Faculty News

Professor Amy Webb explores how daily life will be different after the coronavirus outbreak subsides, noting that Americans must be willing to imagine the unimaginable

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Excerpt from Newsday -- “'Life after the virus will be different from before the virus,' said Amy Webb, professor of strategic foresight at the New York University Stern School of Business. 'We have a choice to make: Do we want to confront our cherished beliefs and make meaningful changes for the future, or do we simply want to preserve the status quo?' Webb said."
Faculty News

Professor Baruch Lev is quoted in a story examining the growing number of companies suspending earnings guidance during the coronavirus outbreak

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Excerpt from Marketplace -- "In normal times, it’s a bad look when companies clam up, according to Baruch Lev, professor of accounting and finance at NYU. 'When you stop guidance, the stock price is hit because it increases significantly [the] suspicion of investors. ‘Why did you stop? What’s the reason?’ ' he said."
Faculty News

Professor Tom Meyvis' comments on why consumers are drawn to shopping at Target are highlighted

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Excerpt from Fox Business -- “'Target and Walmart and a lot of these places have kind of established themselves as places you can go where you pretty much know you're going to get a good deal, that things aren't going to be so expensive,' Meyvis said. “So people sort of treat it like the grocery store, where they're just putting stuff in their cart.'”
Faculty News

Key takeaways and analysis from Professor Aswath Damodaran's recent blog post on the ongoing market crisis are spotlighted

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Excerpt from Seeking Alpha -- "The second winner this week is from Prof. Aswath Damodaran, who graciously shares the tools used in his Stern School of Business MBA classes. I recommend his entire 'Viral Market Meltdown' series, but my focus today is on part V, Back to Basics."
School News

In an in-depth Q&A as part of P&Q’s “Best and Brightest,” undergraduate student Caitlyn Lubas (BS '20) highlights how the School prepared her to value the role of emotional intelligence in business

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Excerpt from Poets & Quants -- “Although the term “business” commonly conjures thoughts of finance and profitability, I learned that business is fundamentally about people. Whether it’s understanding clients, customers, or business partners, it truly is psychology and understanding the human experience that underlies so many aspects of business. Businesses become successful by solving people’s problems, so understanding people is the key first step. Business school has taught me how to be a more thoughtful, perceptive person which in turn makes me a better businesswoman.”
Faculty News

Professor Arun Sundararajan is interviewed about how the coronavirus crisis could catalyze or even accelerate an ongoing change within the sharing economy; his book "The Sharing Economy" is spotlighted

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Excerpt from Newsy -- “This kind of crisis can catalyze or even accelerate an ongoing change,” said Arun Sundararajan, author of "The Sharing Economy: The End of Employment and the Rise of Crowd-Based Capitalism."
Faculty News

Professor Viral Acharya's joint research on the financial ramifications of the COVID-19 pandemic is highlighted

Excerpt from Outlook India -- "A presentation delivered by Viral Acharya and his colleagues at New York University Stern School of Business said that COVID-19 has many similarities with Global Financial Crisis of 2008 and there are some stark differences as well. It also says that this is once-in-a-century pandemic emanated from Wuhan and has engulfed most of the globe."
Faculty News

Professor Arun Sundararajan shares why he believes the coronavirus crisis could dramatically accelerate technological changes, noting that the gig economy flourished after the financial crisis in 2008

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Excerpt from Protocol -- "Sundararajan explained that the gig economy flourished after the last financial crisis, because people were 'more willing to experiment with new ways of earning money. Through that lens,' he added, 'I think that there are lots of ongoing technological changes that could be dramatically accelerated by the current crisis.'"
Faculty News

Professor Allen Adamson explains why luxury brands must embrace risk to save their businesses during the coronavirus outbreak

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Excerpt from Luxury Daily -- "'Luxury brands need to be more comfortable with risk,' said Allen Adamson, cofounder of Metaforce and adjunct professor at NYU Stern School of Business, New York. 'The temptation from most consumers is that luxury can wait, I don't need to make a big decision right now,' he said."
Faculty News

Professor Lawrence White compares the recent U.S. unemployment report to the data of the Great Depression

