Meredith Whitney

CEO

Birthday November 20, 1969

Birth Sign Scorpio

Birthplace Summit, New Jersey, United States

Age 54 years old

Nationality United States

#38762 Most Popular

1969

Meredith Ann Whitney (born November 20, 1969) is an American businesswoman and financial analyst.

1987

She graduated from Madeira School in 1987, before attending a post-graduate year at Lawrenceville School, becoming a member of its first co-ed graduating class.

1992

She graduated with honors from Brown University in 1992 with a B.A. in History.

1993

Whitney joined Oppenheimer Holdings in 1993 as a Director, and in 1995 she joined the company's Specialty Finance Group.

1998

In 1998, she left Oppenheimer to become an Executive Director at Wachovia.

2004

Whitney returned to Oppenheimer in 2004, where she researched banks and brokers as a Managing Director.

2005

On February 12, 2005, Whitney married professional wrestler John Layfield in Key West, Florida.

Layfield is a former professional wrestler, WWE Champion, former WWE color commentator, and fellow Fox News Channel contributor.

2007

She is known for successfully forecasting the financial crisis of 2007–2008, and was dubbed “The Oracle of Wall Street” by Bloomberg.

Whitney grew up in Bethesda, Maryland.

Whitney issued a particularly pessimistic, but accurate, research report on Citigroup on October 31, 2007, to which many Wall Street analysts, and the news media, paid attention.

She noted that the bank's dividends paid out to investors were greater than its profits at the time, and made the case that this would lead to bankruptcy.

Shortly after the report's publication and a sharp drop in Citigroup's stock, Charles Prince resigned as the bank's CEO and his successor slashed the dividend.

Earlier that year, Forbes magazine had listed Whitney as the second-best stock picker in the capital-market industry.

2008

Whitney's extremely bearish view on banks landed her on the cover of the August 18, 2008, issue of Fortune magazine.

Even before the problems that befell Merrill Lynch and Lehman Brothers in September, she said, "It feels like I'm at the epicenter of the biggest financial crisis in history."

That year, Fortune listed her among the "50 Most Powerful Women in Business", The New York Post listed her among the "50 Most Powerful Women in New York City", and a CNBC viewer survey named her as "Power Player of the Year" over Jamie Dimon, Ben Bernanke, and Hank Paulson.

2009

She resigned from Oppenheimer on February 19, 2009, to establish her own firm, Meredith Whitney Advisory Group (MWAG), where she produced company-specific equity research on financial institutions and analyzed the sector's operating environment.

Citigroup stock went on to lose 97% of its value by early 2009.

2010

On December 19, 2010, in an interview on the CBS television program 60 Minutes, Whitney stated that 50 to 100 counties, cities, and towns in the United States would have "significant" municipal bond defaults totaling "hundreds of billions" of dollars, and that "it'll be something to worry about within the next 12 months."

Since the record amount of municipal bond defaults in one year was just over $8 billion at the time, Whitney's comments about hundreds of billions in defaults briefly shook the market and drew a great deal of attention, much of it critical.

According to Michael Lewis in Vanity Fair: "Many of the articles attacking her accused her of making a very specific forecast — as many as a hundred defaults within a year! — that failed to materialize... But that's not at all what she had said: her words were being misrepresented so that her message might be more easily attacked. 'She was referring to the complacency of the ratings agencies and investment advisers who say there is nothing to worry about,' said a person at 60 Minutes who reviewed the transcripts of the interview for me, to make sure I had heard what I thought I had heard. She says there is something to worry about, and it will be apparent to everyone in the next 12 months."

"A tale of two Americas is emerging: one weighed down by debt and facing de minimis economic growth and another brimming with opportunity and nimble to invest in the future."

2013

In 2013, Whitney de-registered MWAG and started her own hedge fund, Kenbelle Capital LP.

This was the thesis to Whitney's 2013 book, Fate of the States: The New Geography of American Prosperity. She argued that a "new map of prosperity" was emerging in the wake of the financial bust, with jobs moving away from the coasts and toward 17 "central corridor" states in the Midwest and Mountain West.

Whitney's municipal debt thesis is still considered valid by at least one analyst.

2015

In December 2015, she joined Bermudian insurer Arch Capital Group as a manager overseeing outside investment firms.

From 2021–2022 Whitney was CFO of Kindbody, a high-growth health and technology company.

2018

In January 2018 S&P Global published an analysis by Mercer Capital titled "Meredith Whitney is Still Right."