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Winners and Losers
December 18, 2015
The Chief and Matty Weber talk White Sox and Cubs offseason moves and more. Rick Newman of Yahoo! Finance shares his opinions on the effectiveness of the Affordable Care Act, the Fed’s raising of the interest rates and government corruption. Finally, David Andalman of PTI Securities & Futures makes a rare Friday morning appearance to talk down markets.
Articles Referenced
Fed Raised Rates Without a Hitch, and It Only Took $105 Billion
Guests & Co-Hosts
Matt Weber
Matt Weber is currently the Executive Producer/Update Anchor for Stocks & Jocks. He is a diehard sports fan (Cubs, Bears and Bulls especially) and has worked for WSCR-AM 670 The Score, 120 Sports Network and Chicago Sports Webio while also appearing on Comcast Sportsnet Chicago. Matt has covered the Chicago Bulls, Chicago Cubs and the Chicago Marathon as a field reporter and has interviewed some of the biggest names in sports. Matt is a Chicago Bulls season ticket holder and currently lives in the Roscoe Village neighborhood on the Northside of the city. (more…)
Rick Newman
As a columnist for Yahoo! Finance, I explain how the momentous changes sweeping through the economy affect ordinary people–and what you can do about it. My latest book, Liberty For All: A Manifesto for Reclaiming Financial and Political Freedom, is a plea for everyone–have-a-lots, have-a-littles, and have-nots–to develop greater self-reliance and rediscover the genuine meaning of liberty in America. My prior book, Rebounders: How Winners Pivot from Setback to Success, explains how nearly everyone can get better at bouncing back from the adversities that are inevitable in business, avocations, relationships and life. These two books encapsulate my learning so far about the ways we all need to adapt in a Darwinian economy if we want to thrive and prosper.
Before starting at Yahoo! in 2013, I was Chief Business Correspondent for U.S. News & World Report, where I worked as a writer for more than 20 years. I’m also a frequent commenter on networks such as CNN, MSNBC, and Fox, plus a lot of local radio stations, where I try to extract meaning from the torrent of information that flows out of today’s media.
In more than 20 years as a journalist, I’ve ridden on submarines, flown on Air Force jets and tromped through mud with soldiers while covering the Pentagon. I’ve walked the halls on Capitol Hill and interviewed many of America’s top political and business leaders.
On September 11, 2001, shortly after I moved from Washington to New York to cover business, I saw the twin towers burning from a distance–then got summoned to Washington to help cover the Pentagon, which had been my beat just a couple months earlier. That evening, I watched the Pentagon burning from a distance, a perverse twofer. It felt humbling and inspiring to have a role covering the most newsworthy event in the nation in at least a generation.
When I covered the Pentagon, I won the Gerald R. Ford Prize for Distinguished Reporting on National Defense. I’ve also won awards from the National Press Club, the Society of Professional Journalists and the International Association of Firefighters. And I’ve been a finalist for the Livingston Award for Young Journalists and the National Magazine Award.
I grew up in Pittsburgh, which makes me a stalwart citizen of Steeler Nation. I graduated from Boston College in 1988 with degrees in English and economics, and wrote my senior thesis on Henry James. I recently came across that thesis in a stained cardboard box in my basement; it reminded me that liberal education is an underappreciated privilege. The Jesuits like to say that learning how to learn is the most important thing students can gain from education. These days, learning how to speak Chinese might be a close second, but when it comes to journalism, at least, the Jesuits are right.
My first book, which I co-authored with Don Shepperd, was Bury Us Upside Down: The Misty Pilots and the Secret Battle for the Ho Chi Minh Trail. It’s about a fascinating group of pilots who flew extremely hazardous, top-secret missions over North Vietnam in the late 1960s. Researching and writing that book taught me a lot about America’s most unpopular war, and about America itself. John McCain, who spent more than five years as a prisoner of war in North Vietnam, wrote the foreword. (That was before his 2008 presidential run.) Don was a great partner whom I still count as a valued friend.
After that, I wrote Firefight: Inside the Battle to Save the Pentagon on 9-11, with Patrick Creed, a volunteer firefighter and Army Reserve officer. Although I spent many days in the Pentagon after 9-11, this book was Pat’s idea. We met serendipitously and decided that with his knowledge of firefighting and my experience working in the Pentagon, we’d make a good team. While we were writing the book, Pat’s Army Reserve unit got activated and sent to Iraq for a year, ending up in a dangerous area during one of the bloodiest times of the U.S. operation there. Pat’s unit suffered some serious casualties and Pat himself was injured in a roadside bombing. It made our work on the book harder, but more meaningful. Pat has recovered and we both feel gratified to have provided the most detailed account on record of what happened inside the nation’s military headquarters after American Airlines Flight 77 slammed into the building on 9-11. Writing that book with Pat was a moving and important experience.
I’m not sure what big projects I’ll work on in the future, but humanity provides so much rich material that I feel confident I’ll find fascinating work for as long as I’m lucky enough to practice journalism.
David Andalman
Technical Analyst, DACS Research, PTI Securities & Futures
David Andalman joins the Stocks & Jocks show every Monday and Wednesday morning. He was born and raised in Chicago, Illinois and earned his bachelor's degree in Engineering from the University of Illinois, and then his MBA in Finance and Marketing from Indiana University. David traded for a year at the MidAmerica Commodity Exchange before starting the DACS Research Newsletters on commodity futures, which were the first all-technical research newsletters at the CME. Currently, he has been a senior wealth manager and portfolio strategist for over 23 years. He holds registrations in Series 3, 4 (Options Principal), 7, 55, 63 and is a registered Commodity Trading Advisor. Read more.
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