“Cryptocurrency is in its infancy. It’s going to continue to develop and evolve,” Lindner Dean Marianne Lewis, PhD, told WCPO-TV. “I think one of the beauties of us building coursework, as well as this lab around it, is to learn as that volatility shifts, [we] start to better understand where that value is in terms of securing assets, trading assets. I think there’s a lot to be learned. And it is going to be a moving target.”
The new lab and fund aim to supply students with experience and know-how critical for employment with digital asset companies. These capabilities will complement how Lindner’s Johnson Investment Counsel Student-Managed Fund and Investment Lab — part of the Johnson Investment Institute — empower hands-on education in equity valuation and portfolio management.
Led by Kautz-Uible Economics Institute Academic Director Michael Jones, PhD, the Kautz-Uible Cryptoeconomics Lab will form a space for corporate partnerships for the research of cryptocurrency and blockchain technology. Jones will soon spearhead a two-day event with 30 local CEOs in the Digital Futures building, educating these business leaders on the essentials of cryptoeconomics.