Faculty News

Professor Nouriel Roubini explains why he doesn't currently see a bubble in the US economy

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Excerpt from CNBC -- "'Across the board I don't see a bubble but I see certainly some frothiness that is not justified by the fundamentals because the economy is barely growing 2 percent, earnings growth is slowing down and PE ratios are now above historical average,' the chair of Roubini Global Economics told CNBC's 'Closing Bell' on Tuesday."
Faculty News

Professor Nouriel Roubini is interviewed about the impact of fintech on the financial services industry

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Excerpt from Financial Times -- "'Technology is a tsunami that will radically change the face of financial services,' Prof Roubini said. 'The losers will be those companies that are not nimble enough to adopt the new technology — and a lot of them may disappear.'"
Faculty News

In an op-ed, Professor Michelle Greenwald highlights IBM Watson's functions that are useful to marketers

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Excerpt from Forbes -- "Fluid software’s Expert Personal Shopper app (XPS) for The North Face, and 1-800 Flowers’ GWYN (Gifts When You Need) concierge powered gift recommendation engine, both use Watson technology to enable natural conversations on their sites, and understand location, temperature, gender, shopper use intentions and climate factors, to suggest the most relevant products to meet customers’ needs."
Research Center Events

Wayne Pacelle, President and CEO of The Humane Society & New York Times Best-Selling Author of The Humane Economy, Speaks to Stern community

Wayne Pacelle Event
Stern's Business and Society Program will host Wayne Pacelle, CEO of The Humane Society and author of The Humane Economy, for a lecture and book signing on September 20.
School News

The Center for Sustainable Business' milestones are featured

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Excerpt from Clear Admit -- "Since launching, the center also assembled its corporate advisory board, recruited a host of industry research scholars, hosted Unilever CEO Paul Polman on its campus and published the 'How Corporate America Can Support the Paris Climate Deal' op-ed in Fortune on Earth Day, April 22, 2016. Each important move reflects the center’s overall theme of 'A Better World through Better Business.'"
Faculty News

Professor Russell Winer is interviewed about consumer choice, marketing and social media

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Excerpt from Livemint -- "The problem with loyalty programmes is that there are too many of them, they are undifferentiated (i.e. the benefits are similar so they don’t offer unique benefits), and difficult for consumers to use with some exceptions like airlines and hotels. The best way for companies to build loyalty is not through gimmicks but by investing in their brands by constantly innovating and offering clear value propositions to their target audiences."
Research Center Events

Doing Good Is Good Business: A Conversation with David Arison

Peter Henry, David Arison, and Tensie Whelan
On September 19, the NYU Stern Center for Sustainable Business welcomed David Arison, global businessman and philanthropist, for a talk entitled, "Doing Good Is Good Business."
Faculty News

Professor Ralph Gomory outlines the potential negative impact of the Trans-Pacific Partnership

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Excerpt from IndustryWeek -- "'Until we learn how to assess the real effects of these trade deals, remembering that they take place in a mercantilist world…we should have no more of them,' he urged. Gomory joined several other TPP critics in warning against the agreement’s dispute settlement provisions that give companies the power to sue governments if the companies believe the governments have taken 'any step that hurts their profits.'"
Faculty News

Professor Pankaj Ghemawat's research on the impact of globalization on public companies' revenue is referenced

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Excerpt from The Economist -- "Pankaj Ghemawat, of the Stern School of Business at New York University and the IESE Business School at Navarra, Spain, calculates that America’s top 1,000 public companies now derive 40% of their revenue from alliances, compared with just 1% in 1980."
Faculty News

Professor Irving Schenkler discusses Wells Fargo's company culture in the wake of its fraudulent accounts scandal

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Excerpt from The Washington Post -- "Irving Schenkler, a professor of management communication at New York University, said that if the finger is pointed too sharply at lower-level workers, it 'could cause unintended consequences or backlash,' sparking disgruntled employees to come forward or current workers to lose trust in leadership. 'It could breed cynicism,' he said."
Faculty News

Professor Lawrence White discusses Point, a startup that purchases equity stakes in homes

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Excerpt from Mashable -- "Banks have experimented with the idea of equity versus debt in home financing for at least 25 years, according to Lawrence White, a professor at New York University's Stern School of Business who has studied mortgage markets. 'It wouldn't surprise me if anyone lending against somebody's castle or somebody's estate in 16th century England would have said, "Why don't I take a piece of equity and why am I lending?"' White said."
Faculty News

Professor Roy Smith is interviewed about Donald Trump's personal debt

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Excerpt from WNYC -- "'Where are JPMorgan Chase, where are Bank of America, where are Citigroup? These are aggressive lenders to the real estate sector. In most instances, they are leaders in lending to this sector, so where are they?' asked Roy Smith, a professor of finance at NYU's Stern School of Business. It could be that Trump has created a comfortable niche for himself, borrowing money from smaller local institutions instead of bigger banks, said Smith."
Faculty News

Professor Viral Acharya is interviewed about his joint research on banking dividends

