Faculty News

Research by the Urbanization Project's Senior Research Scholar Shlomo Angel is featured

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Excerpt from The Economist -- "By using satellite images, old maps and population data, Mr Angel has run a ruler over some 3,600 metropolitan areas. He finds that, with few exceptions, they are less dense in wealthier countries. Paris is less than one-third as densely populated as Cairo and barely one-seventh as dense as Mumbai. Even rich cities that seem packed are sparsely populated compared with poorer ones. Tokyo is only one-fifth as densely populated as Dhaka, for example."
Faculty News

Prof. Gavin Kilduff's research on rivalry is featured

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Excerpt from Entrepreneur -- "When going head-to-head with a rival, motivation can easily become untethered from what's at stake, because 'beating that opponent carries a psychological value in and of itself independent of the size of the prize,' Kilduff says. And that can be dangerous: Laser-focusing in on one rival at the expense of the bigger picture leaves us vulnerable to 'other competitive threats that may be newly emerging.'"
Faculty News

Dean Peter Henry explains why immigration policy is important for the US economy

Excerpt from Bloomberg -- "The immigration issue... is an economic issue, frankly. We've got a shortage of skilled workers in this country. Even... putting aside the amnesty issue, we need more high-skilled numbers. The United States's key competitive advantage has been the fact that we're an open society and we take in skilled workers, and right now we have a shortage of skilled workers in this country. And immigration policy is a key to economic growth."
Faculty News

Prof. Nouriel Roubini shares his predictions for the economy in 2015

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Excerpt from Yahoo! Finance -- "We’re currently in the mid-late stretch of this boom, 'so next year we’ll see economic growth and easy money. This frothiness that we’ve seen in financial markets is likely to continue from equities to credit to housing,' says Roubini. He predicts an eventual crash, but not for at least a few years. He believes that valuations in some markets are already stretched and will continue to stretch until seeing a shakeout around two years down the line, in 2016."
Faculty News

Dean Peter Henry discusses an MBA's return on investment

Excerpt from Bloomberg -- "I think what's really clear from these numbers... these are double-digit returns people are getting on their education. So the first thing to notice is an education pays... It's a challenge for all of us that the cost of a higher education continues to rise and we're all working to make sure that we deliver the maximum value for education. And I think the numbers suggest that we are doing that."
Faculty News

Dean Peter Henry discusses economic challenges faced by the European Union

Excerpt from Bloomberg -- "The European Experiment is definitely under real stress right now. Mario Draghi faces dissension amongst his council. He has to do something very serious with respect to monetary policy. He said he would do whatever was necessary, but the Germans feel very differently. But the real issue facing Europe is... two other words: structural reform. And Europe has not dealt with the structural issues it needs to deal with from the labor market to immigration."
Faculty News

Prof. Nouriel Roubini on QE in Europe

Excerpt from Bloomberg -- "'Europe is only one shock away from deflation and another recession,' [Roubini] told Bloomberg Television. 'The ECB should have done quantitative easing already. They’re waiting until it’s going to be too late.'"
Faculty News

Prof. David Yermack's course on Bitcoin is featured

Excerpt from Village Voice -- "'[Bitcoin] reimagines money, which is something that everybody is interested in at some level,' says Yermack. 'And it's the first currency ever that really wasn't connected to a government or some kind of sovereign authority. It's made people think about possibilities for commerce and business and daily life that probably never occurred to them before.'"
Faculty News

NYU Global Research Prof. Ian Bremmer explains the impact of falling oil prices on Vladimir Putin

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Excerpt from CNBC -- "'I think that lower oil prices simply squeeze [Putin] harder, pushes him further into a corner. He feels he has to fight as a consequence,' said Bremmer, whose Eurasia conducts research and advises clients on political risks around the world."
School News

Associate Dean Roxanne Hori is interviewed about careers in finance

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Excerpt from TopMBA -- "Most of our students interested in pursuing a career in finance opt to specialize in finance, financial instruments & markets, financial systems & analytics, among others. Stern offers MBA students the opportunity to 'specialize' in content areas, which are akin to committing to a major. MBA students are able to specialize in up to three, nine-credit specializations and are able to choose from a robust list of content areas."
Faculty News

Prof. Mervyn King participates in a panel discussion on the Federal Reserve

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Excerpt from Council on Foreign Relations -- "The reason I think there is pressure now is that whereas in the context of monetary policy, around the world, central banks have evolved a very clear mandate and a system of accountability that was not challenged. When the crisis came, the actions that central banks were called upon to take to act as a lender of last resort were things for which there was not a very clear mandate. And in particular, the Federal Reserve pushed the envelope very hard, right up to the boundary of what could legitimately be said to be within its legal remit, and that was done in order to help protect the United States and its economy."
Faculty News

Prof. Scott Galloway discusses Amazon's future

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Excerpt from The New York Times -- "'Everything you buy, starting with your weekly groceries, will be flowing through one pipe called Amazon,' said Scott Galloway, a professor of marketing at New York University’s Stern School of Business. 'They’ll have your credit card purchase history, be able to do data-mining on your needs, offer massive selection with a reputation for low prices.'"
Faculty News

