After graduating magna cum laude from the Gabelli School of Business in May, Goh began working as an analyst in the Chief Investment Office of JP Morgan Chase. He received his first post-college paycheck in August, and promptly made a $1,000 gift to Fordham University, a gift that was matched 100 percent by his employer.
“I’m really excited for the beginning of my career,” Goh wrote in a letter accompanying his gift. He wrote that his gift was a “small gesture to the school for the most wonderful four years of my life and for the life-long education that I received from the Jesuits.”
Sihien Goh, GSB '13, volunteers as a soccer coach for South Bronx United, working with underprivileged children in the Yankee Stadium neighborhood. |
Goh came to Fordham at the age of 20 after completing two years of mandatory military service in his native Singapore.
Some 60 years earlier, his grandparents had immigrated to Singapore from southern China in search of a better life. They worked as laborers on the docks during the British colonial era, dying young.
Goh’s father, orphaned at a young age, worked as a child in rubber plantations and started his own business growing tropical fish when he was 17.
Goh’s mother held a variety of jobs—baking, electronics assembly, and taking care of her three children—while her husband worked extremely long days.
Their hard work to build a better life for their children paid off. Goh’s two older brothers attended university in England. By 2008, when it was time for Goh to choose where to study, the U.S. banking collapse was making global headlines. He closely followed newspaper reports detailing the crisis, and developed an interest in finance and a desire to study in New York City.
His desire for an immersive American experience led him to Fordham, where he found the feeling of a local community and the opportunity to travel with friends around the United States.
“I went to my friend’s wedding in Cleveland, spent Thanksgiving with a friend in Allentown [Pa.],” says Goh. “I had a good time.”
While majoring in finance at the Gabelli School of Business, Goh interned at UBS Financial Services in Manhattan and at the Singapore offices of Credit Suisse and Lazard during the summers. He also co-founded, with Anthony Walters, FCRH ’13, Fordham’s Alternative Investments Club.
And, as vice president of his Gabelli School class in Fordham’s United Student Government, Goh helped to lobby for the Gabelli School to offer a value-investing specialization. The school debuted the three-course specialization, now a secondary concentration, in 2012.
Goh, who specialized in value investing, greatly admires two of its most prominent and successful proponents, Warren Buffett and Mario Gabelli, GSB ’65, the school’s namesake.
Goh is grateful to Joseph M. McShane, S.J., president of Fordham, for introducing him to Mario Gabelli, and for his leadership for the University and his commitment to liberal arts education.
“I will never forget our liberal arts core curriculum, in particular the philosophy and theology classes, that opened my eyes to new perspectives in life. It got me thinking about other things besides numbers and finances, to think about my life, relationships, friends, and family.”
At home in Singapore, his parents often recited a common Chinese proverb: “to always remember the source of the water that you are drinking from.”
Goh says he will always remember “anyone who helped me get to where I am.”
—Rachel Buttner and Jen Spencer
Did you know that many employers offer a matching gift program to eligible employees? Your gift to Fordham may be doubled or tripled. Learn more about matching gifts.
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