Faculty News

Prof. Richard Sylla on adjusting the Dow's record for inflation

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Excerpt from The Wall Street Journal -- "Ignoring inflation, Mr. Sylla said, the Dow appears to be roughly 140 times its level of 100 years ago, an enormous gain. But removing price increases and counting only real gains, the Dow is roughly seven times its level of 100 years ago, a good gain but far from what it appears."
Faculty News

Prof. Arun Sundararajan on the future of Apple

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Excerpt from CNBC -- "'...chances are it's not going to be Apple that makes the next breakthrough consumer technology,' Sundararajan said. 'It's not so much that Apple has lost the secret sauce, it's just that the sauce is less important right now—it's less effective at this point in the evolution of the industry.'"
Faculty News

Dean Geeta Menon discusses trends in undergraduate business education

Excerpt from the Hindustan Times -- "Undergraduate business students are considering alternatives to traditional career paths. Business students are prepared for a multitude of postgraduate opportunities, including traditional business careers and degrees, but also beyond. Students are showing an interest in working in the non-profit and government sectors, and support for this is growing at the administrative level."
Faculty News

Dean Menon cites global exposure as a critical part of undergraduate business education

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Excerpt from the Economic Times -- "That would be global exposure. We talk about crossing boundaries. Students have to have some exposure across boundaries. They are the global managers of the future. We are part of a global network of universities. At least 67 per cent of our students have one semester abroad and all our students spend a week on international studies."
Faculty News

Prof. Richard Sylla puts the Dow record high in historical context

Wall Street Journal logo
Excerpt from The Wall Street Journal -- "I would say it shows a really improving outlook for our economy. Investors are optimistic, maybe the economy is on the mend and if we're lucky, we may see a series of these all-time highs."
Research Center Events

Winter Symposium: The Return of Private Capital to the Mortgage Market

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The Center for Real Estate Finance Research (CREFR) and Marc H. Bell, General Partner of Barbican Capital host a full-day conference on the future of the U.S. housing finance system.
Faculty News

Dean Geeta Menon on women in business schools

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Excerpt from The Times of India -- "Like many business schools, there are more men than women in the student body. I would like to see more women enrolling in business programmes in general. Business is a wonderful undergraduate degree as it provides students with a wellrounded education and prepares them for nearly any field, besides opening up career opportunities."
Faculty News

Prof. Nouriel Roubini on risks to economic growth from the European debt crisis

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Excerpt from Bloomberg -- “'Markets are underestimating how much the sequester and the gridlock in the United States could have negative effects on the economy and eventually on the market,' Roubini said."
Business and Policy Leader Events

Spotlight on Sustainability & Capital Markets at NYU Stern-Citi Conference in Leadership & Ethics

The 10th Annual NYU Stern-Citi Conference in Leadership & Ethics addressed the theme of “Integrating Sustainability Into Capital Markets.” Organized by NYU Stern’s Citi Leadership & Ethics Program and Business & Society Program Area, with generous support from the Citi Foundation, the 2013 conference featured this year’s Distinguished Citi Fellow in Leadership & Ethics, Mindy Lubber, president of Ceres.
Faculty News

In an op-ed, Prof. Jonathan Haidt explains why Democrats and Republicans should focus on fairness

Excerpt from Democracy Journal -- "In this essay I offer such a map, showing the territory currently controlled by Democrats (equality and positive liberty) and by Republicans (proportionality and negative liberty). What remains up for grabs is “procedural fairness”: the integrity of the process by which we decide who gets what. Both parties are open to charges that they don’t want everyone to “play by the same rules.” Both parties have ways of answering this charge and persuading the broader public that its concept of fairness is the better one. The party that wins that point will have the upper hand in this new culture war."
Faculty News

Dean Peter Henry's upcoming book, "Turnaround," is featured

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Excerpt from Vanity Fair -- "In 'Turnaround' (Basic Books), Peter Blair Henry explains how discipline in policy reform reflects the likelihood of economic success in emerging countries."
Faculty News

Prof. Richard Sylla gives a presentation on the art of banking at the Frick museum

Excerpt from Fora.tv -- "Banks, for centuries, have played a key role in economic development...the countries that had the most developed banks and really the most developed financial systems early on were the ones that were successful in modern history. The Northern Italian city-states are an example and what I noted here was that these city-states of Northern Italy 600-700 years ago developed modern banking, innovated it and they also innovated double-entry bookkeeping."
Faculty News

