UPDATED: June 4, 2026

Originally published in Carroll Capital, the print publication of the Carroll School of Management at Boston College. .听


On May 1, a long, rectangular room on the upper floor of Yawkey Athletics Center was fizzing with ideas. Speakers offered insights on such questions as how new developments on the world stage will affect portfolios and pocketbooks.

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Watch videos from the 2026 conference and read presenter bios on the 2026 Finance Conference website.

The occasion was the 19th annual Boston College Finance Conference, hosted by the Carroll School of Management鈥檚 Seidner Department of Finance. Featured presenters included former United States Ambassador to China Nicholas Burns, MCAS 鈥78, H 鈥02, P 鈥09, 鈥12, and Nobel laureate in economics Paul Romer, the Seidner University Professor.

The conference also showcased a community that reassembles each year for conversation and fellowship in their field. Nearly 175 alumni鈥攜oung, old, and in-between鈥攖urned out. So did faculty of the Seidner Department of Finance, ranked 6th nationally in its discipline by U.S. News and World Report. Also present were students, mostly grad-level.

鈥淔or me, it鈥檚 about the community,鈥 said Kate Warren 鈥25, sitting at one of the many round tables inside the Robert J. Murray 鈥62 and Family Function Room. She was with Lindsay Kinum 鈥25 and Robert Mullen 鈥08, MBA/MSF 鈥15, coworkers at Boston-based Trivalent Investments. 鈥淚t鈥檚 great to meet people in the industry and get their ideas鈥攁nd see my old professors,鈥 she said.

Burns, who is the Roy and Barbara Goodman Family Professor of the Practice of Diplomacy and International Relations at Harvard University, spoke of how we are moving from 鈥渁 world order to a world of disorder鈥 triggered by wars and splintering alliances. Romer, who directs the Carroll School鈥檚 Center for the Economics of Ideas, discussed the digital revolution鈥檚 impact on knowledge creation. Noted investment advisor Richard Bernstein, the global head of macro investing and custom strategies at Janus Henderson Investors, predicted higher inflation and recommended short-term bonds and equities.

Other speakers and interlocutors included Carroll School Finance Professor Paul Schmelzing, who presented his longitudinal research documenting how interest rates have fallen steadily through seven centuries; Marc Seidner, MCAS 鈥88, P 鈥24, chief investment officer of non-traditional strategies and managing director at PIMCO鈥檚 Newport Beach office; Daniel E. Holland III, MCAS 鈥79, P 鈥07, 鈥08, chief operating officer of Shield Capital; and John and Linda Powers Family Dean Andy Boynton 鈥78, P 鈥13.

The dean said in closing remarks, 鈥淚 hope you learned a lot鈥攁nd met old friends and new friends.鈥

Visit bc.edu/financeconference for more.


William Bole is the director of marketing and communications at the Carroll School of Management and the editor-in-chief of .听

Photography by Dominic Chavez.听

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