Profile
Dr. Gregory L.
Batey is Chief Investment Officer & Managing Director at Munder Capital Management, Inc. Prior to joining Munder Capital, Dr. Batey led fixed income portfolio strategy, quantitative and market research groups at JP Morgan, Chase Manhattan Bank, and Lehman Brothers in New York, London and Hong Kong.
He has expert knowledge of fixed income portfolio management, risk management, and performance measurement and attribution.
His investment strategy and research expertise has been recognized by numerous industry publications, including by being named best fixed income strategist in the Institutional Investor All Asia Poll and top Asia fixed income research team by Asia Debt Review and Global Finance.
Dr. Batey is a seasoned professional with wealth of experience in fixed income quantitative analysis, investment strategy, market and credit research and product development spanning domestic and international markets.
Dr. Batey earned a B.S.
from the University of Michigan in Engineering and a Ph.D.
from Stanford University in Engineering Economic Systems.
Former positions of Gregory Linn Batey
| Companies | Position | End |
|---|---|---|
Munder Capital Management
Munder Capital Management Investment ManagersFinance Munder Capital Management offers a variety of investment disciplines including large-, mid-, and small-cap growth, small-cap value, international equity and taxable and municipal fixed income. Generally, securities are identified for equity accounts through a variety of fundamental factors such as earnings growth, capital efficiency and valuations. More subjective factors are often considered, such as the quality of the business model, competitive profile and quality of management. Technical factors are also often utilized, such as a company’s relative valuation, momentum and market sentiment. Portfolio construction is monitored and managed through risk controls such as overall tracking effort relative to the portfolio’s benchmark and maintaining discipline on targeted sector exposure, position size and capitalization. Fixed income strategies begin with a view of the economic fundamentals, which may be influenced by the Federal Reserve Bank’s policy intentions, inflation intentions and growth expectations and then key risks are identified, such as regulatory risks, merger and activity risks, and sovereign or contagion risks. These views lead to decisions on how to position a portfolio on the yield curve, opportunistic sector allocations to take advantage of any price discrepancies and, ultimately, security selection. Securities are generally selected by identifying securities with a low probability of a negative credit event, using a proprietary financial ratio model to identify purchase and sale candidates, and searching the market for individual pricing inefficiencies. | Head-Fixed Income Invts | 2010-03-27 |
Training of Gregory Linn Batey
Experiences
Positions held
Active
Inactive
Listed companies
Private companies
Connections
1st degree connections
1st degree companies
Male
Female
Members of the board
Executives
Linked companies
| Private companies | 3 |
|---|---|
Munder Capital Management
Munder Capital Management Investment ManagersFinance Munder Capital Management offers a variety of investment disciplines including large-, mid-, and small-cap growth, small-cap value, international equity and taxable and municipal fixed income. Generally, securities are identified for equity accounts through a variety of fundamental factors such as earnings growth, capital efficiency and valuations. More subjective factors are often considered, such as the quality of the business model, competitive profile and quality of management. Technical factors are also often utilized, such as a company’s relative valuation, momentum and market sentiment. Portfolio construction is monitored and managed through risk controls such as overall tracking effort relative to the portfolio’s benchmark and maintaining discipline on targeted sector exposure, position size and capitalization. Fixed income strategies begin with a view of the economic fundamentals, which may be influenced by the Federal Reserve Bank’s policy intentions, inflation intentions and growth expectations and then key risks are identified, such as regulatory risks, merger and activity risks, and sovereign or contagion risks. These views lead to decisions on how to position a portfolio on the yield curve, opportunistic sector allocations to take advantage of any price discrepancies and, ultimately, security selection. Securities are generally selected by identifying securities with a low probability of a negative credit event, using a proprietary financial ratio model to identify purchase and sale candidates, and searching the market for individual pricing inefficiencies. | Finance |
Stanford University
Stanford University Other Consumer ServicesConsumer Services Functions as a College/University | Consumer Services |
University of Michigan
University of Michigan Other Consumer ServicesConsumer Services Functions as a College/University | Consumer Services |
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