Chester Currier

Chester Currier (1946–2007) was a newspaper and magazine columnist and nonfiction book author. He worked for Bloomberg News and the Associated Press, providing daily and weekly columns covering Wall Street, markets and financial matters.

Currier was also noted as a major contributor of crossword puzzles, having published over 1000 large-format puzzles through the Associated Press syndicate.

Biography

Currier was born in New York City on 26 March 1945. He attended elementary school in Greenwich, Connecticut, and high school at Berkshire School, a co-educational boarding school in Sheffield, Massachusetts. He then attended Amherst College, graduating in 1966 with a bachelor's degree in English. He then served with the United States Navy.

Currier married his wife Carol in 1970. They had one daughter Dana (1980) and one son Craig (1982).

Career

After discharge from the military, Currier's first employment was with a trade journal, Home Furnishings Daily. From there he moved to The Associated Press, first based in Kansas City, Missouri (1970), then in New York (1972). In 1974 he was assigned to provide full-time financial coverage (i.e. Wall Street reporter).

His first financial column for AP was titled Ticker Talk, and provided an irreverent but financially sound analysis of both daily financial events and long-term trends. He added a second column, On the Money in 1979.

In 1999 Currier moved from AP to Bloomberg, providing a twice-a-week column discussing financial news and trends, and providing financial investing advice.

Later life

In 2005 Currier and his wife moved from New York to Manhattan Beach, California, where he lived until his death. He died in a local hospice due to complications of prostate cancer on 29 July 2007.

Books

  • The Investor's Encyclopedia
  • The 15-Minute Investor
  • Careers in the '80s
  • Careers in the '90s
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gollark: There are MANY.
gollark: They will not, unfortunately, actually accept my debit card.
gollark: I mean, there's probably nothing stopping them from arbitrarily apiarizing it if they need more money.
gollark: Actually, it's a phishing website I made.

References


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