Tag Archives: Career Education

Career Education Names Veteran Educator and Business Leader Scott Steffey as President & CEO

By Business Wirevia The Motley Fool

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Career Education Names Veteran Educator and Business Leader Scott Steffey as President & CEO

Former Strayer Chief Operating Officer and SUNY Vice Chancellor also Nominated to CEC Board

SCHAUMBURG, Ill.–(BUSINESS WIRE)– Career Education Corporation (CEC) (NAS: CECO) , a global provider of postsecondary education programs and services, today named Scott Steffey – former Chief Operating Officer of Strayer Education, Inc., and Vice Chancellor of the State University of New York (SUNY) – as its President and Chief Executive Officer. Steffey, whose appointment is effective immediately, will also be nominated to stand for election to the Career Education Board of Directors at the upcoming Annual Meeting of Stockholders.

“Scott’s unique mix of education, business and investment experience match up well with the key drivers of our business,” said Steven H. Lesnik, Chairman of the Board of Career Education. “This is a great alignment of skills and experience. As we put our sector’s headwinds behind us, I am optimistic that Scott and our strong leadership team together will carry us through our transformation.”

Steffey’s career includes leadership roles spanning the education spectrum as well as senior posts at both publicly- and privately-held businesses. Most notably, he served as Executive Vice President & Chief Operating Officer (COO) of Strayer Education, Inc., and Chairman of the Board of Trustees of Strayer University. In his role as COO, Steffey was a hands-on force in driving operational excellence and efficiency, academic integrity and accountability, innovative online learning and prudent enrollment growth.

As Vice Chancellor of the SUNY – at the time the largest non-profit, unified system of postsecondary education in the United States – Steffey was the senior operating officer for much of his tenure at SUNY – comprised of 64 degree-granting campuses, with 400,000 students, several vocational centers, and 75,000 faculty and administrators. He helped lead a transformation of the SUNY system, resulting in greater academic quality and achievement at its campuses, significant enrollment growth, revenue growth, expense containment, and a large capital re-investment in its campus infrastructure.

Most recently, Steffey was Founder and President of Symposium Ventures, a private equity firm serving private sector and nonprofit education institutions.

While at SUNY, Steffey also founded the Charter Schools Institute, a nationally recognized incubator of K-12 schools dedicated to enhancing education opportunities for economically disadvantaged students. Steffey was previously an executive with New Mountain Capital, a private equity firm serving the private postsecondary industry, and at NYNEX (now …read more

Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance

2 of Yesterday's Big Disappointments

By Rich Duprey, The Motley Fool

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The old investing maxim “sell in May and go away” means we’re quickly approaching the time when the incredible run of the Dow Jones Industrial Average over the past three months will be coming to a close. Yesterday’s five-point loss could be the signal that the market is topping here, and with Europe doing all it can to stop the spread of a financial contagion after its bailout of Cyprus, there seems little reason to believe this bull market will continue much longer.

Yesterday’s big loser was Hewlett-Packard, the first quarter’s big winner, though after a 68% gain over the past three months, a small 2% loss is no big deal. But the landscape for computers hasn’t changed, so now comes the point where the turnaround has to gain traction on its own. I’m not so certain it will, though a broad overview of the markets suggests there are still worse places to be standing right now.

Canary in the coal mine
Coal miner Walter Energy took it on the chin (again) yesterday, falling 8% as the ISM manufacturing index posted its biggest miss to expectations in a year, coming in at 51.3 compared with forecasts of 54.0. The bigger worry, however, is new orders falling all the way down to 51.4 from 57.8, which, coupled with a pullback in China‘s economy, diminishes the prospects for renewed industrial demand and, in turn, greater coal demand. Arch CoalPeabody Energy , and Consol Energy all tumbled 3% or more yesterday.

Analysts see a particularly tough year ahead for Walter because of the weak pricing environment. It has significant cash obligations coming due this year, with Wall Street looking askance at the $150 million or so in interest payments and total cash obligations of $365 million, both of which combine to put it between a financial rock and a hard place. 

It faces outside pressure as well from shareholders agitating for change. Hedge-fund operator SAC Capital Partners recently reported a new 5% stake in the miner, while Audley Capital has publicly expressed doubts about management’s capabilities to turn the company around and wants to oust some directors in favor of its own five-man slate.

As coal miners remain under the gun, there appear to be few catalysts in front of Walter to change its downward trajectory.

Wearing the dunce cap
For-profit educators got schooled yesterday as well, with ITT Educational Services falling almost 9%, Grand Canyon Education dropping 5%, and Corinthian Colleges and Career Education both falling about 3% on the day. The one bright spot was Apollo Group , which rose about 1.5% and is up more than 3% since reporting better-than-expected earnings last week.

Yet even in beating Wall Street forecasts, Apollo showed what the problems are facing the sector: falling revenues, higher expenses, and dwindling student enrollments. When ITT reported fourth-quarter earnings in January, it saw all of those same factors, but it didn’t have the luxury of beating expectations. First-quarter results …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance

Louis Caldera Joins Career Education Corporation Board of Directors

By Business Wirevia The Motley Fool

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Louis Caldera Joins Career Education Corporation Board of Directors

SCHAUMBURG, Ill.–(BUSINESS WIRE)– Career Education Corporation (CEC) (NAS: CECO) , a global provider of postsecondary education programs and services, announced that Louis Caldera was today appointed to the company’s Board of Directors.

Louis Caldera, former President of the University of New Mexico and Secretary of the Army, was appointed to the Career Education Corporation Board of Directors. (Photo: Business Wire)

Caldera brings a mix of law and policy, higher education, military, business and management experience to the Career Education Board of Directors. Caldera has served in both the Clinton and Obama administrations, as well as on several nonprofit and public company boards of directors. A graduate of the U.S. Military Academy at West Point, he also holds both a law degree and a Master’s of Business Administration from Harvard University.

As President of the University of New Mexico from 2003 to 2006, Caldera oversaw an increase in research and scholarship funding while leading a significant expansion and modernization of university facilities. He increased focus on bolstering the university’s academic reputation, including development of new programs in entrepreneurship, nanotechnology and biomedical engineering.

Serving as Secretary of the Army from 1999 to 2001, Caldera was known for advocating investment in the youngest members of the Army, including improving their opportunities for training and education. He is credited with leading development and beginning implementation of the Army Transformation vision, which moved the Army from a Cold War footing to a rapidly deployable force using new technologies and weapons platforms.

As a California state legislator from 1992 to 1997, Caldera served on the Higher Education Committee and authored legislation promoting children’s health and safety, charter schools and public education. Representing a multi-ethnic district centered in downtown Los Angeles, he contributed to economic revitalization efforts.

“Louis’ addition to the Career Education board affords us his broad range of perspectives and experience, so many of which pertain directly to how we provide quality, career-focused education that improves the lives of students,” said Chairman, President and CEO Steven H. Lesnik. “As the son of Mexican immigrants, Louis’ personal story of rising from humble beginnings to achieve high-ranking American leadership positions mirrors the dreams of many of our students, who through hard work and education strive to achieve a better life for themselves and their families.”

With Caldera’s appointment, the number of members currently serving …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance