School News

The STEM designation of Stern's two-year Full-time MBA program and focused Andre Koo Technology and Entrepreneurship MBA program is highlighted

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Excerpt from Poets & Quants -- "“This has clearly become an important issue for international students as they are looking at MBA programs and potential higher-education opportunities,' says JP Eggers, NYU Stern’s vice dean for MBA programs and academic director of the Andre Koo Technology and Entrepreneurship MBA, which like the full-time MBA is STEM-designated."
School News

NYU Team Wins the Kellogg-Morgan Stanley Sustainable Investing Challenge

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A team of NYU Wagner and NYU Stern students have won first place at the 2020 Kellogg-Morgan Stanley Sustainable Investing Challenge. The team was among four finalist schools that presented, which were ultimately narrowed from 95 teams from over 74 schools and representing over 50 countries.
Faculty News

Joint research from Professor Melissa Schilling on uncharted technological terrain and breakthrough innovation is featured

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Excerpt from Gadget -- "The study also considered the role of serendipity – exploring how long search paths, scientific reasoning or distant recombination might help inventors make the most of a chance discovery. 'Some inventions do seem to materialize out of thin air,' Kneeland said. 'But that’s not really a process you can encourage or teach.'
The paper was co-authored with Melissa Schilling of New York University’s Stern School of Business and Barak Aharonson of the Coller School of Management at Tel Aviv University.
Faculty News

In a co-authored op-ed, Professor Marti Subrahmanyam calls for legislative changes to prevent insider trading by public officials

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Excerpt from The Hill -- "Is trading by Congress illegal? Should members of Congress be allowed to trade financial securities that are sensitive to private information? The “coronavirus trades” made by Sen. Richard Burr (R-N.C.) and his wife just prior to the March ’20 market crash raise these questions and signal the need for changes to the law. Some proposals go as far as banning stock trading by members of congress outright. The other extreme is to allow full discretion. The right solution is in between: Only allowing public officials to trade securities based on broad market indices."
Faculty News

In an op-ed, Professor Vasant Dhar highlights the challenges that designers and operators of AI systems face in times of crisis, pointing to his recent research on the COVID-19 pandemic

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Excerpt from Medium -- "Something didn’t seem right in the financial markets on Monday morning, February 24 2020. I wondered whether there was a decimal error in the P&L number that the machine sends out periodically. The number was correct. I scoured the news. Financial markets appeared to be acknowledging the significance of COVID-19. But why today, a full seven weeks after the spread of the deadly virus was first made public by China, and almost a month after it started appearing in the headlines globally?"
Faculty News

Takeaways on the need for qualitative “narratives” from Lord Mervyn King's recent book, "Radical Uncertainty," are cited

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Excerpt from Financial Times -- "Mervyn King, in his book with John Kay Radical Uncertainty: Decision-making for an unknowable future, makes a similar point; computer models should inform decision-making, but do not replace the need for qualitative 'narratives' on which the best judgments are made."
Faculty News

Professor Scott Galloway's comments on how CEO compensation tied to earnings reports drives behavior are highlighted

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Excerpt from CNBC -- “'When you pay CEOs based on earnings, and the metric is quarterly earnings, and the compensation committee says 98% of your compensation is going to be based on the stock price, which investors have linked to the earnings, compensation drives behavior,' Scott Galloway of NYU’s Stern School of Business said on CNBC when Dimon made his remarks in 2018."
Faculty News

Professor Lawrence White illustrates how the speed of the descent with regard to unemployment data and the coronavirus crisis is unprecedented

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Excerpt from NBC News -- “'It took three and a half years, from August of 1929 to March of 1933, to go from robust full employment to the depths of the Great Depression. It looks like we’re going to get there in less than three and a half months,' said Lawrence White, an economics professor at New York University. 'The speed of the descent is unprecedented.'”
Faculty News

Professor Allen Adamson notes that shopping malls must pivot and embrace charity and cause-related events like blood drives to succeed in the current retail climate

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Excerpt from Sarasota Herald Tribune -- "Malls 'can do things that are charity related, cause related — like helping first responders, helping health care workers, providing free meals to health care workers and things like that,' said Allen Adamson, co-founder of marketing consulting firm Metaforce and adjunct professor at New York University’s Stern School of Business. 'It’s going to be closer to charity events than entertainment events. Before, it was indoor ski rinks and roller-coasters. Now they need to pivot and do events that can help people.'”
Faculty News

Professor Michael Spence warns that if vulnerable developing countries don't get help from the G20 and international financial institutions it could trigger a correction in the global economy

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Excerpt from China Daily Asia -- "Some commentators believe the compound effect of this could result in the 2020s becoming a repeat of the Great Depression in the 1930s. Michael Spence, professor of economics at New York University’s Stern School of Business and a Nobel Prize winner for economics, said this is not inconceivable. 'There would have to be a lot of mistakes made to get there. The main risk is the poorer developing countries. They are highly vulnerable, both medically and economically,' he said."
Faculty News

Professor Arun Sundararajan explains how crises can serve as catalysts for change

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Excerpt from Inventiva -- "'Crisis can be sort of a catalyst or can speed up changes that are on the way — it almost can serve as an accelerant,' said Arun Sundararajan, an NYU Stern School of Business professor researching how digital technologies transform society. This is the time of distress. People are losing their jobs; some are being denied their salaries and some have been laid off."
Faculty News

Professor Jonathan Haidt's book, "The Coddling of the American Mind," is highlighted

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Excerpt from The New York Times -- "Over the past decades, a tide of 'safetyism' has crept over American society. As Greg Lukianoff and Jonathan Haidt put it in their book “The Coddling of the American Mind,” this is the mentality that whatever doesn’t kill you makes you weaker. The goal is to eliminate any stress or hardship a child might encounter, so he or she won’t be wounded by it."
Faculty News