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Excerpt from The Wall Street Journal -- "'If you took into account the interests of the collective welfare of all shareholders in the financial system, you’d cut back on dividends,' Viral Acharya, a finance professor at New York University and one of the study’s authors, said in an interview."
Faculty News

Professor Roy Smith comments on Deutsche Bank's $14 Billion fine by the Department of Justice

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Excerpt from the Financial Times -- "Roy Smith, a former president of Goldman Sachs International and now a professor at NYU Stern School of Business, said: 'It is never a good idea to say that [you won’t pay] when you are dealing with the Justice Department.'"
Faculty News

Professor Thomas Philippon's research on the financial services industry is cited

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Excerpt from Reuters -- "Look at the high-level data and it is easy to see why my assertion that the industry is too big and too self-serving is fair. The unit cost of a dollar of financial intermediation has remained about two cents for 130 years, according to data from Thomas Philippon, Professor of Finance at New York University."
Faculty News

Professor Richard Sylla's book, "A History of Interest Rates," is referenced

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Excerpt from Bloomberg -- "Sidney Homer and Richard Sylla, co-authors of the landmark 'History of Interest Rates,' noted that in the second half of the 19th century, the corporate debt of railroads tended to run to 50 or 100 years. One source concluded that two-thirds of all railroad debt issued in the 1890s ran 50 years or more."
Faculty News

Professor Arun Sundararajan is interviewed about the impact of the sharing economy on the future of work

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Excerpt from Fortune -- "I think the shift is fundamentally good for the following reasons: We're moving the role of the individual from being a provider of labor or talent in exchange for a wage from the institution to actually being part owner. Being someone who runs a small business through an institution. So you go from working for a hotel to being an Airbnb host that's running a small business through the hotel. You go from driving for someone else as an employee to being an Uber driver. You go from working in a retail store to being an Etsy seller. So as the role of the individual shifts from being laborer to being owner, we're going to in the long run, reduce inequality because we're spreading the ownership of capital in society across a broader range of people."
Faculty News

Research Scholar Brandon Fuller's joint research on state-based visas is featured

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Excerpt from Fast Co.Exist -- "'A state-based visa program would create a temporary work permit that would allow participating states to manage the flow and regulate the quantity of temporary migrants who want to live and work within their border,' write Brandon Fuller and Sean Rust for the CATO Institute, a think tank."
Faculty News

Professor Lawrence White discusses Donald Trump's stock holdings

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Excerpt from Politifact -- "'These are publicly traded companies,' said Lawrence White, an economist at New York University’s Stern School of Business. 'If Mr. Trump received a dividend payment, then he must have owned shares of stock in that company -- that is, he was invested in the stock market.'"
Faculty News

Professor Jonathan Haidt comments on Donald Trump's appeal to right-wing voters

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Excerpt from The Economist -- "'Trump is something other. Trump is bringing in emotions and concerns that were not well-represented on the traditional left-right scale before', says Jonathan Haidt, a social psychologist at New York University."
Press Releases

Self-Reliant Women Are Five Times More Likely to Be Judged as Better Leaders than Self-Reliant Men, According to New Research from NYU Stern

Rebecca Schaumberg
Research has shown that people are predisposed to believe men are more capable leaders than women, and women with assertive or dominant characteristics are often viewed in a more negative light than their male counterparts. New research from NYU Stern Professor Rebecca Schaumberg finds that this perception is reversed for female leaders who exhibit self-reliance – the capacity to self-govern and control their own outcomes.
School News

Connie Kim, Director of Leadership Development, and Yael Shy, Senior Director of NYU Global Spiritual Life, discuss MindfulNYU and Stern's Mindfulness in Business Initiative

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Excerpt from MindfulMBA -- "A grounding in practical application is paramount for Kim, and her program’s offerings are designed to emphasize 'IQ plus EQ' — academic excellence and emotional intelligence — a combination Stern believes is critical for leadership success. For example, she and Shy collaborate frequently on events, merging MindfulNYU’s expertise in mindfulness techniques with the leadership lens of Mindfulness in Business."
Research Center Events

$300K Entrepreneurs Challenge: Competition Kick-Off

300K Entrepreneurs Challenge Kickoff
More than 500 aspiring entrepreneurs from across the NYU student, faculty and alumni communities gathered in Paulson Auditorium for the 2016-2017 Entrepreneur’s Challenge Kick-Off on Wednesday, September 14.
Faculty News

Professor Claudine Gartenberg comments on the complexity of consumer credit card agreements

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Excerpt from BuzzFeed News -- "'In credit cards and other aspects of consumer banking, the model often relies on making money from fees that the customer isn’t paying attention to or is even aware of,' said Claudine Gartenberg, assistant professor at New York University’s Stern School of Business, to BuzzFeed News."
Faculty News

Professor Jonathan Haidt discusses ethical failure in business

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Excerpt from Forbes -- "Says Jonathan Haidt, Professor of Business Ethics at NYU and founder of Ethical Systems, 'Good people will do terrible things when people around them are even gently encouraging them to do so.'"