Diana B.
Henriques of The New York Times
to receive Lifetime Achievement Award;
Minard Editor
Award honoree is Martin Peers of The
Information;
Loeb Awards banquet on October 10 in New York
City will celebrate honorees and reveal competition winners
live.
LOS
ANGELES, Aug. 22, 2024 /PRNewswire/ -- The G.
and R. Loeb Foundation Inc. and UCLA Anderson School of Management
today announced two career honorees and 41 competition finalists of
the 2024 Gerald Loeb Awards for Distinguished Business and
Financial Journalism.
Loeb Awards announce 2024 finalists &
career honorees for highest honors in business journalism in
the United States.
The Loeb Awards banquet and celebration will be held on
Thursday, October 10, 2024, at the
Rainbow Room in New York City.
The winning journalists and outlets in each competition category
will be announced during the banquet and not in advance. The
evening will also include tributes to the career achievements of
Diana B. Henriques and Martin Peers. Held atop Rockefeller Center for
the first time in the foundation's history, the awards ceremony
will be hosted by Tyler Mathisen,
co-anchor of CNBC's Power Lunch. Additional presenters from
television news will be announced in the coming weeks via the Loeb
Awards Newsroom SMS, LinkedIn and X (formerly
Twitter).
Visit theloebawards.com for the official 2024
Loeb Awards invitation and complete information about tickets,
tables, sponsorship opportunities and tribute journal
advertising. Ticket and table discounts are available for all
media outlets, journalists, finalists and judges. The G. and
R. Loeb Foundation Inc. is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization
established in 1957 by the late Gerald
Loeb, a founding partner of E.F. Hutton. The foundation
relies on banquet sponsorships and sales of tables and
tickets as primary sources of support to continue the
operation and administration of the Loeb Awards.
The Loeb Awards were created to encourage and support reporting
on business and finance that inform and protect the private
investor and the general public. The awards are considered the
highest honor in business journalism in the United States. In 1973, Gerald Loeb appointed UCLA Anderson the steward
of the G. and R. Loeb Foundation.
Career Achievement Honorees
The 2024 Lifetime Achievement Award recipient is
Diana B. Henriques, retired
senior writer for The New York
Times. The Lifetime Achievement Award recognizes a
journalist whose career exemplifies the consistent superior insight
and professional skills necessary to further the understanding of
business, financial and economic issues.
With a career spanning more than five decades, Henriques has
made significant contributions to business journalism through her
investigative reporting on white-collar crime, market regulation
and corporate governance. After graduating from the Elliott School of International Affairs at George
Washington University in 1969, she worked for several weekly
and daily newspapers in New
Jersey, including the Trenton Times. In 1982,
she joined the business news staff at The Philadelphia
Inquirer. Her talent for financial reporting led her in 1986 to
Barron's, where she further honed her skills before
joining The New York
Times in 1989.
At the Times, Henriques became a prominent figure in the
business section, covering complex and impactful financial stories,
such as the Enron scandal and the 2008 financial crisis. She
produced an investigative series in 2004 that led to legislative
reforms and financial reimbursements for defrauded American
military personnel. She was also part of the Times team that
won the 1999 Loeb Award for Deadline and/or Beat Writing.
Her best-selling book, The Wizard of Lies, and its
subsequent adaptation into an HBO film further cemented her
reputation as a leading voice in financial journalism. Henriques'
involvement with Investigative Reporters and Editors (IRE), the
Journalism and Women Symposium (JAWS) and the Society for Advancing
Business Editing and Writing (SABEW) highlight her commitment to
the industry and mentoring of young journalists.
Henriques' recognition as recipient of the Lifetime Achievement
Award underscores her exceptional ability to make Wall Street's
most intricate practices understandable to the general public. Her
dedication to holding the powerful accountable is a symbol of
journalistic integrity.
Martin Peers, co-executive
editor of The Information, will receive the 2024 Lawrence
Minard Editor Award. Created in memory of Lawrence "Laury"
Minard, founding editor of Forbes Global and a former final
judge for the Loeb Awards, this award recognizes excellence in
business, financial and economic journalism editing. It honors an
editor whose work does not often receive public recognition.