Professor Anindya Ghose offers his perspective on the future of Indian hotel startup Oyo in the wake of the coronavirus pandemic

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Excerpt from Deal Street Asia -- "'Worldwide, the travel and hospitality industry has been devastated, and this is not a short-term thing; it’s going to take a long time for the industry to recover,' said Anindya Ghose, who teaches business at New York University’s (NYU) Stern School of Business. 'Oyo is not a four-star, five-star chain or even a three-star chain. They are in budget space and their clientele is very different (than premium hotels’), and the income of this demographic, because of job losses, furloughs, etc will be hit very hard by the crisis. All this tells me that things are going to be dire for a long time for Oyo and other companies like Oyo.'"
Faculty News

Professor Thomai Serdari's comments on the future mindset of fashion consumers are spotlighted

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Excerpt from This is Glamorous -- "According to Thomai Serdari, a professor of luxury marketing and branding at New York University's Stern School of Business, 'I think that a lot of people are going to realize that they don't need as much — we have missed an entire month already that we're never going to get back. And people are pressured financially because they're losing their jobs and preparing for a recession.'"
Faculty News

Professor Scott Galloway weights in on the state of the economy amid the coronavirus pandemic, asserting that companies that use bailout money for stock buybacks should be allowed to fail

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Excerpt from MarketWatch -- “'Let’s not have capitalism on the way up and then when we hit a crisis we have the worst type of socialism, we have cronyism,' Galloway said, pointing out that, going forward, companies using most of their bailout money for stock buybacks should be allowed to fail.
Faculty News

Professor Priya Raghubir is quoted in a story examining why some consumers are purchasing airline tickets amid travel advisories and border closures

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Excerpt from The New York Times -- “'The comparison of real prices today versus reference prices that consumers have in their memories — ones they may even be unaware that they hold — is leading to this kind of purchase behavior,' said Priya Raghubir, a New York University Stern School of Business professor who studies consumer psychology and spending."
Faculty News

Professor Edward Altman's Z-Score data is highlighted

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Excerpt from Splash -- "The Z score formula for predicting bankruptcy was first published in 1968 by Edward Altman, who was, at the time, an assistant professor of finance at New York University. The formula can be used to predict the probability that a firm will go into bankruptcy within two years."
School News

Stern's Langone Part-time MBA Program is highlighted in a feature on top part-time MBA programs

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Excerpt from FindMBA -- "NYU Stern School of Business runs a top-rated part-time MBA program in New York City. The location is a major advantage for students, since it’s a global mecca for business and culture, from finance to fashion."
School News

Data from the Sustainable Market Share Index™, research by the Center for Sustainable Business and IRI, is spotlighted

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Excerpt from GreenBiz -- "Furthermore, in terms of market share, we’re talking about a small part of the overall consumer goods market. The NYU Stern research found only 16 percent of CPG goods are marketed as sustainable. (And of course, we might be skeptical as sustainability nerds about what percentage of those goods we’d consider truly 'sustainable.')"
Faculty News

In a co-authored column, Professor Kim Schoenholtz argues that the global financial system will continue to operate on a dollar system for at least the next 10 years

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Excerpt from The International Economy -- "No one knows how the global financial system will evolve over the next decade, but we can look to the past as a guide to what the broad contours are likely to be. First, the dollar-based system arose in the aftermath of World War I largely because of the trust established when the United States remained on the gold standard while others, especially the British, did not."
Faculty News

Professor Richard Berner offers his perspective on regulation outside of the banking system in a story examining whether the coronavirus crisis has exposed cracks in investment management

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Excerpt from Wealth Professional -- [W]e’ve done much less [to regulate players] outside the banking system,' said New York University finance professor Richard Berner, who was also the former head of the US Treasury’s Office of Financial Research. 'And that unlevel playing field tends to get regulatory arbitrage, with some activities simply migrating to less regulated entities.'"
Faculty News

Professor Nouriel Roubini asserts that public-health responses in advanced economies have been inadequate to curb the coronavirus pandemic and the fiscal policy packages being implemented are not large enough to support a quick recovery

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Excerpt from Moneyweb -- "Nouriel Roubini, professor of economics at New York University, argues that the ensuing contraction might not be a V- or U- or L-shaped but I-shaped (a vertical line representing a sharp and drastic decline of financial markets and the real economy)."
Faculty News

Professor Thomas Philippon is quoted in a story profiling French economist Thomas Piketty

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Excerpt from WIRED -- "In 1993, aged 22, he finished a prizewinning PhD on wealth distribution and immediately became an assistant professor in MIT’s revered economics department. 'He always did everything two years before everyone else and twice as quickly,' says his friend Thomas Philippon, a French economist who followed him to MIT and is now a professor at New York University."
School News

In a joint op-ed, Center for Business and Human Rights Senior Program Manager Natasja Sheriff and Program Manager Zahra Khan explain the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on low-wage laborers who support large swathes of the global consumer economy

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Excerpt from Quartz -- "As the coronavirus pandemic ripples around the world, it’s affecting all of us. But it’s having the most devastating impact on people invisible to many who are reading this: low-wage laborers who support large swathes of the global consumer economy."
School News

In an in-depth feature, current Langone Part-time MBA student Megan Fairchild details how she is balancing working remotely as a ballet dancer, classwork and family time while quarantining during the COVID-19 pandemic

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Excerpt from The New York Times -- "The dining room is set up as a work space for my husband on one end, while I edit YouTube ballet classes and interviews on my computer at the other — in between parenting, staying in shape, and doing Zoom classes and homework (I’m studying for an M.B.A. at New York University). With a baby, we are held to a certain schedule: My husband gets priority to work on weekdays, and I do most of my work on weekends, or when my daughter naps."