Faculty News

In an op-ed, Prof. Michelle Greenwald outlines the 7 best strategic uses of consumer-facing technology in retail and hospitality

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Excerpt from Forbes -- "Here are my top picks for pioneers embracing new forms of technology at retail, to differentiate themselves among digitally savvy target audiences. In so doing, they’re better meeting consumer needs such as product customization, or quality and speed of service and payment."
Faculty News

Prof. April Klein on DuPont's proxy fight

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Excerpt from USA Today -- "April Klein, a professor of accounting at New York University’s Stern School of Business, said the money spent to keep Peltz off the board will benefit the company in the long run because it forced DuPont to review strategies to increase its stock price. She noted the proxy campaign’s $15 million cost is only a small percentage of DuPont’s $66.7 billion capitalization."
 
Faculty News

Prof. Thomas Philippon's research on the financial industry is cited

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Excerpt from The New York Times -- "Research from Thomas Philippon of New York University suggests the United States financial industry has become less efficient over the last 130 years at channeling capital toward productive use. And this same phenomenon may be a major contributor to rising inequality."
Faculty News

Prof. Jonathan Haidt's book, "The Righteous Mind," is highlighted

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Excerpt from The Washington Post -- "These divergent perspectives on the Pew survey are connected to larger narratives that frame how conservative and liberal Christians in the United States see themselves. In 'The Righteous Mind,' Jonathan Haidt describes the different 'stories' that arise, depending on whether you lean to the left or right politically. Though he has written primarily about 'liberals' and 'conservatives' from a political standpoint, I find his analysis easily applies to 'liberals' and 'conservatives' within Christianity also."
Press Releases

NYU Stern School of Business Announces New Master of Science in Accounting

Henry Kaufman Management Center
New York University Stern School of Business has announced a new one-year, full-time Master of Science in Accounting that will begin accepting qualified college graduates to start in the fall semester 2016. This program will satisfy the 150-credit-hour education requirement needed as a prerequisite for New York State’s Certified Public Accountant (CPA) certification. The MS in Accounting provides a thorough foundation for careers in accounting, including attestation and assurance services, as well as taxation and forensic accounting.
School News

MBA student Jennifer Meacham is profiled as one of 50 Poets & Quants "Best & Brightest MBAs"   

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Excerpt from Poets & Quants -- "A prolific leader and volunteer, Meacham serves as president of Stern’s Association of Hispanic and Black Business Students (AHBBS), Chair of the Diversity and Inclusion Council in Stern’s Student Government, and Vice President of Marketing and Logistics for Stern Speaks. During her time, she has helped host case competitions, speakers, discussion panels, and charity auctions. Meacham was also the recipient of the President’s Service Award, which recognizes students who make significant impact in the areas of learning, leadership, and quality of student life." Full article: http://bit.ly/1JtHFCH
Faculty News

Prof. Aswath Damodaran's research on stock market returns is cited

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Excerpt from The Wall Street Journal -- "There are several approaches to estimating where it stands at any given time, including surveying investors and looking at the historic relationship between stock and Treasury returns. An alternative method involves using expected future cash flows from stocks, as Stern School of Business professor Aswath Damodaran has done in the model he has made available on his website. According to this, the S&P 500’s equity-risk premium as of the end of April was 5.8 percentage points, which counts as one of the higher readings in data going back to 1960. On that basis, it seems like there is a sizable cushion between still very low yields on Treasurys and the stock market’s expected returns. In other words, stocks don’t look so expensive on this basis."
Press Releases

Robert Greifeld, CEO of Nasdaq, to Keynote NYU Stern School of Business 2015 Graduate Convocation

Bob Greifeld
Bob Greifeld will discuss the role of dynamic and well-functioning capital markets in frontier and emerging economies. He will stress the importance of ensuring the efficient movement of capital and resources in driving job growth, infrastructure development and economic prosperity.
School News