An Australian native, Peers began his journalism career in 1982
with several newspapers there before moving to the United States. After a stint at the New
York Post's business section, he covered the business side of
the entertainment industry for Daily Variety and
Variety in New York through
the second half of the nineties. He then spent 15 years at The
Wall Street Journal, first as a reporter and later as deputy
editor of the financial analysis section, Heard on the Street,
before becoming the media and marketing bureau chief. Peers was
part of a team of Journal reporters who won the
Pulitzer Prize for explanatory reporting in 2003.
In 2014, Peers joined The Information playing a pivotal
role in shaping the budding newsroom, initially as a columnist and
later as managing editor. In his current role as co-executive
editor, he is dedicated to supporting his team in pushing
boundaries and pursuing excellence in their work. At the same time
he continues to probe the intersection of media, technology and
finance with his nightly Briefing newsletter.
Peers' collaborative style, knack for synthesizing complex
topics and mentorship of young journalists have elevated the
quality of journalism at his publications and inspired a new
generation of reporters. His career trajectory exemplifies the
exceptional editorial leadership celebrated by the Minard Editor
Award.
2024 Competition Finalists
The following Loeb Awards finalists were selected from 491
entries, representing the work of over 200 journalists across
local, regional, national and global media outlets in various
formats:
AUDIO CATEGORY
"Spellcaster" – Bloomberg News and
Wondery
Hannah Miller,
Annie Massa, Max Chafkin, Chris
Seigel, Russell Finch,
Rachel B. Doyle, Mark Milian and Jeff
Grocott
"Head Down: A Two-Part Investigation into the Migrant Guest
Worker Program" – Futuro Investigates and
Prism
Fernanda Echavarri,
Patricia Sulbaran, Tina Vasquez, Andrea López-Cruzado, Peniley
Ramírez, Maria Hinojosa, Sofía
Sánchez and Roxana Aguirre
"The Uncertain Hour, Season 6: The Welfare-to-Work Industrial
Complex" – The Uncertain Hour, Marketplace/American Public Media
and APM Research Lab
Krissy
Clark, Peter Balonon-Rosen,
Grace Rubin, Michael May, Elisabeth
Gawthrop, Alyson Clary,
Caitlin Esch, Chris Julin, Muna
Danish, Marque Green, Tiffany
Bui, Jayk Cherry,
Catherine Winter and Sam Anderson
BEAT REPORTING CATEGORY
"The Pentagon's Struggle: Confronting an Era of Rising Global
Threats and Rapid Warfighting Innovation" – The New York Times
Eric Lipton
"The Musk Industrial Complex" –
Reuters
Marisa
Taylor, Steve Stecklow,
Norihiko Shirouzu, Hyunjoo Jin,
Rachael Levy, Kevin Krolicki, Waylon
Cunningham, Koh Gui Qing and Marie
Mannes
"The Dark Side of Meta's Algorithms" – The Wall Street
Journal
Jeff Horwitz and
Katherine Blunt
BREAKING NEWS CATEGORY
"The Collapse of Credit Suisse" – Financial
Times
Arash Massoudi,
Stephen Morris, Laura Noonan, James
Fontanella-Khan and Owen
Walker
"The Bankman-Fried Verdict" – The
New York Times
David Yaffe-Bellany, Matthew Goldstein, J. Edward Moreno, David
Streitfeld and Erin
Griffith
"The New Banking Crisis" – The Wall Street
Journal
Rachel Louise
Ensign, Corrie Driebusch, Meghan
Bobrowsky, Telis Demos,
Ben Foldy, AnnaMaria Andriotis, Miriam Gottfried, David
Benoit, Ben Eisen and
Justin Baer
"United Auto Workers Strike" – The Washington
Post
Jeanne Whalen,
Lauren Gurley, Rachel Lerman, Hanna
Zakharenko and Staff of The Washington Post
COMMENTARY CATEGORY
"The Economic Challenges and Successes of American Women and
Families" – The Washington Post
Catherine Rampell
"The Help Desk" – The Washington
Post
Geoffrey A.
