Faculty News

NYU Stern's Global Systemic Risk Rankings, accessible online from the School's Volatility Lab (V-Lab), are cited

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Excerpt from Bloomberg View -- "A model set up by economists at New York University regularly performs a sort of simplified stress test on the world's largest financial institutions. It does so by asking the stock market what it thinks about the value and riskiness of the banks' assets, then using that information to estimate what would happen to the banks in a severe crisis -- and how much added equity capital they would need to avoid distress."
Faculty News

Professor Adam Brandenburger addresses the relationship between technology and trading

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Excerpt from FAZ -- "Fast computers, algorithms and so-called live feeds of data from different exchanges can help investors decide what and when they buy or sell. Therefore, investing is an increasingly more resource-intensive process."
Faculty News

Professor Scott Galloway discusses Tesla's response to the autopilot crash

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Excerpt from Business Insider -- "In this case, according to Galloway, Tesla did three things right:

It acknowledged the problem in a blog post on its website Thursday.
Had the top guy address the matter head-on.
And it overcorrected; reiterating Autopilot's limitations, and reminding drivers to stay alert, even with the feature activated."
Faculty News

Professor Jeanne Calderon and Scholar-in-Residence Gary Friedland's joint research on the EB-5 Immigrant Investor Program is referenced

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Excerpt from Indianapolis Business Journal -- "New York University real-estate professors Jeanne Calderon and Gary Friedland are the foremost academic experts on EB-5 and published 'A Roadmap to the Use of EB-5 Capital.' The database lists 27 major projects that have sought a total of $5.4 billion in EB-5 financing."
Faculty News

Research Scholar Robert Frank discusses systematic unfairness and hiring decisions, from his book, "Success and Luck"

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Excerpt from The Harvard Business Review -- "What’s tripping us up? Robert H. Frank, a Cornell economist and the author of Success and Luck, provides one explanation: We just don’t see the large role that chance events play in people’s life trajectories. If someone lands a great job and makes lots of money, we interpret those outcomes as evidence of smarts and hard work. (We look at our own lives the same way.) As for those who don’t thrive? Well, we tell ourselves, maybe they’ve caught a bad break here and there, but they could turn things around if they tugged on their bootstraps a bit harder."
Faculty News

Professor Thomas Philippon's research on the efficiency of the financial industry is referenced

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Excerpt from Forbes -- "In a recent paper, Thomas Philippon from New York University finds the annual cost of financial intermediation in the U.S., which is roughly 2%, is the same now as it was in the late nineteenth century. This leads him to conclude that the US finance industry has showed no efficiency gains at all over 130 years."
Faculty News

Professor Gian Luca Clementi discusses the global economic impact of Brexit

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Excerpt from Mic -- "[Brexit] is a major setback for the European Union in particular because the whole idea of integration was actually to expand as much as possible, within the European countries, not shrink it. So that's a major issue. It's a major issue both from a political point of view and also from an economic point of view."
Faculty News

Professor Arun Sundararajan discusses the future of employment and benefits, from his book, "The Sharing Economy"

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Excerpt from The Washington Post -- "Full-time employment, in other words, means something a lot better than could have been the case, Sundararajan argues. And it’ll take us time to figure out how to do the same for work in the new crowd-based capitalism. 'When we transition to the individual-is-an-owner model,' he adds, 'you’re starting at a better place fundamentally.'"
Faculty News

Professor Scott Galloway discusses the future of driverless cars in the wake of a fatal crash involving a Tesla on autopilot

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Excerpt from the Los Angeles Times -- "'Unless statistics show this is not only as dangerous but more dangerous than traditional modes of driving, I don’t think you’re going to see a slowdown' in using the technology, [Galloway] said."
Faculty News

Professor Kim Schoenholtz discusses big banks' capital distribution plans

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Excerpt from CNBC -- "'The system would be safer if the disbursement of capital remains limited,' said Kim Schoenholtz, professor of management practice in the New York University economics department. 'The level of capital requirements is too low.'"
Faculty News

Professor Thomaï Serdari comments on British footwear retailer John Lobb's film series

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Excerpt from Luxury Daily -- "'John Lobb is a brand whose DNA relies on the one-on-one relationship between the craftsman and the customer,' Ms. Serdari said. 'It is the tacit knowledge John Lobb’s craftsmen have about the brand’s customers from doing bespoke order after bespoke order that gives them that extra confidence in manipulating the materials.'"
Faculty News

Professor Robert Engle discusses banks' stress test results

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Excerpt from Bloomberg -- "The fact that pretty much the banks are getting a clean bill of health, seems to me slightly overoptimistic, in the sense that we can see that the bank capital ratios have improved over the last several years. But I don't think that they're kind of where they ought to be. So I think there's still work to be done."
Faculty News