A Stern Signature Project, in partnership with the Urbanization Project, to improve public spaces in Valledupar, Columbia, is highlighted; Research Scholar Nicholas Galarza is quoted

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Excerpt from El Pilon -- (translated from Spanish using Google Translate) "According to the advanced studies in the city, Galarza said, they found that there are about 3.3 meters of public space per person in Valledupar, 'similar to the national average, which does not mean that we are doing well on average, really meaning that Colombia has too little public space and especially parks.'"
Faculty News

Prof. Arun Sundararajan moderates a Congressional panel on the sharing economy

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Excerpt from Forbes -- "Sundararajan described the self-regulating trend of sharing economy companies. An advocate of self regulation, he’s clear to note he is not opposed to regulation generally, though it should be applied carefully. 'I believe in regulation very strongly because I believe in markets very strongly. And the purpose of regulation is to step in and help markets function better, to fill the gaps, correct them when things are going off the wrong way. So you can’t be anti-regulation if you are pro-market, it’s just a question of being surgical about it.'"
Faculty News

Prof. Jonathan Haidt's research on morality is cited

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Excerpt from New York Magazine -- "This gut-centric view of political psychology isn’t a new idea — researchers like Jonathan Haidt have been doing fascinating work that argues, at its core, that people don’t weigh evidence and then decide where they stand on an issue. Instead, moral impulses embedded deeply within them — impulses that vary widely across exactly the political divisions you’d expect — stack the deck beforehand. To Haidt and other researchers, the stories we tell ourselves and others about why we believe what we believe are mostly window dressing, forms of ex post facto justification for decisions really made at a baser level."
Business and Policy Leader Events

Greg Coleman, President of Buzzfeed, Joins MBAs for Langone Speaker Series

Greg Coleman | Langone Speaker Series
Greg Coleman, president of BuzzFeed and former president of HuffingtonPost.com, joined MBA students and alumni for a 2014-2015 Langone Speaker Series event, presented by U.S. Trust. Professor Jeffrey Carr moderated the discussion, beginning with a one-on-one interview.
Faculty News

Prof. Thomaï Serdari explains why luxury brands advertise at the Cannes Film Festival

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Excerpt from Luxury Daily -- "'This is not only about brand synergies, or exposure to a captive audience of ultra wealthy prospects,' she said. 'It is mainly of each brand’s elevated status just based on the fact that they can afford the expenditure required for their presence and events at Cannes."
Faculty News

In an op-ed, Prof. Pankaj Ghemawat discusses his research on globalization in India

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Excerpt from Business Insider -- "My own research on India's openness for the DHL Global Connectedness Index, which I prepare with my IESE business school colleague Steven A. Altman, indicates that India is still a relatively closed country in many aspects. The ratio of India's exports to its GDP has tripled over the past two decades, but across a broader range of indicators, the depth of India's global connectedness still ranks only 119th out of 140 countries."
Faculty News

Prof. Arun Sundararajan on Airbnb's impact on housing in San Francisco

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Excerpt from TIME -- "Arun Sundararajan, an economist who reviewed the report, believes that Airbnb and its data are something of a red herring. While the site may lead to some units being taken off the market and to disturbances among neighbors who don’t like sharing their buildings with tourists, he says the housing options provided by Airbnb are likely drawing more tourists—and more revenue—to the city. The responsibility of Airbnb in yielding the current lack of housing in the city is 'sort of like a rounding error when you compare it to the population growth in San Francisco and the number of units that are rent-controlled.'"
Faculty News

Prof. Nouriel Roubini discusses the impact of higher interest rates on bonds

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Excerpt from CNBC -- "Bond investors shouldn't expect a 'rate riot or rate rage' when the Federal Reserve begins to raise interest rates because the central bank has already telegraphed what it is going to do, economist Nouriel Roubini said Tuesday. 'It's not going to be a significant surprise. As the economy recovers, as inflation goes higher, gradually long-term interest rates are going to go higher,' said the co-founder and chairman of Roubini Global Economics, also known as 'Dr. Doom.'"
Faculty News