Prof. Sinan Aral on Facebook COO Sheryl Sandberg as a role model

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Excerpt from Delta Sky Magazine -- "Sandberg has been described as a consummate socializer, one who is a genuine friend. She remembers birthdays, answers emails and maintains more real relationships than most people have Facebook friends. It seems fitting that the Facebook COO would be so focused on relationships. Social capital is invaluable, and Sandberg knows how to cultivate and maintain it."
Faculty News

Prof. Adam Alter will discuss his new book, "Drunk Tank Pink," with Malcolm Gladwell

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Excerpt from CBS -- Adam Alter with Malcolm Gladwell: Drunk Tank Pink: And Other Unexpected Forces that Shape How We Think, Feel, and Behave
Faculty News

Prof. Paul Romer discusses urbanization and investment opportunities

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Excerpt from Charlie Rose -- "...the big issues that excite me are the massive wave of urbanization we're going to see in the developing world...The rich countries face this problem of insufficient investment demand. This is our big challenge macroeconomically. But the developing world has this enormous investment demand for urban infrastructure so there's a deal that can be done here between the places that have a lot of investment capacity and financing capacity and parts of the world that really could use that productively."
School News

Michael Posner's appointment to NYU Stern is featured

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Excerpt from Foreign Policy -- "'At NYU Stern we categorically reject the "or" and embrace the "and." Profits and principle must coexist as citizens and consumers around the globe demand both. Mike is respected around the world for his distinguished 30-year career as a lawyer, advocate and policymaker,' Stern Dean Peter Henry said in the statement."
Faculty News

Prof. Adam Alter's new book "Drunk Tank Pink" is featured

Excerpt from Smithsonian Magazine -- "Alter covers the ways that names, labels, symbols, people, culture and many other factors affect our brains."
Faculty News

Prof. Adam Alter explains how exposure to a culture can result in adoption of its behaviors

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Excerpt from the Harvard Business Review -- "You might think a culture would have an effect on you only if you’ve spent some time immersed in it, but that’s not the case. Culture influences you more easily than you realize. Thanks to the internet and the rise of global commerce and travel over the past 15 to 20 years, we’ve all become more aware of foreign ideas and symbols."
Faculty News

Prof. Adam Alter's new book, "Drunk Tank Pink," is featured

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Excerpt from Fast Company -- "In the new book Drunk Tank Pink, professor Adam Alter of New York University's Stern School of Business examines the psychological cues that guide behavior, such as the use of the color in jails to calm the unruly inebriated."
Student Club Events

Stern Private Equity Club’s Eighth Annual Conference

The Stern Private Equity Club will host its Eighth Annual Stern Private Equity Conference on Friday, March 1, 2013. Themed, “The New Normal in Private Equity,” the conference will provide a forum for industry leaders to discuss the opportunities and risks of today's private equity and venture capital environment. Tepid global growth, regulatory dynamics, political pressure and financial market conditions are posing challenges to fundraising, deal financing and operations. The conference will foster thought-provoking discussions on the issues facing today's private equity and venture capital community.
Research Center Events

NYU Entrepreneurs Festival

NYU’s entrepreneurial community—including successful student, faculty and alumni startup founders and venture capital investors—will gather to celebrate innovation and entrepreneurship at the second annual NYU Entrepreneurs Festival.
Press Releases

Michael Posner Joins NYU Stern to Establish New Center for Business and Human Rights

Henry Kaufman Management Center
New York University Stern School of Business today announced that Michael H. Posner will join its faculty in March 2013. Posner will be a professor in the School’s Business and Society Program Area and will lead an effort to establish a center for business and human rights at NYU Stern.
School News

Michael Posner's appointment to NYU Stern is highlighted

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Excerpt from the Washington Post -- "The exodus at the State Department continues, as attorney and human-rights advocate Mike Posner heads for the hills. Actually, his destination is a little more civil than that: he’s joining the faculty of New York University’s Stern School of Business."
Faculty News

Prof. Nicholas Economides on bank bonus limits

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Excerpt from BBC News -- "First of all, let me say that this idea, this legislation, is misguided. The high bonuses, the high salaries were not really the cause of the financial crisis. The cause of the financial crisis was poor regulation and I think the European Union and other countries around the world have to address the problem of regulation. Just saying people should be pay less will not solve anything."
Faculty News

In an op-ed, Prof. Nouriel Roubini questions the effectiveness of quantitative easing

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Excerpt from Project Syndicate -- "Most observers regard unconventional monetary policies such as quantitative easing (QE) as necessary to jump-start growth in today’s anemic economies. But questions about the effectiveness and risks of QE have begun to multiply as well. In particular, ten potential costs associated with such policies merit attention."