Faculty News

Professor Anindya Ghose shares insights on how Samsung can restore trust with its customers

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Excerpt from ABC News -- "Ghose said that to restore trust with consumers, the company would have to recall all of the defective phones (a process it has started), pinpoint the cause of the problem, fully reimburse consumers and convince its business partners 'to give it another shot with the next set of product releases.'"
Research Center Events

Innocence Project Attorney Seema Saifee and Exoneree Darryl Howard Speak to the Stern Community

Seema Saifee and Darryl Howard
NYU Stern’s Business & Society Program welcomed Seema Saifee, staff attorney for the Innocence Project, and Darryl Howard, who was recently exonerated after serving 24 years for a wrongful murder conviction, to speak to an audience of undergraduate Stern students.
Faculty News

Research Scholar Sarah Labowitz underscores the impact of terror attacks and unsafe working conditions on Bangladesh's appeal to businesses

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Excerpt from Reuters -- "'One of the risks for Bangladesh right now is that between the July terror attack, the legacy of Rana Plaza and now this (Tampaco fire), it begins to look like a non-desirable place to do business,' said Sarah Labowitz, co-head of NYU Stern's Center for Business and Human Rights. 'The government and industry really need to step up and respond.'"
Faculty News

Professor Adam Brandenburger is profiled

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Excerpt from mbaMission -- "Students with whom mbaMission spoke reported being consistently impressed by his capacity to make the complex simple in the classroom, stating that Brandenburger is able to take the 'complicated, theoretical and intangible' world of game theory and make it 'easy to understand and practical.'"
Faculty News

Professor Baruch Lev's "Knowledge Effect" research is featured

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Excerpt from Ticker Magazine -- "The Knowledge Effect is grounded in academic literature. It was first discovered in a series of studies in the 1990s, when NYU’s Baruch Lev analyzed 20 years of financial data and discovered an association between a firm’s level of knowledge capital and its subsequent stock performance."
Faculty News

Professor Scott Galloway comments on the omission of Yahoo's security breach from its September 9 SEC filing

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Excerpt from The Washington Post -- "Scott Galloway, a professor at New York University’s Stern School of Business, said Mayer probably relied on her legal counsel to vet the document rather than reviewing it herself. 'However, CEOs are ultimately accountable for what’s in the proxy,' he said, 'if it comes out that their lack of transparency was a function of them not wanting to hamstring the Verizon deal, then they've held material information back from an acquirer.'"
Faculty News

Lord Mervyn King discusses the aftermath of Brexit

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Excerpt from Sky News -- "During the referendum campaign, someone said the real danger of Brexit is you'll end up with higher interest rates, lower house prices and a lower exchange rate, and I thought: dream on. Because that's what we've been trying to achieve for the past three years and now we have a chance of getting it."
Faculty News

Professor Robert Seamans comments on companies' initiatives to expand internet access

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Excerpt from The New York Times -- "Internet service providers 'are trying to go after those folks who are willing to pay less, but not to appeal to those willing to pay more,' said Robert Seamans, an associate professor at New York University’s Stern School of Business and a former economist at the Obama White House."
Faculty News

Professor Thomas Philippon comments on the impact of Nobel Prize winners Oliver Hart and Bengt Holmstrom's research

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Excerpt from The Wall Street Journal -- "Their research suggests CEO performance incentives should be set relative to performance of managers in similar industries, so as not to reward them for events beyond their control that affect all industries. 'That we do not see [this] more in practice is often a failure of governance,' Mr. Philippon said in an interview."
Faculty News

Professor Edward Altman's research in collaboration with Golub Capital is featured

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Excerpt from The Wall Street Journal -- "Mr. Altman, in the report, said the results show earnings growth is slowing across all sectors when compared to last year. 'While the companies in the middle market are profitable, this is the first quarter since we began tracking this data in 2012 that ebitda was essentially flat on a year-over-year basis,' he said."
School News

Associate Dean of MBA Admissions Isser Gallogly is featured in ​The Real Humans of MBA Admissions series

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Excerpt from Clear Admit -- "In our recent chat with Gallogly, '...I have always seen it as more of a calling than a career,' he says. 'You never know how the numbers are going to pan out, but more than that, you just know how important it is to everyone applying,' he adds. 'It is a life-changing experience, applying is a really tough process, and we have an important responsibility to make the best decisions we can for everyone.'"
Faculty News

Professor Arun Sundararajan illustrates how Juno, a competitor to Uber, sets itself apart

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Excerpt from The New Yorker -- "'If I was going to compete with Google, I would compete on privacy,' Arun Sundararajan, a professor at NYU’s business school and the author of the book 'The Sharing Economy,' says. 'I can’t compete with them on search-engine quality, because they’ve got all the best algorithms. So I compete on something that they can’t respond to easily. With Uber, it’s not quite as clear-cut, but if you look at all the different dimensions of their execution the driver relationship is the weakest, and it’s not one that they can easily correct.'"
 