Prof. Samuel Craig on the cancellation of "American Idol"

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Excerpt from Marketplace -- "'Nothing is forever in TV land,' says Sam Craig, a professor at New York University. After 15 seasons spanning 13 years, he says this is an 'inexorable movement.'"
Faculty News

Prof. Jennifer Carpenter on the recent volatility in China's stock market

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Excerpt from Xinhua -- "'China's stock market volatility is quite normal, and let's not pretend that developed markets are immune to the same forces,' Jennifer Carpenter, an associate professor of finance at New York University, told Xinhua in a recent interview."
Faculty News

In an op-ed, Visiting Research Prof. Manuel Arriaga argues that citizen deliberation can help reform democracy

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Excerpt from Foreign Policy -- "As described in my book, Rebooting Democracy: A Citizen’s Guide to Reinventing Politics, a number of extraordinarily encouraging experiments along these lines have taken place in British Columbia, Oregon, and elsewhere over the last decade. What they all have in common is citizen deliberation: the use of large panels of randomly selected citizens to carefully reflect and decide on complex policy matters, a practice which dates back to ancient Greece. Expanding on this experience could usher in a fundamental change to the nature of government."
Business and Policy Leader Events

Andre J.L. Koo Lobby Dedication Ceremony

Andre Koo Lobby Ribbon Cutting
The Stern School honored Andre J.L. Koo (MBA 1994), Chairman, Chailease Group, today for his generous contributions to Stern at the dedication of the Andre J.L. Koo Lobby in the Henry Kaufman Management Center.
Faculty News

In an op-ed, Prof. Arun Sundararajan discusses the regulation of digital platforms

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Excerpt from Boston Review -- "By redefining exchange in the markets they mediate, today’s platforms will create new efficiencies that diminish some sources of market failure—for example, the uncertain quality of taxicabs and their drivers that necessitated government licensing in the past. At the same time, though, platforms may induce new forms of market failure, such as the denial of market access to a supplier or a consumer. The regulatory framework should allow the government to respond to specific failures, not prescribe intervention across the board."
Faculty News

Profs Samuel Craig and Anindya Ghose discuss career opportunities for MBAs in media and advertising

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Excerpt from BusinessBecause -- "'Companies now need marketing managers who are comfortable with data analytics,' says Anindya Ghose, professor of marketing at NYU’s Stern School of Business. ... 'Students who understand the digital ecosystem and who have technical skills are much in demand,' says Professor Samuel Craig, director of NYU Stern’s Entertainment, Media and Technology MBA track."
Faculty News

Prof. Scott Galloway on the popularity of "vanity capital"

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Excerpt from Quartz -- "We buy things that make us somehow feel we are better—more attractive, more powerful—and that show the outside world that we’re good enough, smart enough, and people like us. Scott Galloway, a professor of marketing at NYU’s Stern School of Business, goes a step further, saying the cachet that all vanity capital carries is distinctly libidinous. 'Men want to spread their seed to the four corners of the world,' he says, and women want their choice of mate. Anything that projects prestige or increases our physical attractiveness helps us accomplish those goals."
Faculty News

At the Milken Global Conference, Prof. Nouriel Roubini discusses the art market

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Excerpt from CNNMoney -- "'Like any other market, you need more price transparency and more information to make it more efficient,' [Roubini] said."
Faculty News

Prof. Baruch Lev's "Knowledge Effect" research is highlighted

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Excerpt from Seeking Alpha -- "The Knowledge Effect was originally discovered by academic researchers, spearheaded by Baruch Lev, who studied 20 years of financial data and discovered an important association between a firm's level of knowledge capital and its subsequent stock returns. Further research advanced the original findings and in 2005 Lev, building on his own earlier research as well as that of others, proved the existence of a market inefficiency traceable to missing information about corporate knowledge investments. This inefficiency has led highly innovative companies to deliver persistently positive abnormal returns in the stock market."