Fowler
"How to Revive America's Comatose Downtowns" – The
Washington Post
Heather
Long and Sergio Peçanha
EXPLANATORY CATEGORY
"Bad Medicine" – Bloomberg
News
Kendall Taggart,
Priyanka Pulla, Peter Robison, Zachary
Mider, Anna Edney,
Riley Griffin, Swati Gupta and Modou
Joof
"The Obesity Revolution" – STAT
Elaine Chen, Megan
Molteni, Nicholas Florko,
Isabella Cueto and Matthew Herper
"AI Is a Lot of Work" – The Verge and New York
Magazine
Josh Dzieza
FEATURE CATEGORY
"Ford's Electric Pickup Uses Metal That's Damaging the
Amazon" – Bloomberg News
Sheridan Prasso and Jessica Brice
"Inside the Psychiatric Hospitals Where Foster Kids Are a
'Gold Mine'" – Mother
Jones
Julia Lurie
"American Icon" – The Washington Post
Staff of
The Washington Post
"Inside an OnlyFans Empire: Sex, Influence and the New
American Dream" – The Washington Post
Drew Harwell
INTERNATIONAL CATEGORY
"Indian Companies Are Bringing One of the World's Most Toxic
Industries to Africa" – The
Examination, The Museba Project and Ghana Business
News
Will Fitzgibbon,
Christian Locka and Emmanuel K. Dogbevi
"Cyprus Confidential" – International Consortium of
Investigative Journalists, Organized Crime and Corruption Reporting
Project, Paper Trail Media and 66 media partners
Staff
of the International Consortium of Investigative Journalists
"Alone and Exploited" – The New York
Times
Hannah
Dreier
"China: The Superpower of
Seafood" – The Outlaw Ocean Project
Ian Urbina, Joe
Galvin, Maya Martin,
Susan Ryan, Daniel Murphy, Austin
Brush, Jake Conley,
Stephan Foxwell, Ben Blankenship and Raphaela Morais
INVESTIGATIVE CATEGORY
"Death by the Dose" –
Reuters
Krishna N.
Das, Edward McAllister,
Jennifer Rigby, Stanley Widianto, Kate
Lamb, Saurabh Sharma and
Willy Kurniawan
"Denied by AI: Consequences for Sick and Vulnerable
Americans" – STAT
Casey
Ross and Bob Herman
LOCAL CATEGORY
"Checked Out: How L.A. Failed to Stop Landlords from Turning
Low-Cost Housing into Tourist Hotels" – Capital & Main and
ProPublica
Robin Urevich
and Gabriel Sandoval
"Milwaukee's Hidden
Landlords" – Milwaukee Journal Sentinel and Milwaukee Neighborhood News
Service
Cary Spivak,
Genevieve Redsten, Daphne Chen and Princess
Safiya Byers
"Toxic Texas Air" – Public Health
Watch
David Leffler,
Savanna Strott, Salina Arredondo, Jana Cholakovska, Jim Morris, Nazmul
Ahasan and Susan White
PERSONAL FINANCE & CONSUMER REPORTING CATEGORY
"Charting the Rise and Fall of Allegedly
Fraudulent California Consumer Debt Firm" –
Law360
Daniel
Connolly, Matt Fair,
Brandon Lowrey, Jon Hill, Allison
Grande, Emily Field,
Dave Trumbore and Robert Rudiger
"The Ugly Truth: Inside the 'We Buy Ugly Houses' Company" –
ProPublica
Anjeanette
Damon, Byard Duncan and Mollie
Simon
"Uncovered" – ProPublica and The Capitol
Forum
David Armstrong,
Patrick Rucker, Maya Miller, Robin
Fields, T. Christian Miller
and Ash Ngu
VIDEO CATEGORY
"ABC News Investigates: Danger in the Fields?" –
ABC News Nightline
Eman
Varoqua, Cindy Galli,
Alex Presha, Cho Park, James
Hill, Karin Weinberg,
Pete Madden, Deborah Kim, Jared
Kofsky and Kate Holland
"IMPACT x Nightline: Unboxing SHEIN" – ABC
News Studios
Eman
Varoqua, Candace Smith
Chekwa, Selina Wang,
Karen Ye, Jaclyn Skurie, Caitlin
Bladt, Elizabeth Mendez,
Karson You, Tenzin Shakya, Ashley
Riegle and Rachel
Wenzlaff
"The Shark Fin Hunters" – Al Jazeera
English
Laila Al-Arian,
Jeremy Young, Josh Rushing, Rodrigo
