School News

MS in Business Analytics student Jack Hanlon is named to Forbes' 30 under 30 list

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Excerpt from Forbes -- "Also head of product, [Kinetic Social Cofounder Jack] Hanlon is the architect of the data-focused Kinetic Social tech platform, which helps marketers and their agencies manage campaigns across social platforms and also gain an understanding of their audiences. The company's more than 500 clients since launch include Mars, H&M and Victoria's Secret's PINK. In one quarter he increased profitability from 19% to 53% while growing the client portfolio."
Faculty News

Prof. Alexander Ljungqvist on hedge funds investing in start-ups

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Excerpt from The New York Times -- “'These funds have a lot of money and push money out into whatever looks hot,' said Alexander Ljungqvist, professor of finance at New York University. 'It’s like throwing spaghetti at the wall and seeing what sticks.'”
Faculty News

Prof. Gavin Kilduff's research on mindset in the workplace is cited

Excerpt from Bustle -- "According to business professors Gavin Kilduff (New York University) and Adam Galinksy (Columbia Business School), the way individuals feel or act upon entering a group setting will shape their long-term status in it. Those who start off confident will be more assertive, and thus appear more able — which in turn will lead to higher regard among group members going forward, the business profs says."
Faculty News

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

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Excerpt from Bloomberg -- "More broadly there is this Thomas Philippon paper finding that "the finance industry of 1900 was just as able as the finance industry of 2010 to produce loans, bonds and stocks, and it was certainly doing it more cheaply."
Faculty News

Prof. Arun Sundararajan's forthcoming research on the sharing economy is mentioned

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Excerpt from Forbes -- "Arun Sundararajan, who teaches at NYU’s Stern School of Business, recently announced he is compiling statistics on this leaner, more efficient kind of consumption. He hopes to release his findings later this year."
Faculty News

Prof. Johannes Stroebel's research on the impact of the Credit CARD Act is featured

Excerpt from American Banker -- "'The finding was that approximately half a percent of all borrowers shifted their behavior toward this payoff that would allow them to pay off within 36 months,' says Johannes Stroebel, an NYU assistant professor of finance who worked on the study."
Faculty News

Prof. Luke Williams is named to GQ Australia's Men of the Year list

Excerpt from GQ Australia -- "Meet the Australian TED-talker, NYU professor, occasional Apple designer and 'disruptive thinker' transforming staid industry practices to achieve success."
Faculty News

In an op-ed, NYU Global Research Prof. Ian Bremmer defines the new rules of globalization

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Excerpt from Harvard Business Review -- "In globalization’s heyday, strategic sectors—those in which governments take an active interest—and nonstrategic ones were easy to identify. Multinational companies could enter some industries, such as soft drinks, all over the world; other sectors, such as aircraft manufacturing, were off-limits. That’s why Coca-Cola sells its products in more than 200 countries today, while Lockheed Martin generates 80% of its revenues from sales to the U.S. government and employs 95% of its workforce in the United States. In the new era of guarded globalization, however, any sector could prove to be strategic, depending on a government’s attitudes and policies."
School News

Dean Peter Henry explains how LAUNCH inspires MBA students to create value

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Excerpt from BizEd -- "We bill LAUNCH as 'An Education in Possible,' which is the essence of our mission. For us, LAUNCH has become both noun and verb. As an event, it is the beginning of our MBA students' experience at Stern; it is also an active process that propels students onto a trajectory to explore how they can become more transformative leaders."
Faculty News

Prof. Anat Lechner on non-traditional consulting

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Excerpt from Marketplace -- "New York University management professor Anat Lechner previously worked at consulting heavyweight McKinsey & Company and still consults through her own firm alongside academic work. She says hiring non-traditional consultants can be a smart move bringing fresh perspective, but that firms also need to be careful in how they seek and use advice from advisors in a totally different industry."
Faculty News

In an op-ed, Nouriel Roubini makes predictions for the global economy in 2014

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Excerpt from Project Syndicate -- "The outlook for 2014 is dampened by longer-term constraints as well. Indeed, there is a looming risk of secular stagnation in many advanced economies, owing to the adverse effect on productivity growth of years of underinvestment in human and physical capital."
Faculty News

Prof. Larry White discusses a lawsuit by the American Bankers Association

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Excerpt from Fox Business -- "This particular thing they're suing over isn't really at the center of the Volcker Rule. The center is proprietary trading and that's done."
Faculty News

Prof. Scott Galloway's predictions on Apple are featured

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Excerpt from Forbes -- "Look now for Ahrendts to bring her tech-enhanced fashion acumen to Apple, which could mean an expansion of the brand to apparel and accessories such as handbags, jewelry and watches, said Scott Galloway, founder of digital think tank L2. It’s all part of Apple’s unstated bid to be the global prestige brand of record, Galloway told me in October."
Faculty News

