Business
Muriel Siebert’s business strategy is simple: “When I see a challenge, I put my head down and charge.”
Dec. 10, 2000
Can an ambitious, frustrated secretary, masquerading as her boss, put together a $67-million corporate acquisition and get away with it?
Jan. 8, 1989
Muriel Siebert Has Been Blazing Investment Trails for Five Decades
Feb. 18, 1997
World & Nation
What changes would you like to see in business practices and the workplace this year?
Jan. 1, 1989
A 44-year-old executive hopes to break the glass ceiling in the financial services industry. Experts offer a reality check.
July 16, 2000
The brokerage firm run by Muriel Siebert, the first woman to hold a seat on the New York Stock Exchange, is buying the Women’s Financial Network, a Web site geared toward female investors.
Oct. 12, 2000
Siebert Financial Corp. said its investment banking group will acquire the retail brokerage accounts of a unit of William O’Neil & Co. for an undisclosed cash amount.
Aug. 13, 1997
L ast week, Wall Street went haywire.
Oct. 25, 1987
Growing up in Cleveland, Muriel Siebert assumed she would get married and have children like everyone else.
May 28, 1995
Obituaries
Siebert, an influential Wall Street analyst, bought a seat on the NYSE in 1967. She also served five years as New York State banking superintendent.
Aug. 25, 2013