The Gerald Loeb Award is given annually for multiple categories of business reporting: "News or Wire Service" in 2002, "News Services Online Content" in 2003–2007, "News Services" in 2008–2014, "Online" in 2008–2009 and 2013–2014, "Online Commentary and Blogging" in 2010, "Online Enterprise" in 2011–2012, and "Blogging" in 2011–2012.
Gerald Loeb Award winners for News or Wire Service (2002)
edit- 2002: "Muddy Markets: How Companies Mislead and Manipulate Their Shareholders with Inadequate and Selective Deisclosure" by Jonathan Berr, Adam Levy, Peter Robison, Russell Hubbard and Neil Roland, Bloomberg News[1]
- Articles in Series:
- "Raytheon Briefed Analysts Without Telling the Public",[1] March 9, 2001[2]
- "Raytheon SEC Probe May Test New Disclosure Rules, Analysts Say",[1] March 14, 2001[3]
- "Enron CEO Skilling Takes Company in New Directions",[1] May 1, 2001[4]
- "U.S. Earnings Reports Miss Point — How Much Did Company Earn?",[1] August 3, 2001[5]
- "Enron Investors Say Lay Must Deliver on Earnings Transparency",[1] October 15, 2001[6]
- "SEC to Charge Company With Misleading `Pro Formas'",[1] December 18, 2001[7]
- "SEC to File First Fair Disclosure Case, Pitt Says",[1] December 24, 2001[8]
- Articles in Series:
Gerald Loeb Award winners for News Services Online Content (2003–2007)
edit- 2003: "SuperModels" by Jon D. Markman, CNBC on MSN Money[9]
- 2004: "The Flimflam Man" by Adrian Cox, David Evans and Abhay Singh, Bloomberg News[10]
- 2004: "Risky Rx" by Chris Adams and Alison Young, Knight Ridder Washington Bureau[10]
- 2005: "Exposing Small-Cap Fraud" by Carol S. Remond, Dow Jones Newswires[11]
- 2006: "LAX Loans" by Frank Bass, Dirk Lammers and Larry Margasak, The Associated Press[12]
- Articles in Series:
- "Sept. 11 recovery money went to small business unaffected by the disaster", September 8, 2005[13]
- "Congress to investigate Sept. 11 loan program", September 9, 2005[13]
- "Feds praise their Sept. 11 relief loan program but omit critical audit", September 13, 2005[13]
- "Small Business Administration ignores criticism of post-Sept. 11 loans", September 14, 2005[13]
- "Inspector general confirms that Sept. 11 loan recipients weren't hurt by attacks", December 28, 2015[13]
- Articles in Series:
- 2007: "Who Are the Short Sellers?" by Alistair Barr, MarketWatch[14]
Gerald Loeb Award winners for News Services (2008–2014)
edit- 2008: "Wall Street's Faustian Bargain" by Mark Pittman, Bob Ivry and Kathleen M. Howley, Bloomberg News[16]
- Articles in Series:
- "Subprime Securities Market Began as 'Group of 5' Over Chinese", December 17, 2007[17]
- "'Deal With Devil' Funded Carrera Crash Before Bust", December 18, 2007[17]
- "Bass Shorted Subprime to 'God, I Hope You're Wrong' Wall Street", December 19, 2007[17]
- "Rating Subprime Investment Grade Made 'Joke' of Credit Experts", December 20, 2007[17]
- "Savannah Cries About a Bicycle Left Behind in Reset of Subprime", December 21, 2007[17]
- Articles in Series:
- 2009: "Broken Promises" by William Selway and Martin Z. Braun, Bloomberg News[18]
- 2010: "Goldman, Moody's and the Collapse of the American Economy" by Greg Gordon, Kevin G. Hall and Chris Adams, McClatchy Newspapers[19]
- 2011: "Profiting from Fallen Soldiers" by David Evans, Bloomberg News[21]
- 2012: "Shell Games" by Brian Grow, Kelly Carr, Laurence Fletcher, Nanette Byrnes, Matthew Bigg, Joshua Schneyer, Cynthia Johnston and Sara Ledwith, Reuters[23]
- Articles in Archive:
- "A little house of secrets on the Great Plains", June 28, 2011[24]
- "America's Havens of Anonymity", June 2011[24]
- "Hub of Secrets: Wyoming", June 2011[24]