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

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Excerpt from The New York Times -- "Last week I lingered over an excellent book, 'The Righteous Mind: Why Good People are Divided by Politics and Religion,' by the social psychologist Jonathan Haidt. Published in 2012, it plumbs the relationship between emotion and reason."
Faculty News

In an op-ed, NYU Global Research Prof. Ian Bremmer explains US-Saudi differences in the Middle East

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Excerpt from Reuters -- "The bottom line: the Saudis are actively competing with Iran for influence throughout the Middle East. That's why the Saudis have the most at stake from any easing of sanctions on Iran, any normalization of relations with the West, or any nuclear breakthrough that gives Iran the ultimate security bargaining chip."
Faculty News

Prof. Arun Sundararajan's research about the economic impact of the sharing economy

Excerpt from Bloomberg Businessweek -- “'It allows you to get more out of the same capital -- or the same out of less capital, less input, less labor,' said Sundararajan, who teaches at the Stern School of Business and is among the first to begin studying the so-called sharing economy."
Faculty News

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

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Excerpt from TIME -- "Haidt, a secular liberal, explores social-science findings that educated, upper-middle-class Americans are the most extreme moral outliers in the world. That is, the moral framework they impose on human thought and behavior is radically alien to the moral perceptions of the overwhelming majority of humanity. This doesn’t make them wrong, but it does make them extremely unusual."
School News

Past Stern Social Venture Competition Winner Violet Health is featured

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Excerpt from Forbes -- "Forty percent of women globally don’t have enough iron, a leading cause of anemia... While studying at NYU Stern School of Business, Matthew Edmundson and Jennifer Tsai decided to try to make a dent in the problem–specifically, in the matter of maternal anemia."
Faculty News

Profs. Ghose & Sundararajan are named to Analytics Week's Top 200 Thought Leaders

Excerpt from Analytics Week -- "We looked at active twitter accounts who are influential thought leaders as per Kred, Klout and PeekYou. Then, we searched for certain keywords in twitter and captured twitter suggestions for accounts on those specific keywords."
Faculty News

Prof. David Yermack's research on Bitcoin is featured

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Excerpt from Bloomberg -- "To test the case for Bitcoin as a currency, Yermack compared it against the three major characteristics of money: that it serves as a medium of exchange, a unit of account and store of value. On this test, Bitcoin increasingly serves as a medium of exchange because more companies accept it, Yermack said. Where it fails is as a unit of account and store of value, he said."
Faculty News

Vice Dean Joel Steckel on the famous Times Square "Naked Cowboy" franchise

Excerpt from The Aggregate -- "Today this brand extends to Naked Cowboy Oysters and approximately eight other Naked Cowboys and Cowgirls, or franchisees who, according to NPR, pay $500 a month or $5,000 a year for the privilege. As a franchiser, the Naked Cowboy is collecting money in exchange for other performers to adopt components of his likeness — the Stetson, the guitar, and the near-nudity. Joel Steckel, a professor of marketing from NYU’s Stern School of Business, explains that a 'franchise is essentially a head start in running a business.'”
Faculty News

Prof. Stephen Brown advocates for long term investing

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Excerpt from Voice of America -- "Anyone investing in the markets is investing for longer term, so what happens in the short term nobody can say. But in the longer term, if we believe in America, we believe that this is a reasonable way to invest your money."
Faculty News

Prof. Michael Spence shares his predictions for the economy in 2014

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Excerpt from Council on Foreign Relations -- "The 2014 global economy is likely to see a reemergence of the post-crisis pattern of relatively high growth in the developing economies, a continuation of real growth in the United States, and very low growth in Europe."
Faculty News

In an op-ed, Prof. Adam Alter explains the impact of appearance on success

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Excerpt from The New Yorker -- "For each point of C.E.O. attractiveness on the ten-point scale, a company gained, on average, a one-percent boost to its stock price. This suggests that the benefits of attractiveness radiate far beyond a single individual. Research suggests not only that attractive people enjoy higher incomes but that the shareholders who invest in their companies profit as well."
Faculty News

Prof. Robert Engle on financial risk in China

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Excerpt from ABC.net -- "So, what is happening in China is that the banks are taking a lot of risk; they've made loans to municipal governments and state-owned enterprises which are, by all reports, largely non-performing, many of which have gone into feeding a real estate bubble and, what is most likely to happen in China is that there will be big reforms and the Chinese government will pump a lot of money into the banks to clean up their balance sheet."