Excerpt from NY Daily News -- "Lawrence White, a longtime economics professor at New York University’s Stern School of Business, said the new numbers don’t even stack up well against the Great Depression of the 1930s. 'In the 1930s, we went from full employment in 1929 to 25% unemployment in 1933. It took three and a half years. We’re going to be seeing a comparable descent from full employment to deep depression in three and a half weeks, by this rate,' White told the Daily News."
Faculty News

Professor Nouriel Roubini discusses how the coronavirus crisis may have profound implications for the global balance of power

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Excerpt from Wired -- “'China is building its soft power,' says Nouriel Roubini, an economist at NYU who was an adviser to presidents Clinton and Obama. 'They are going to use this crisis to say, ‘Our political system is better, our technological model is better, our economic model is better.’”
Faculty News

Professor Edward Altman's comments on high-yield bond default rates and the modern junk bond market are spotlighted

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Excerpt from Grant's Interest Rate Observer -- "Altman hazards no guess about when this grandaddy of benign cycles will turn malicious. 'When both macro and micro market forces point to an unmistakable negative outlook, I except the next stressed credit cycle to produce default amounts that will be higher than any in the past due to the enourmous bond, bank and nonbank buildup, and the crisis may last longer than the previous one."
School News

Vice Dean of MBA Programs JP Eggers discusses how Stern's focused Andre Koo Tech MBA and Fashion & Luxury MBA programs prepare students to meet industry needs; current student Robert Ung (MBA '20) explains the benefits of the tech program’s structure

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Excerpt from The Wall Street Journal -- "New York University’s Stern School of Business added two specialized one-year M.B.A. programs in 2018, one in technology and the other focused on the fashion and luxury industries. For 2020, the school said applications for its one-year tech M.B.A. grew 59%; those for the fashion and luxury degree climbed 6%.
'The impetus was trying to think differently about what the future of graduate business education would look like and to meet the needs of employers that our existing programs may not be able to,' said J.P. Eggers, vice dean of M.B.A. and graduate programs."
School News

Center for Business and Human Rights Deputy Director Paul Barrett is quoted in a story examining how the spread of online misinformation has undermined the public’s overall sense of what is true during the coronavirus outbreak

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Excerpt from Fast Company -- “'I think we have been drifting downward for years toward a growing and pernicious consensus that you can’t tell truth from falsity and there’s almost no point in trying to figure out whether there’s truth on a given subject,' says Paul Barrett, deputy director of New York University’s Stern School of Business and Human Rights, who has written extensively on misinformation in election cycles."
School News

In an in-depth Q&A as part of P&Q’s “Best and Brightest,” undergraduate student Aldo Gonzalez Aragon (BS '20) underscores how Stern's interdisciplinary offerings have helped prepare him for future success

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Excerpt from Poets & Quants -- "I was surprised by how diverse and interdisciplinary my business education has been. Majoring in business lies at the intersection of understanding and analyzing problems beyond spreadsheets. I am currently taking a class on Entrepreneurship & Sustainable Proteins. When I first applied to Stern’s Undergraduate College, I never imagined taking a course that analyzed how plant-based proteins can upgrade our food system to be more environmentally-friendly, healthier, and innovative. I used to think business was about spreadsheets, deals, and quarterly earnings reports. It’s so much more than that."
Faculty News

Professor Joseph Foudy explains why some companies are opting to cut salaries instead of laying people off during the coronavirus outbreak

Excerpt from Adweek -- "The pandemic serves as a 'short-term shock,' said Joseph Foudy, clinical associate professor of economics at NYU Stern School of Business. Unlike a recession, there could be a turnaround in months, not necessarily years. 'If the recovery comes sooner than expected, they could find that it’s difficult to regrow,' Foudy said. 'It would be really inefficient to lay people off.'”
Faculty News

Professor Thomai Serdari is quoted in a story examining the future of department stores in the wake of the COVID-19 outbreak

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Excerpt from Retail Dive -- "Saks Fifth Avenue's flagship in particular, in the post-COVID era, will face what Serdari called 'an added, unwritten responsibility, which is what it means to define New York City retail on Fifth Avenue, luxury stores, across from Rockefeller Center. Even if times are tough for that parent company [HBC], that's worth exploring.'"
Faculty News

