The Museum of American Finance, the nation’s solely impartial museum devoted to finance and monetary historical past, will honor the achievements of Fortune journal journalist Carol Loomis at its annual gala on March 13.
Loomis will obtain a particular recognition honor for her groundbreaking contributions to the sphere of monetary journalism and unprecedented 60-year tenure at Fortune journal. Loomis might be launched by Warren Buffett, chairman and CEO of Berkshire Hathaway, by way of video.
Along with reporting on a variety of monetary and company information, Loomis is understood for profiles of enterprise luminaries like Buffett and Sandy Weill, and for canopy tales resembling “Every little thing In Historical past Was In opposition to Them” (April 13, 1998), an evocative story of 5 Holocaust survivors who got here to America and have become profitable businessmen. “Fortune has revealed hundreds of success tales since its first situation almost 70 years in the past, however none has been as compelling as this week’s cowl story on the enterprise breakthroughs of 5 Holocaust survivors,” mentioned the New York Publish.
Loomis has received three lifetime achievement awards: the Gerald M. Loeb Lifetime Achievement Award in 1993, the Girls’s Financial Spherical Desk award in 2000 for print journalists, of which she was the primary recipient, and Time Inc.’s Henry R. Luce Award in 2001, of which she was additionally the primary recipient.
In 1976, the U.S. Secretary of the Treasury appointed Loomis to the Advisory Committee on Federal Consolidated Monetary Statements. In 1980, she served as one in all six panelists questioning presidential candidates Ronald Reagan and John Anderson in a nationally televised debate sponsored by the League of Girls Voters.
In 2000, Loomis received a “Entrance Web page” award from the Newswomen’s Membership of New York for her story “Lies, Damned Lies, and Managed Earnings,” which anticipated the monetary scandals that rocked the U.S. markets. In 2001, she returned to the identical theme in an article known as “The 15% Delusion.”