- "A nested network?", June 2011[24]
- "How two shell companies duped the Pentagon", June 28, 2011[24]
- "The bonds that turned to dust", August 15, 2011[24]
- "A Global Web", August 2011[24]
- "The mysterious charity behind Micalizzi's bonds", August 2011[24]
- "A modern day Monaco", August 2011[24]
- "Inside 'Secrecy Jurisdictions'", August 2011[24]
- "A Cautious Crackdown", September 8, 2011[24]
- "Nevada's big bet on secrecy", September 26, 2011[24]
- "Consultants with troubled pasts", September 2011[24]
- "Video: The businesses is booming in the Silver State", September 2011[24]
- "Interview: Sec. of State Ross Miller: Nevada is no "safe haven", September 26, 2011[24]
- "Mediscam: How criminals easily form fake companies to swindle millions from Medicare", December 2011[24]
- "States resist efforts", December 21, 2011[24]
- "Cracking Shells", December 2011[24]
- "A fraud within a fraud", December 21, 2011[24]
- "The energy baron's secret", December 28, 2011[24]
- "Peeling back the corporate veil", December 2011[24]
- Articles in Archive:
- 2013: "Inside Chesapeake Energy" by Brian Grow, Anna Driver, Joshua Schneyer, Janet Roberts, Jeanine Prezioso, David Sheppard and John Shiffman, Reuters[25]
- Articles in Series:
- "The energy billionaire's shrouded loans", April 18, 2012[26]
- "A lucrative deal for the CEO's financier", April 18, 2012[26]
- "The CEO's secret hedge fund", May 2, 1012[26]
- "The lavish leveraged life of Aubrey McClendon", June 7, 2012[26]
- "Energy rivals plotted to suppress land prices", June 25, 2012[26]
- "It's time to 'smoke a peace pipe'", June 25, 2012[26]
- Casualties of a 'land grab'", October 2, 2012[26]
- "Anatomy of Chesapeake's land grab", October 2, 2012[26]
- "For sale: 'worthless' acreage", October 2, 2012[26]
- "Video", October 2, 2012[26]
- Articles in Series:
- 2014: "Rigging the World's Biggest Market" by Liam Vaughan, Gavin Finch, Bob Ivry, and Ambereen Choudhury, Bloomberg News[27]
Gerald Loeb Award winners for Online (2008–2009, 2013–2014)
edit- 2008: "Keeping Up With The Wangs" by Art Lenehan, Anh Ly and Suzanne McGee, MSN Money[16]
- 2009: "Middle Class Crunch" by Art Lenehan, Peggy Collins, Aaron Whallon, Anh Ly, Elizabeth Daza, Joe Farro, Sean Enzwiler, Rachel Elson, Mark Baumgartner, Lauren Barack, Richard Conniff and Judi Hasson, MSN Money[18]
- 2013: "Ghost Factories" by Alison Young and Peter Eisler, USA Today[25]
- Articles in Series:
- "Long-gone lead factories leave poisons in nearby yards", April 19, 2012[28]
- "Lead in the soil", April 19, 2012[28]
- "How lead factories can pollute", April 19, 2012[28]
- "Interactive", April 19–20, 2012[28]
- "Card 1"
- "Card 2"
- "Card 3"
- "Card 4"
- "Card 5"
- "Card 6"
- "Card 6b"
- "Site 57: John T. Lewis/National Lead/Anzon"
- "Site 100: Loewenthal Metals, Chicago"
- "Site 150: Kansas City Smelting & Refining (Eagle-Picher)"
- "Site 20: Columbia Smelting (NYC/baseball diamond)"
- "Video: Danger: Invisible & Ignored"
- "Video: Failure to Protect the Public"
- "Video: Soil Testing: USA TODAY’s Findings"
- "Video: Case Study: Tyroler Metals, Cleveland"
- "Video: How USA TODAY Tested Soil"
- "Video: About Sanborn Maps"
- "Video: Philadelphia: John T. Lewis/National Lead"
- "Video: West Allis, WI: Allied Smelting"
- "Video: Chicago: Loewenthal Metals Corp."
- "Video: Portland, ORE: Multnomah Metal Co. Works"
- "Video: Carteret, NJ: U.S. Metals Refining Co."
- "Video: Philadelphia: White Brothers Smelting Co. and Thos. F. Lukens Metal"
- "Video: Minneapolis: Northwestern Smelting & Refining"
- "Video: EPA, state respond to lead smelter sites in New Jersey"
- "Video: Who is responsible for cleanups?"
