Peter Cohan

Peter Cohan

Peter Cohan is president of Peter S. Cohan & Associates, a management consulting and venture capital firm he founded in 1994. By conducting over 150 consulting projects, he has helped governments and businesses to identify, evaluate and profit from growth opportunities that spring from new technologies. Three of his portfolio companies were sold for a total of $2 billion.

He teaches business strategy to undergraduate and graduate students at Babson College — BusinessWeek ranked its undergraduate strategy department #2 in the U.S.

AchieveMax ranked his eighth book, You Can’t Order Change: Lessons From Jim McNerney’s Turnaround at Boeing, the #1 business book of 2009. His ninth book, co-authored with Srini Rangan, is Capital Rising: How Capital Flows Are Changing Business Systems All Over the World— that Choice called “important, well-researched, socially-responsible, and groundbreaking.”

He has appeared on ABC’s Good Morning America, CBS’s Evening News and Early Show, CNBC, CNN, and PBS’s Nightly Business Report as well as on NPR’s MarketPlace. And he’s been quoted in the New York Times, The Wall Street Journal, Time, BusinessWeek, and Fortune.

Recent Articles

Take JPMorgan Chase to the Bank, But Skip Goldman Sachs

Both stocks are cheap on expected 2012 EPS growth, but should you buy JPMorgan Chase and avoid Goldman Sachs? Yes. Here's why.

Given the Choice, It’s Allstate Over Progressive

Progressive is innovative but suffering from bad investments and hurricane losses while Allstate is forecast to recover strongly in 2012.

Pepsi Vs. Coke — On the Trading Floor

PepsiCo is overvalued and relatively unprofitable -- but before testing out the very profitable Coca-Cola, wait until its stock price loses some fizz.

Build Your Materials Wealth With Kaiser Aluminum, Not Alcoa

Alcoa profit is expected to plunge, but news in the sector is not all bad. In fact, one aluminum stock looks cheap on expected 43% earnings growth.

4 Reasons Apple Has Left the Building

Steve Jobs' death left too many holes to fill, putting Apple's longer-term growth in doubt. Here are four reasons why it won't prevail.

Pour Yourself a Glass of Constellation Brands

Constellation Brands is shrinking to a profitable core, supplying growth at a reasonable price. Molson Coors and Brown-Forman are a bit costly.

Family Dollar Is Worth Your Money — Costco, Target Are Bad Bargains

Target (TGT) and Costco (COST) are priced above their earnings growth, while Family Dollar (FDO) is fairly priced and well positioned to profit from economic weakness.

Yum! Brands, Chipotle and Domino’s — A Recipe for Investor Indigestion

YUM, CMG and DPZ are all growing, but none of these restaurant stocks are worth their high P/E's.

Line Your Portfolio With Crocs, Wolverine

Crocs’ rapid growth, wide margins and low valuation make it a compelling buy; Wolverine has upside potential, too.

Don’t Bet Your Chips on Intel, Micron

Don't bet your chips on these two stocks. One is solid but growing too slowly, and the other is too hard to predict.