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| Spring 2000 issue | . | The Reformer: Paul Schultz | |
LINKS: Notre Dame Department of Finance
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A framed letter of complaint hangs on the wall of Paul Schultzs
office. It chides him for harboring "a fundamental lack of understanding" of the
way financial markets work, and its signed by the president of Nasdaq (National
Association of Securities Dealers Automated Quotation system), the worlds second
largest stock market.The letter evokes amused pride in Notre Dames John W. and Maude Clarke Professor of Finance. It was written in response to an article Schultz wrote in 1994, with another finance professor, that suggested brokers might be overcharging buyers of over-the-counter stocks. In early 1999, the fallout from that article was summarized this way in a story in the financial journal, Barrons Weekly: "Who says academics can't make things happen? The five years since a couple of finance professors began circulating their suspicions that Nasdaq makers were profiting from maintaining artificially wide spreads on customers' trades have seen no less than a restructuring of the Nasdaq, which is spending $100 million on improved surveillance, a record $1.03 billion settlement of a class-action investor lawsuit with dealers alleged to have overcharged them, and $26.3 million in SEC fines against 28 securities firms." Shultz was teaching at Ohio State when he and Vanderbilts William Christie wrote their article citing evidence that Nasdaq traders were artificially rigging prices to sweeten sales profits. The Justice Departments antitrust division quickly launched an investigation; even quicker than that, Schultzs telephone was ringing with calls from lawyers planning to file suits on behalf of aggrieved investors. Gathered ultimately into one class-action suit, an out-of-court settlement was announced early in 1999. By then, the Justice Department had wrapped up its probe, and sweeping changes in the rules governing share trading were in place. Since 1998 Schultz has been on the faculty of Notre Dames College of Business Administration, where he teaches courses in market microstructure and corporate finance. His current research is focused on day traders, an Internet-inspired phenomenon that sees some investors buying and selling securities frequently throughout the trading day in search of quick profits. Schultz seldom alludes in the classroom to his role in the legal settlement that has benefitted somewhere between 100,000 and a million investors. But re-entering his office after class, he sometimes glances at the framed letter and indulges in a smile. |
Photo by Rob Finch | |
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