Professor Julianna Pillemer's research on complex dynamics of interpersonal connections at work is cited

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Excerpt from My Company Poland -- "It is surprising how little research is done to deal with this problem. It turns out to be quite complex. Julianna Pillemer, American psychologist from New York University Stern School of Business, the author of pioneering research into close relationships at work, wanted to answer some of the questions about the relationship between friendship and work. What are the basic features that distinguish friendship at work from other friendly or mentoring relationships? What is the difference between friendship between boss and subordinate and peer relationship? How is friendship with a person who you know 10 years different from the one that develops in the workplace?"
Faculty News

Professor Scott Galloway offers his perspective on why he believes Amazon could emerge from the coronavirus pandemic strongest from a perception standpoint among Big Tech companies

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Excerpt from Yahoo Finance -- "The increase has spurred Amazon (AMZN) to hire an additional 100,000 workers to keep up with the demand, as Americans turn to the site for home essentials. And according to NYU Stern School of Business professor of marketing Scott Galloway, the greater reliance on Amazon will make it a far stronger company well after the coronavirus lockdowns come to an end."
Faculty News

In a video Q&A interview, Professor Amy Webb offers insights on the scale of the COVID-19 outbreak in the U.S.

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Excerpt from The Verge -- "We’re continuing our Vergecast interview series remotely during the COVID-19 pandemic and this week, Verge editor-in-chief Nilay Patel sits down via Skype with Amy Webb, the founder and CEO of The Future Today Institute. Amy is also a professor at NYU’s Stern School of Business and recently came out with a book called The Big Nine: How the Tech Titans and Their Thinking Machines Could Warp Humanity."
Faculty News

Lord Mervyn King explains why the economic recovery following the peak in the coronavirus pandemic will depend critically on the policies governments put in place

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Excerpt from Yahoo Finance -- "You can’t, until we get an exit plan from the new world the coronavirus has created. 'I think it [the economic recovery] will look very different. It will depend critically on the policies governments put in place,' explained former Bank of England governor Lord Mervyn King on Yahoo Finance’s The First Trade."
Faculty News

Professor Jonathan Haidt's work on the moral foundations of politics is spotlighted

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Excerpt from The New York Times -- "But there have been more sophisticated and sympathetic efforts, too, like the influential work of New York University’s Jonathan Haidt on the 'moral foundations' of politics: Haidt argues that conservatives actually have more diverse moral intuitions than liberals, encompassing categories like purity and loyalty as well as care and fairness, and that the right-wing mind therefore sometimes understands the left-wing mind better than vice versa."
Faculty News

In a joint op-ed, Professors Michelle Greenwald and Ronni Burns offer 11 tips to increase attentiveness, engagement and success in online meetings

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Excerpt from Forbes -- "Below are tips Ronni and I came up with to help with a diverse range of audiences, both business and academic. Necessity is the mother of invention. I believe we’re all surprising ourselves with our abilities to adapt to teaching online in ways wouldn't have imagined as recently as 2 weeks ago, and finding it more satisfying than expected."
School News

Recent alumnus Sam Breslow (MBA '19) is profiled as part of Clear Admit's "Real Humans of Google" segment, spotlighting Stern's emphasis on preparing students with the skills needed to succeed in the tech industry

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Excerpt from Clear Admit -- "When I started to research schools in earnest, Stern also stood out for its flexibility, with a menu of core courses and a broad range of electives and specializations. In spite of its (well-earned) reputation as a more traditionally finance-focused business school, I also felt that Stern was (and is still today) one of the few top schools to place a real emphasis on preparing students for careers within the tech industry, which was particularly important to me given my background and interests."
Faculty News

Professor Michael North is quoted in an article examining how the coronavirus pandemic is fueling intergenerational strife

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Excerpt from San Francisco Chronicle -- "'Generational shaming is a time-honored tradition,' said Michael North, a business professor at New York University who has researched the recent spate of media standoffs between Baby Boomers and Millennials. 'What’s taking place now is a symptom of our inherent generational divide, not a cause.'”