Galdos, Luis del Valle and
Warwick Meade
"RUIN: Money, Ego and Deception at FTX" – Bloomberg
News
Shern Sharma, Maria
Gabriella Pezzo, Stuart Hart,
Pat Regnier, Annie Massa, Max
Chafkin, Hannah Miller,
Zeke Faux, Stacy-Marie Ishmael and Staff of
Bloomberg
"Elon Musk's
Demons" – The New York
Times
Andrew Ross
Sorkin, Jacqueline Corba,
Sam Dolnick, Caroline Brunelle, Kate
Carrington and Julie Zann
"Sold Out: Ticketmaster and the Resale Racket" – Vice and
Tubi
Pieter Colpaert,
Nicholas Fraccaro, Maral Usefi,
Beverly Chase, Stacey Sommer, Jason
Koebler, Jeb Banegas,
Chris Herde and Khadija
Abuyousif
VISUAL STORYTELLING CATEGORY
"Humans Are Biased. Generative AI Is Even Worse" –
Bloomberg News
Leonardo
Nicoletti, Dina Bass,
Chloe Whiteaker and Jillian Ward
"Power Plays" – Bloomberg News
Gavin Finch, Jason Grotto, Todd Gillespie, Sam
Dodge, Will Mathis,
Vernon Silver, Eric Fan, Naureen
Malik, Rachel Adams-Heard and
Jeremy C.F. Lin
"Elon Musk's Unmatched Power
in the Stars" – The New York
Times
Adam
Satariano, Scott Reinhard,
Cade Metz, Sheera Frenkel and Malika Khurana
For more information about the awards, please visit
anderson.ucla.edu/gerald-loeb-awards, connect with us by joining
the Loeb Awards Newsroom SMS, engage with us on LinkedIn and
X (formerly Twitter), reach out by email
loeb@anderson.ucla.edu or call (310) 825-4478.
About Gerald Loeb
Gerald Martin Loeb was born in
1899 in San Francisco, California.
He began his career in 1921 in the bond department of a securities
firm. He moved to New York City in
1924 to help establish E.F. Hutton and eventually ascended to vice
chairman of the board. During Gerald
Loeb's career, he was a favorite of business and financial
journalists for his willingness to be interviewed and was described
as "probably the most quoted man on Wall Street"
(Forbes 1955). He was also an author of two investment
strategy books, a guest columnist for Forbes and widely
considered a Wall Street icon. In 1957, he established the G. and
R. Loeb Foundation (under the stewardship of the University of Connecticut) to present the Gerald
Loeb Awards for Distinguished Business and Financial Journalism. In
1973, he transferred the stewardship of the awards to UCLA Anderson
School of Management under the deanship of Harold Williams.
About UCLA Anderson School of Management
UCLA Anderson School of Management is a world-renowned learning
and research institution. As part of the nation's No. 1 public
university, its mission is to advance management thinking and
prepare transformative leaders to make positive business and
societal impact. Located in Los
Angeles, one of the nation's most diverse and dynamic cities
and the creative capital of the world, UCLA Anderson places more
MBAs on the West Coast than any other business school, and its
graduates also bring an innovative and inclusive West Coast
sensibility to leading organizations across the U.S. and the world.
Each year, UCLA Anderson's MBA, Fully Employed MBA, Executive MBA,
UCLA-NUS Executive MBA, Master of Financial Engineering, Master of
Science in Business Analytics and doctoral programs educate more
than 2,000 students, while the Executive Education program trains
an additional 1,800 professionals. This next generation of
transformative leaders will help shape the future of both business
and society.
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