- "About this project"
- "Soil Testing Methodology"
- "Some neighborhoods dangerously contaminated by lead fallout", April 20, 2012[28]
- "Lead in the body", April 20, 2012[28]
- "Contaminated soil", April 20, 2012[28]
- "Video: Ghost Factories: USA TODAY's soil testing findings", April 20, 2012[28]
- "What blood tests show", April 20, 2012[28]
- "Long-gone lead factories leave poisons in nearby yards", April 25, 2012[28]
- "Video: Ghost Factories: Invisible and ignored danger", April 25, 2012[28]
- "How lead factories can pollute soil", April 25, 2012[28]
- "Lead: The danger", April 25, 2012[28]
- "Lead in the soil", April 25, 2012[28]
- "Old lead factories may stick taxpayers with cleanup costs", December 19, 2012[28]
- Articles in Series:
- 2014: "Planet Money Makes A T-Shirt" by Kainaz Amaria, Alex Blumberg, Brian Boyer, Jacob Goldstein, Wes Lindamood, and Joshua Davis, NPR[27]
Gerald Loeb Award winners for Online Commentary and Blogging (2010)
edit- 2010: "Pogue's Posts" by David Pogue, The New York Times[19]
Gerald Loeb Award winners for Online Enterprise (2011–2012)
edit- 2011: "What They Know" by Julia Angwin, Emily Steel, Scott Thurm, Christina Tsuei, Paul Antonson, Jill Kirschenbaum, Jovi Juan, Andrew Garcia Phillips, Sarah Slobin, Susan McGregor, Tom McGinty and Jennifer Valentino-DeVries, The Wall Street Journal[21]
- Pieces Submitted:
- "The Web's New Gold Mine: Your Secrets", July 30, 2010
- "What They Know", July 30, 2010
- "A Short Guide to Cookies", July 30, 2010
- Pieces Submitted:
- 2012: "Jet Tracker" by Mark Maremont, Tom McGinty, Jon Keegan, Palani Kumanan, Sarah Slobin and Neil King Jr., The Wall Street Journal[23]
Gerald Loeb Award winners for Blogging (2011–2012)
edit- 2011: "Liveblogging Yahoo Earnings Calls in 2010 (They're Funny!)" by Kara Swisher, All Things Digital[21]
- Articles in Series:
- "Liveblogging the Yahoo Fourth-Quarter Earnings Call:Can You Say “Sequential”? (Also Homepage HoverOut!)", January 26, 2010[31]
- "Liveblogging Yahoo’s First-Quarter Earnings Call:Yahoo Paints by the Numbers!", April 20, 2010[31]
- "Liveblogging Yahoo’s Second-Quarter Earnings Call:How Do You Solve a Problem Like Flat Revenue?", July 20, 2010[31]
- "Liveblogging Yahoo’s 3Q Earnings: Busy, Busy, Busy(So Go Away, Tim Armstrong!)", October 19, 2010[31]
- Articles in Series:
- 2012: "Felix Salmon's Blog" Felix Salmon, Reuters[23]
References
edit- ^ a b c d e f g h "Journal reporters win Loeb for Enron Coverage". The Wall Street Journal. June 26, 2002. p. B6.
- ^ Berr, Jonathan (March 9, 2001). "Raytheon Briefed Analysts Without Telling the Public" (PDF). UCLA Anderson School of Management. Retrieved March 8, 2019.
- ^ Berr, Jonathan; Baer, Justin; Roland, Neil; Stamas, Vicky; Cruz, Phil (March 14, 2001). "Raytheon SEC Probe May Test New Disclosure Rules, Analysts Say" (PDF). UCLA Anderson School of Management. Retrieved March 8, 2019.
- ^ Levy, Adam (May 1, 2001). "Enron CEO Skilling Takes Company in New Directions" (PDF). UCLA Anderson School of Management. Retrieved March 8, 2001.
- ^ Robison, Peter (August 3, 2001). "U.S. Earnings Reports Miss Point -- How Much Did Company Earn?" (PDF). UCLA Anderson School of Management. Retrieved March 8, 2001.
- ^ Hubbard, Russell (October 15, 2001). "Enron Investors Say Lay Must Deliver on Earnings Transparency" (PDF). UCLA Anderson School of Management. Retrieved March 8, 2001.
- ^ Roland, Neil (December 18, 2001). "SEC to Charge Company With Misleading 'Pro Formas'" (PDF). UCLA Anderson School of Management. Retrieved March 8, 2001.
- ^ Roland, Neil (December 24, 2001). "SEC to File First Fair Disclosure Case, Pitt Says" (PDF). UCLA Anderson School of Management. Retrieved March 8, 2019.
- ^ a b "2003 Loeb Awards". UCLA Anderson School of Management. July 1, 2003. Archived from the original on April 12, 2019. Retrieved February 1, 2019.
