president who teaches at least a full faculty schedule. In Academic
Year 2010-2011, he is teaching four full courses.
YINGMAO TANG
Mr. Yingmao Tang is associate professor at Peking
University Law School. Prior to joining the faculty of
Peking University Law School, Prof. Tang was a
practicing lawyer with Sullivan & Cromwell LLP and
an in-house counsel for China International Capital
Corporation. Prof. Tang’s research areas include crossboarder finance transactions and regulations, crossboarder mergers & acquisitions and the Chinese
judicial system. Prof. Tang has recently been involved
in the research of nuclear law and policy in China.
Prof. Tang received his LL.B. and his LL.M from
Peking University Law School in 1997 and 1999, and
his LL.M and J.S.D. from Yale Law School in 1999 and 2004.
PAUL WACHTEL
Paul Wachtel is a professor of economics and the Jules
Backman Faculty Research Fellow at New York
University Stern School of Business. He teaches
courses in monetary policy, banking and central
banking and global macroeconomics.
Prorfessor Wachtel has been with NYU Stern for more
than 30 years. He has served as the chairperson of the
Economics Department and as Vice Dean for Program
Development at Stern and was also the chairperson of
the University Faculty Council.
His primary areas of research include monetary policy,
central banking, and financial sector reform in
economies in transition. He is the author of several books, including Banking In
Transition Economies: Developing Market Oriented Banking Sectors in Europe
(Edward Elgar, 1998). His writing has been published in numerous journals,
including, most recently, International Finance, Journal of Banking and Finance,
and Journal of Money Credit and Banking. He is also an associate editor of
Japan and the World Economy and the proceedings editor for the Dubrovnik
Economic Conferences. He has been a research associate at the National Bureau
of Economic Research, a senior economic advisor to the East West Institute, and
a consultant to the Bank of Israel, the IMF and the World Bank.
Professor Wachtel received his bachelor of arts from Queens College, his Master
of Arts in economics from the University of Rochester, and his Doctor of
Philosophy from the University of Rochester.
XUAN WANG
Xuan Wang is the Chief Representative of the New
York Liaison Office of CCIC (China Continent
Insurance Company) which is the fifth biggest C&P
insurance company in China and a member of China
Reinsurance Group. In 2007, Mr. Wang found this
office, which is one of the only two Chinese insurance
institutions in U.S.. Wang leads the office to develop
the business relationship with the American insurance
industry, to look for the cooperation opportunities with
the American business partners and to do research
about the American insurance market.
Wang joined CCIC as the Deputy General Manager of
Business Management Department in 2004 and supervised underwriting and
marketing of non-automobile insurance products. In 2005, he became the
General Manager of Suzhou Branch. In 2006, he became the Deputy General
Manager of the Major Project Department. The responsibility was to develop the
market of the major projects.
Prior to joining CCIC, Wang had worked for PICC ( The People’s Insurance
Company of China) for over 12 years. He was the General Manager of
Marketing Department of the Shaanxi Branch and was in charge of developing
non-auto insurance market in Shaaxi Province. Wang also worked in many other
departments including Planning & Statistic Department, R&D Department,
Property Insurance Management Department, International Business
Department. He once designed the uniform Employer Liability Insurance
Product for PICC.
Wang graduated from Northwest University in China and has a Master degree of
Economics. Now he is attending the EMBA program in U.S.. His publication
includes “The Problems in the Development of the Chinese Trust Industry”,
“How the Chinese Trust Industry Develops healthily”, “The Innovation and
Reform of the Insurance Industry in China ”.
Mr. Wang is the director member of The Finance Committee of China General
Chamber of Commerce—U.S.A. and the Member of the Chinese Insurance
Brokers Association.
XUN WANG
Xun Wang is a PHD candidate of economics at the
National School of Development, Peking University.
He will serve as a post doc from this september at the
China Economic Research Center(CERC) of
Stockholm School of Economics. Before that, he was a
management trainee of Consumer Market Knowledge
(CMK), Procter & Gamble, based in Guangzhou. His
research interests focus on Chinese economy and
international finance issues. He has published several
journal articles, including “What determine China’s
inflation”(China Economic Journal) and “Nominal and
real return on China’s foreign reserves”(Journal of
Economic Research). He has been the research assistant of Development and
Research Center of the State Council and the Research Section of China Finance
40 Forum. Xun Wang received his master of economics from the Sun Yat-set
University.
