Patrick Kinsella

Adjunct Professor of Accounting at USC Marshall School of Business

Schools

  • USC Marshall School of Business

Links

Biography

USC Marshall School of Business

B.S., California State University at Northridge

Patrick Kinsella is a retired partner from KPMG, LLP and has provided audit and advisory services to financial clients, including banks, thrifts, mortgage, automotive finance, specialty finance, and investment management companies. He has served as the Finance and Derivative Resource and IFRS partner within KPMG, as well as the resource partner of the implementation of Section 404 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act. Kinsella is a current board member and audit committee chair of PennyMac Financial Services, Inc, a public mortgage company. He also serves as a board member of the non-for-profit Center Dance Arts and is a former board member of United Way of Los Angeles. He holds a B.S. from California State University at Northridge.

Read about executive education

Other experts

Elizabeth (Betsy) Ziegler

Elizabeth "Betsy" Ziegler is the associate dean, and Chief Innovation Officer for the Kellogg School of Management at Northwestern University. In this newly created role she is responsible for portfolio innovation as well integrating technology into the Kellogg educational experience. From 2011 t...

Christopher Blanford

BiographyEmployment History and Education | Senior Lecturer in Biomaterials, School of Materials, University of Manchester | 2015 to present | | Lecturer in Biomaterials, School of Materials, University of Manchester | 2013 to 2015 | | EPSRC Career Acceleration Fellow (held at the University of...

Bradley Gold

Bradley has 15+ years of strategic business management experience to compliment 10+ years of General Counsel and law firm experience, focusing on complex transactional business matters, drafting, negotiating, and implementing organizational contracts, maintaining relationships across and througho...

Looking for an expert?

Contact us and we'll find the best option for you.

Something went wrong. We're trying to fix this error.