- ^ a b "2004 Winners". UCLA Anderson School of Management. Archived from the original on August 26, 2012 – via Internet Archive.
- ^ "2005 Winners". UCLA Anderson School of Management. Archived from the original on December 16, 2005. Retrieved May 22, 2010 – via Internet Archive.
- ^ Lowe, Mary Ann (June 27, 2006). "2006 Gerald Loeb Award Winners Announced by UCLA Anderson School of Management". UCLA. Archived from the original on February 2, 2019. Retrieved February 1, 2019.
- ^ a b c d e Bass, Frank; Lammers, Dirk; Margasak, Larry (2005). "LAX Loans" (PDF). UCLA Anderson School of Management. Retrieved March 7, 2019.
- ^ "2007 Gerald Loeb Award Winners Announced by UCLA Anderson School of Management". Business Wire. June 25, 2007. Retrieved February 1, 2019.
- ^ a b c d Barr, Alistair (2006). "Who Are the Short Sellers?" (PDF). UCLA Anderson School of Management. Retrieved March 6, 2019.
- ^ a b "2008 Gerald Loeb Award Winners Announced by UCLA Anderson School of Management". Fast Company. October 28, 2011. Retrieved February 1, 2019.
- ^ a b c d e Pittman, Mark; Ivry, Bob; Howley, Kathleen M. (2007). "Wall Street's Faustian Bargain". UCLA Anderson School of Management. Retrieved March 5, 2009.
- ^ a b "Loeb Winners". UCLA Anderson School of Management. June 29, 2009. Archived from the original on February 2, 2019. Retrieved February 1, 2019 – via Internet Archive.
- ^ a b "Early Loeb winners: NYT's Sorkin and Pogue". Talking Biz News. June 29, 2010. Retrieved February 3, 2019.
- ^ a b c Gordon, Greg; Hall, Kevin G.; Chris, Adams (2009). "Goldman, Moody's and the Collapse of the American Economy" (PDF). UCLA Anderson School of Management. Retrieved March 5, 2019.
- ^ a b c "Loeb Award Winners". UCLA Anderson School of Management. June 28, 2011. Archived from the original on March 21, 2019. Retrieved February 2, 2019.
- ^ a b c Evans, David (2010). "Profiting from Fallen Soldiers" (PDF). UCLA Anderson School of Management. Retrieved March 4, 2010.
- ^ a b c "UCLA Anderson Announces 2012 Gerald Loeb Award Winners". UCLA Anderson School of Management. June 26, 2012. Archived from the original on April 12, 2019. Retrieved February 2, 2019.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u Grow, Brian; Carr, Kelly; Fletcher, Laurence; Bigg, Matthew; Schneyer, Joshua; Johnston, Cynthia; Ledwith, Sara (2011). "Shell Games" (PDF). UCLA Anderson School of Management. Retrieved March 9, 2019.
- ^ a b "UCLA Anderson School of Management Announces 2013 Gerald Loeb Award Winners". PR Newswire. June 25, 2013. Retrieved February 2, 2019.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j Grow, Brian; Driver, Anna; Schneyer, Joshua; Roberts, Janet; Prezioso, Jeanine; Sheppard, David; Shiffman, John (2012). "Inside Chesapeake Energy" (PDF). UCLA Anderson School of Management. Retrieved March 10, 2019.
- ^ a b "UCLA Anderson School of Management Announces 2014 Gerald Loeb Award Winners". UCLA Anderson School of Management. June 24, 2014. Archived from the original on February 1, 2019. Retrieved January 31, 2019.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Young, Alison; Eisler, Peter (2012). "Ghost Factories" (PDF). UCLA Anderson School of Management. Retrieved March 10, 2019.
- ^ a b c Pogue, David (2009). "Pogue's Posts" (PDF). UCLA Anderson School of Management. Retrieved March 5, 2009.
- ^ a b c Maremont, Mark; McGinty, Tom; Keegan, Jon; Kumanan, Palani; Slobin, Sarah; King Jr., Neil (2011). "Shell Game" (PDF). UCLA Anderson School of Management. Retrieved March 9, 2019.
- ^ a b c d Swisher, Kara (2010). "Liveblogging Yahoo Earnings Calls in 2010 (They're Funny!)" (PDF). UCLA Anderson School of Management. Retrieved March 5, 2019.
- ^ a b c d Salmon, Felix (2011). "Felix Salmon's Blog" (PDF). UCLA Anderson School of Management. Retrieved March 9, 2011.