1999 65438+ 10 Mr. Lin joined Oliver Wyman Consulting; The company has also set up an electronic risk management department to provide consulting and network analysis tools for banks and energy enterprises. As the founder and president, Mr. Lin is responsible for business strategy, marketing, customer relations, business and product development. He left the electronic risk management department in April 2002, but retained his status as a member of the company.
From 1995 to 1998, Mr. Lam served as the chief risk manager of Fidelity Investment, which is the largest fund company in the world with assets of 700 billion US dollars. Magazines such as The Economist, PricewaterhouseCoopers Review and Risk Magazine called his work at Fidelity the best practice in case studies. Prior to joining Fidelity, he was the Chief Risk Manager of FGIC Capital Market Services Company of General Electric.
Mr Lam is also the author of the book Enterprise Risk Management published by Wiley, which became the top ten bestseller list of management books, major books and websites two months after its release. 1997 global risk management experts association awarded Mr. Lin the honor of financial risk manager of the year. He often speaks at industry conferences and appears on TV and newspapers. Mr. Lin has published many articles, including more than 50 articles and book chapters. He is the author of many books, including Modern Risk Management: A Historical Review (co-authored with Nobel Prize winners Markowitz, modigliani and Samuelson) and Derivatives Handbook (co-authored with alan greenspan and merton miller). He has been mentioned many times in The Wall Street Journal, Financial Times, CFO Magazine and American Banker.
Mr. Lin received a Bachelor of Science degree in Business Administration from Baruch College with the highest honors, and an MBA degree from UCLA. He teaches at Harvard Business School and is the object of a case study. In addition, he is an associate professor of finance at Babson College, teaching risk management and advanced derivatives to graduate students.