Professor Robert Salomon explains why he doesn't believe the English language will be eliminated from the European Union in the wake of Brexit

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Excerpt from Marketplace -- "'One thing is theory, the other is practice,' he said. 'Although in theory English might leave as an official language of the EU, in practice most diplomats, most politicians will continue to use English to communicate amongst themselves.'"
Faculty News

Research Scholar Shlomo Angel's research on urban expansion in African and Chinese cities is cited

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Excerpt from The Economist -- "Shlomo Angel of New York University has studied seven African cities in detail: Accra, Addis Ababa, Arusha, Ibadan, Johannesburg, Lagos and Luanda. He calculates that only 16% of the land in new residential areas developed since 1990 has been set aside for roads—about half as much as planners think necessary. And 44% of those roads are less than four metres wide."
Faculty News

Professor Nouriel Roubini predicts ongoing global volatility in the wake of Brexit

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Excerpt from Bloomberg -- "I think this is an episode of volatility. How much is it going to last? The previous two lasted about two months. In this case, I think the uncertainty is going to be much longer. The UK will have to decide whether to invoke Article 50 and when, when the negotiations will start towards a divorce."
Faculty News

Professor Viral Acharya discusses Raghuram Rajan's plan to rescue the Reserve Bank of India

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Excerpt from Bloomberg -- "'At a minimum, it looks opaque and devious,' said Viral Acharya, a professor of economics at New York University’s Stern School of Business. 'Setting a precedent to compromise central bank risk management for public-sector bank recapitalization could lead to repeat and more devious interventions that over time could be perceived as an attack on central bank independence.'"
Faculty News

Professor Lawrence White discusses the US-China trade deficit during President Obama's first term

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Excerpt from PolitiFact -- "'This economic expansion would be expected to expand imports more than exports would expand, and thus the trade deficit would be expected to widen, holding other things constant,' Lawrence J. White, a professor at New York University’s Stern School of Business."
Faculty News

Professor John Horton discusses Upwork, a popular freelancing website

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Excerpt from MarketWatch -- "'Upwork offers a remarkably detailed look at what skills professionals are providing and what skills are being sought-after, and the data also has tremendous breadth -- ranging from software development to technical writing to increasingly high-end skills like legal and business consulting,' said New York University professor John Horton."
Faculty News

Professor Baruch Lev's book, "The End of Accounting," is highlighted

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Excerpt from Forbes -- "In the just-published book The End of Accounting (John Wiley & Sons, Inc.), authors Baruch Lev and Feng Gu report that in corporations’ quarterly 'earnings' calls, almost none of the questions from analysts involve reported earnings. For example, the transcript of a Netflix conference call showed analysts asking about such matters as the progress of negotiations with content providers and subscriber additions and cancellations."
Faculty News

Professor David Yermack illustrates the impact of Brexit on bitcoin

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Excerpt from Politico -- "The virtual currency, which is still quite unstable due to its relatively low supply, has been leveraged by some as a 'store of value' during times of crisis like Brexit and the Greek debt negotiation, NYU finance professor David Yermack told MT."
Faculty News

Professor Vicki Morwitz's comments at the 38th INFORMS Society for Marketing Science Conference in Shanghai are highlighted

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Excerpt from Shanghai Daily -- "'Firms need to have very active customer service, and departments need to be very engaged with social media,' Morwitz argued."
 
Faculty News

Professor Nicholas Economides reacts to Brexit

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Excerpt from CNN -- "It's completely clear that [the referendum] should have never been called, and Mr. Cameron, the Prime Minister, is hugely responsible for this. It was pushed by opposition parties, but he didn't have to do it and he shouldn't have done it."
Faculty News

Professor Thomas Philippon's research on the financial services industry is spotlighted

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Excerpt from the Financial Times -- "There is no more devastating verdict on the performance of the finance industry than the one that emerges from research by Thomas Philippon, professor of finance at New York University. Using data going back to the late 19th century, he found that the US financial sector generated no increase in productivity at all over 130 years."
Faculty News

Professor Jonathan Haidt discusses his research on the psychology of authoritarianism an anti-immigration sentiment

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Excerpt from The New York Times -- "As Jonathan Haidt, a social psychologist and professor at New York University’s Stern School of Business, put it: 'It’s as though a button is pushed on their forehead that says, "In case of moral threat, lock down the borders, kick out those who are different and punish those who are morally deviant."'"
Faculty News

Professor Gian Luca Clementi explains why he does not believe Greece will leave the European Union

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Excerpt from NY1 -- "Gian Luca Clementi, an associate professor of economics at New York University, says he doesn't think Greece will leave the European Union. Instead, he believes creditors will reach an agreement with Greece that eases anger inside the country toward the E.U. 'I think what has to happen with Greece [is that] a good chunk of the loans are forgiven,' Clementi said. 'Their debt is several times more than their GDP.'"