Prof. Scott Galloway discusses the evolution of Black Friday

Excerpt from Bloomberg -- "I think these defined moments of shopping are becoming less important and people are getting more confidence with the research that they do online that these products will be available for a while, so that the definitive 24-hour 'just-buy-now' is losing credibility, especially when you see Black Friday moving into Thanksgiving. So, I just don't think people are as worried they're going to miss out."
School News

The Stern Volatility Institute's launch in Shanghai is featured

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Excerpt from TopMBA -- "The Volatility Institute is focused on analyzing and assessing risk in global financial markets with the aim of influencing international financial policy. The NYU Shanghai extension into China and Shanghai’s financial district of Liujiazui is intended to provide a platform facilitating research into Chinese financial markets."
Faculty News

In an op-ed, Professor Nouriel Roubini discusses the global impact of quantitative easing

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Excerpt from Project Syndicate -- "The recent decision by the Bank of Japan to increase the scope of its quantitative easing is a signal that another round of currency wars may be under way. The BOJ’s effort to weaken the yen is a beggar-thy-neighbor approach that is inducing policy reactions throughout Asia and around the world."
Business and Policy Leader Events

The Amazon Way: Innovating at High Speed

Street View of Tisch Hall
NYU Stern welcomes David Nenke, WW Director Product and Marketing, Amazon Cloud Drive, Amazon.com, who joins first-year MBAs for a special Block Time discussion on Monday, December 1. 
Faculty News

Prof. Adam Alter's research on milestone birthdays is featured

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Excerpt from The Guardian -- "And for the first time, thanks to new research by Alter and Hal Hershfield, an expert on the psychology of time at the University of California’s Anderson School of Management, we have a glimpse of just how profoundly we’re affected when we sense these milestones approaching and experience a 'crisis of meaning'."
Faculty News

Prof. Emeritus Michael Moses discusses the art market

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Excerpt from The New York Times -- "'It’s phenomenal,' said Michael Moses, a founder of the Mei Moses Fine Art Index, a widely followed measure of art prices, and a retired professor at the New York University Stern School of Business. 'At the Christie’s postmodern and contemporary sale, the average compound return was 20 percent annualized. That’s amazing.'"
Faculty News

Prof. Priya Raghubir discusses Black Friday discounts

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Excerpt from NBC News -- "'Consumers are cottoning on to these clever tactics and so over time they are less likely to be fooled,' said Priya Raghubir, the chair of the marketing department at New York University’s Leonard N. Stern School of Business in New York City. 'And if they’re less likely to be fooled, the magic of Black Friday pretty much starts getting lost.'"
Faculty News

Prof. Arun Sundararajan on social impact entrepreneurship

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Excerpt from CCTV -- "'I’ve seen a really substantial impact not just in the U.S., but also in India of interests in social impact entrepreneurship. I think that comes from realization from a new generation from the people in India that the country’s problems won’t be solved by government, and they are going to have to be solved by free enterprise,' said Arun Sundararajan, a professor from New York University’s Stern School of Business."
Faculty News

Prof. Samuel Craig discusses new fitting room technology

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Excerpt from OZY -- "And even some concepts that have been percolating for some time now have proved to be a bust at some high-end boutiques. 'It’s been a little slow to catch on,' says Sam Craig, director of the Entertainment, Media & Technology program at NYU Stern School of Business."
Faculty News

Prof. Gavin Kilduff on rivalries in college football

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Excerpt from The Wall Street Journal -- "The oomph in every rivalry, Kilduff said, comes from similarity, proximity and history. Auburn versus Alabama—an intrastate matchup of public universities that dates to 1893—could be a case study. His research also shows that sports rivalries are stronger when their historical records against each other are closer."
Faculty News

In an op-ed, Prof. Arun Sundararajan compares the cultures of Airbnb and Uber

Excerpt from Harvard Business Review -- "The contrast was especially striking given that Airbnb and Uber are together inventing a new organizational form: platforms that are firm-market hybrids, supplying branded service offerings without actually employing the providers or owning the assets used in provision. Crucial to their long-run success could be creating an appropriate platform culture — shared norms, values and capabilities among the providers. It’s the analog of an organizational culture, but without the directive authority or co-located social systems that traditional firms can take advantage of to manage their employees. The fact that these two market leaders are using such different approaches provides a useful testing ground for what works and what doesn’t."
Press Releases

Volatility Institute Launches at NYU Shanghai

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NYU Shanghai is celebrating the launch of the Volatility Institute at NYU Shanghai. The Volatility Institute at NYU Shanghai, located at the NYU Shanghai Pudong Academic Building in the heart of Liujiazui, Shanghai’s financial center, aims to create opportunities for research focused on both the Chinese financial markets and markets around the world.
Faculty News

Prof. Luke Williams on Uber's expansion

Excerpt from Fox Business -- "We have to put [the expansion] in context. So, it's double their existing size and also it's one and a half times the size of Twitter. It also puts them at the same size as Salesforce.com, Delta Airlines, Kraft Foods. If we think about Hertz, it's been in the business forever. They're only about 11.3 billion. So, it's important to put it in context and say, what do they need it for? And they really need it for international expansion. So I think that's the interesting question. Why do they need to expand so quickly internationally?"