Louise Cooper (financial analyst)
Louise Cooper is a British Chartered Financial Analyst, journalist, and Times columnist, known for her work on the BBC World Service between 2002 and 2011 as a presenter and senior economics journalist for shows including Newshour and Europe Today. She writes a regular column for newspaper The Times and publishes the financial blog CooperCity.
She came to the attention of the public in 2011 while working for BGC Partners as a Senior Financial Analyst, appearing from their offices to provide opinion and economic insight on TV for major broadcasters such as BBC News, ITV News, Al-Jazeera, Sky News and CNBC among others. She garnered praise for her no-nonsense style and the ability to break down complex business stories for a wider audience. Cooper is often quoted in the media, commenting on complex financial issues such as Greek debt.[1] billion dollar corporate mergers,[2] gender equality in pay[3] and the impact of finance on football[4]
Life and career
Cooper attended the Cass Business School graduating with first class honours in Business and Finance in 1992. From there she moved to Goldman Sachs working in UK Equity Institutional Research Sales. In 1999 she moved to The Money Channel, working as a presenter until 2001. In June 2002 she joined the BBC World Service Radio station as a Senior Business Journalist, she remained there until 2011 when she joined Lansons Communication as the Head of Lansons Live.[5]
In June 2011 Cooper moved to BGC Partners as a Senior Financial Analyst, where she came to prominence on British Television, providing financial analysis from the BGC offices. Cooper featured on BBC News, Sky News, ITV, CNBC and Al Jazeera. She has also made appearances on The Daily Politics[6] where she described then UKIP leader Nigel Farage as 'laughable' for his comments denying discrimination against women working in London's financial sector.[7] She has also appeared on ITV's Daybreak as well as Question Time and This Week. In August 2011 an article was published by the Mail on Sunday, calling Cooper the 'Downturn Diva' and the 'New face of the global economic downturn'.[8]
After leaving BGC Partners in November 2012,[9] Cooper published her blog CooperCity[10] and has written articles for a number of newspapers and websites, including The Guardian,[11] The Daily Mail,[12] CNN,[13] The Spectator and City A.M..[14] She also writes a regular column for The Times[15] and works as a keynote speaker and host.[16]
References
- ↑ "FTSE CLOSE: Market hits its second-highest close ever after benign inflation data; no Greek debt breakthrough yet". This Is Money.
- ↑ Feldsted, Andrea; Thomas, Daniel. "New group no nimble operator". FT.com.
- ↑ "Microsoft CEO apologizes for gender pay gap comments". Yahoo Finance.
- ↑ Clinch, Matt. "Man Utd manager leaves after disastrous season". CNBC.
- ↑ Mattinson, Alec. "Lansons Live appoints BBC journalist Louise Cooper as new head". PR Week.
- ↑ "Women working in financial markets: Farage and Cooper". BBC.
- ↑ Graham, Georgia. "Nigel Farage is 'laughable' for saying women are not discriminated against in the City". The Telegraph.
- ↑ "As shares fall her stock rises: Louise, the downturn diva... a new rival to Robert Peston". Mail Online.
- ↑ "A welcome return to City inboxes as Louise Cooper goes it alone". City AM.
- ↑ Cooper, Louise. "CooperCity". CooperCity.
- ↑ "Louise Cooper Profile". The Guardian.
- ↑ Cooper, Louise. "LOUISE COOPER: Britain's banks have truly experienced a year of horrors, but the crisis is far from over". Mail Online.
- ↑ Cooper, Louise. "Barclays' bankers: No longer the Wayne Rooneys of finance". CNN.
- ↑ Cooper, Louise. "Fiscal honesty has emerged from the US deficit debates". City AM.
- ↑ Cooper, Louise. "Buy the rumour and sell the fact: why Spain and Italy are fizzing". The Times.
- ↑ "Louise Cooper". Specialist Speakers.