You are here: Home Newsroom Latest News July 2007 Smeal MBA Student To Appear On CNBC's 'Fast Money' Friday

Smeal MBA Student To Appear On CNBC's 'Fast Money' Friday

A Smeal College of Business MBA student is scheduled to appear on the CNBC program "Fast Money" on Friday during the show's "Grade the Trade" segment.

Smeal MBA Student To Appear On CNBC's 'Fast Money' Friday

UNIVERSITY PARK, PA (July 31, 2007) – A Smeal College of Business MBA student is scheduled to appear on the CNBC program "Fast Money" on Friday during the show's "Grade the Trade" segment.

Second-year MBA student Jason Munson will have 30 seconds to explain what stocks he would buy and sell under a specific scenario described by the show's host, Dylan Ratigan. When he's finished, the show's panel of financial analysts will critique his stock advice and assign him a letter grade.

"Fast Money" airs at 8 p.m. Eastern on CNBC. In June, second-year MBA student Tom Aichelle appeared on the program. You can view his appearance online at www.cnbc.com/id/18985668.

Munson holds a bachelor's degree in landscape architecture from the University of Georgia and worked for The HLA Group prior to entering the Smeal MBA Program.

He was orginally scheduled to be on the July 27 episode of "Fast Money," but was rescheduled for August 3.

REPORTERS & EDITORS: For more information, please contact Wyatt DuBois in the Smeal College of Business Media Relations Office at 814-863-3798 or wed112@psu.edu.

Penn State's Smeal College of Business offers highly ranked undergraduate, MBA, executive MBA, Ph.D., and executive education opportunities to more than 5,500 students at all levels. Featuring academic departments of accounting, finance, marketing, insurance and real estate, management, and supply chain and information systems, the college is also home to major research centers such as the Center for Supply Chain Research, the Institute for the Study of Business Markets, the Center for Digital Transformation, the Farrell Center for Corporate Innovation and Entrepreneurship, the Center for Global Business Studies, and the Center for the Management of Technological and Organizational Change.

Document Actions