WEI XIONG
Wei Xiong is a professor of economics in the
Department of Economics and the Bendheim Center
for Finance, Princeton University. His research
interests center on capital market imperfections. His
earlier papers cover economic mechanisms of
speculative bubbles, effects of stock price bubbles on
managerial incentives and firm investment, asset
market contagion, limited investor attention, nonstandard investor preferences, and China's financial
markets. He is currently researching financial crises
driven by dynamic coordination problems between
creditors, bubbles and short-term credit booms,
delegated asset management, and financialization of commodities markets. He
received his Ph.D. from Duke University in 2001. He is a research associate of
the National Bureau of Economic Research and the finance editor of
Management Science.
FRANCIS ZOU
Francis Zou is a partner in the Bank Finance Practice
Group and Bank Regulatory Practice Group of White
& Case's New York office. He advises major
international commercial banks and corporate
borrowers in investment grade, leveraged or structured
financing transactions, receivables financings and other
trade financings, and debt restructurings. In addition,
he advises foreign banks in connection with their
applications to the Federal Reserve and the applicable
federal or state bank chartering authorities to establish
presence in the US and in connection with their
strategic expansion in the US. Mr. Zou also has
substantial experience in corporate and financial institution mergers and
acquisitions, asset finance, private placements and SEC-registered offerings of
debt, equity and convertible securities, and derivatives transactions.
Representative clients of Mr. Zou include leading Chinese banks and
corporations and Taiwanese banks operating in the US, N.V. Bank Nederlandse
Gemeenten, Landesbank Baden-Württemberg, Norddeutsche Landesbank, and
Rabo Bank.
Registered Attendees
J. Achacoso
D. Alpert
J. Bai
D. Beim
C. Booth
P. Bracken
J. Carpenter
M. Cheah
A. Chan
A. Chen
B. Chen
K. Chen
J. Chen
P. Chen
R. Chen
P. Chow
G. Chu
J. Connorton
N. Consonery
B. Cutter
R. De La Gueronniere
G. Denoon
J. Feng
R. Foroohar
P. Friend
K. Froewiss
P. Gaudet
D. Guo
F. Han
I. Hasan
J. Hsiung
B. Jin
D. King
E. La Roche
N. Lateef
E. Lew
J. Li
R. Liao
Affliliation
USAFTC
Westwood Capital
NY Fed
Columbia
Korea Society
Yale
NYU
Sun America
Hong Kong Economic and Trade Office
Columbia
Reuters
Societe Generale
WSR
Morgan Stanley
BNP Paribas
NYU
Sino-Century China Private Equity
Hawkins, Delafield
Eurasia Group
Roosevelt Institute
New Providence Asset Management
NYU
Goldman Sachs
Time
New Providence Asset Management
NYU
Axonic Capital
NYU
NYU
Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute
NYU
Rutter Associates
Poten & Partners
CICC
Foreign Policy Association
NYU
Maxim Group
Rutgers
E. Lincoln
J. Lipman
M. Liu
S. Liu
Z. Liu
B. Lloyd
X. Luo
H. Malin
Y. Mao
L. Miller
S. Moon
J. Mukherji
M.I. Nadiri
H. Pan
T. Qi
D. Savino
R. Schneiderman
K. Schoenholtz
L. Shen
S. Shin
L. Song
J. Sun
A. Tang
Y. Tang
I. Walter
D. Wang
K. Wang
S. Wei
R. Woo
T. Wu
N. Xuan
J. Ye
Q. Zheng
T. Zhu
X. Zhu
NYU
NYU
Columbia
Columbia
China Merchant's Bank
Harding Loevner
ICBC
NYU
NYU
Avascent Internatioanl
Harding Loevner
S&P
NYU
Rhodium Group
CICC
Governors LLC
Newsweek
NYU
NYU
Morgan Stanley
Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute
Morgan Stanley
Committee of 100
Fordham
NYU
NYU
Fordham
Columbia
Sino-Century China Private Equity
Columbia
NYU
NYU
China Merchant's Bank
Goldman Sachs
SKIM Analytical