Research Center Events

Executive Education Short Course: Breakthrough Strategic Thinking

Executive Education Short Course: Great Leadership
This course is suitable for leaders of organizations and business professionals who wish to enhance their strategic thinking abilities and gain competitive advantage in dynamic environments.
Faculty News

Professor Nouriel Roubini comments on how Brexit will impact the UK economy

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Excerpt from Bloomberg -- "'The risk is not that the U.K. has a recession of two-three quarters; the risk is that the U.K. will stagnate at 1 percent growth for the next five years,' Roubini said."
Faculty News

Professor Joshua Ronen explains why some private companies don't disclose their revenue

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Excerpt from Crain's New York -- "The question of when to talk openly about performance is a complicated one for private companies. Those that disclose might seem more transparent than those that don't, but they also could be engaged in a subtle battle of wits, according to Joshua Ronen, a professor of accounting at NYU's Stern School of Business. 'If I provide my revenue and a competitor doesn't, I'm signaling that I'm better,' he said."
Faculty News

Professor Lawrence White comments on the Trump campaign’s statement regarding his taxes

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Excerpt from PolitiFact -- "At most, Trump might be able to argue that he has some fiduciary obligations to his employees, suggested Lawrence White, a professor at New York University’s Stern School of Business. That would be arguable 'to the extent that any bankruptcy -- which might have arisen if he had not availed himself of these loss carry-forward/carry-back opportunities -- would have converted them into unsecured claimants for any delayed wages or other benefits,' White said."
Faculty News

Professor Pankaj Ghemawat discusses the impact of globalization

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Excerpt from BBC -- "I, too, worry about currency manipulation. I worry about chronic imbalances that are going to have to be unwound and I do worry about the international transmission of shocks. The question is whether, if we see certain things that we don't like about the architecture of the global system, do we take steps that basically risk pulling the whole house down?"
Faculty News

Professor David Yermack's research on Michelle Obama's impact on the fashion industry is referenced

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Excerpt from Vogue -- "In a 2010 study of Michelle’s economic impact on the fashion industry, David Yermack, of the Stern School of Business at New York University, found that the average value to a company following an appearance of an item worn by the First Lady was $14 million."
Faculty News

Professor Constantine Yannelis' research on student debt is referenced

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Excerpt from The Economist -- "According to number-crunching by Adam Looney of the Treasury Department and Constantine Yannelis of New York University, non-traditional students made up more than half of all new borrowers from the federal government between 2004 and 2014. They accounted for fully 70% of those who defaulted within two years of starting repayments in 2011."
Faculty News

Professor Rosa Abrantes-Metz is interviewed about her research on market manipulation

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Excerpt from Kitco News -- "Manipulation is not only bad, it is also illegal. Yes, it is often part of the game, a rigged part of the game. For over a decade that I have been developing empirical screens (as in this gold case), in order to assist in detecting this type of rigging. I am a believer in markets, but also know well (given my work across many markets) that they can be and have been abused."
Faculty News

In an in-depth interview, Professor Viral Acharya shares his views on Deutsche Bank, banking in India and the global financial crisis

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Excerpt from Bloomberg Quint -- "...I am hoping that the RBI and Modi government work out a market friendly solution for this problem rather than saying let’s just kick the can down the road, just like what Japan did in the 1990s, which is what Italy has done in the last 5 years, and I am worried that is what Germany is going to do right now. If we stand out and do the right thing, I think we can push the Indian growth rate above maybe even 10 percent."
Faculty News

Research Professor Ralph Gomory shares his views on American manufacturing for our next president

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Excerpt from The Huffington Post -- "Our present wide-open economy and the current orientation of our major corporations make our nation an excellent target for mercantilist exploitation. Although we like to imagine that we are in a world of free trade, the world that we live in is not like that. It is to a considerable extent, a world of mercantilism---a world in which many foreign governments do whatever it takes to make their industries succeed. Our vulnerability to these tactics can be traced to the doctrine of shareholder primacy, profit as the only corporate goal."
 
Faculty News

In an op-ed, Research Scholar Brandon Fuller outlines how cities, states and universities can retain foreign entrepreneurs

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Excerpt from Forbes -- "University programs that, with the support of surrounding cities and states, allow foreign entrepreneurs to stay in the U.S. show just how beneficial high-skilled immigration can be. Congress should facilitate growth and job-creation by raising the cap on high-skilled visas. But until it does this, entrepreneur-in-residence programs offer a great way to retain top foreign talent, and create wealth and job opportunities for Americans."
Research Center Events

TIME Editor and Author Rana Foroohar Discusses her Book, “Makers and Takers: The Rise of Finance and the Fall of American Business”

Rana Foroohar Book Signing
Stern’s Business & Society Program, in partnership with the Aspen Institute Business & Society Program and the Ford Foundation, welcomed TIME Editor Rana Foroohar to discuss her new book, Makers and Takers: The Rise of Finance and the Fall of American Business. The conversation was moderated by Fusion Senior Editor Felix Salmon.
Faculty News

Professor Robert Salomon provides perspective on the implications of Apple being ordered to pay tax to Ireland

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Excerpt from ICAS -- "'Operationally for Apple, this will mean very little,' says Robert Salomon, Associate Professor of Management and Organisations at New York University’s Stern School of Business. 'It won’t change how they do business, sell their products, market their products or how they run their business, but it will change their potential tax liability.'"