Faculty News

In a co-authored op-ed, Professor Kim Schoenholtz explains how an independent Central Bank might operate

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Excerpt from The Huffington Post -- "An independent central bank is a device to overcome the problem of time consistency: the concern that policymakers will renege in the future on a policy promise made today. Keeping inflation low and stable requires a credible policy commitment to price stability that will, from time to time, be highly unpopular. When inflation rises, the central bank must promptly raise interest rates. And, should deflation threaten and the policy rate hit the zero bound, the central bank must respond by using its balance sheet flexibility. In this way, an independent central bank improves economic performance: it can achieve lower and more stable inflation rate without sacrificing long-run economic growth."
Faculty News

Professor Baruch Lev discusses how corporate governance has improved since the collapse of Enron

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Excerpt from The Street.com -- "Enron's collapse was driven by governance weaknesses, auditing inefficiencies and accounting problems, and significant strides were made afterward in correcting the first two of those problems, said Baruch Lev. An accounting and finance professor at New York University's Stern School of Business, Lev testified before Congress after Enron's fall and has written five books including Winning Investors Over, published in 2012. 'Corporate boards are now more independent than they used to be, and they have committees that are completely composed of independent board members, like the audit committee,' he noted."
Faculty News

Professor William Greene's research on urban design is highlighted

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Excerpt from Salt Lake City Weekly -- "The study points out that Salt Lake City's lack of density is essentially the cause of lack of vibrancy. Downtown currently has an estimated population of just over 5,000 residents. But, according to the study, nearly 58,000 more residents would move downtown from nearby metro areas if it were feasible."
Faculty News

Professor Scott Galloway explains why he believes Yahoo should be sold

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Excerpt from Bloomberg -- "The coal mine of Yahoo has canaries dying everywhere. Everyone that has watched [Marissa Mayer's] tenure really closely, whether it's her senior managers, her colleagues, or the hedge fund guy who put her in the CEO spot, they've either sold all their shares and headed for the hills or they've left the company, and the numbers speak for themselves."
Faculty News

Professor Arun Sundararajan comments on Uber's political support from its users

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Excerpt from Bloomberg -- "'Because of the immediacy and the flexibility of the app, it does give them a certain advantage,' said Arun Sundararajan, professor at New York University’s business school who studies the sharing economy. 'For their size, they have immense amounts of regulatory battles. Uber seems to be a strong believer in using consumer collective action as one of the forces in their political battles.'"
Faculty News

Professor David Yermack's research on the relationship between charitable giving and stock prices is cited in connection with the formation of the Chan Zuckerberg Initiative

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Excerpt from Inc. -- "At least one academic report suggests chief executives tend to make significant stock gifts following a run up in share prices. And given the current frothy environment around tech stocks, where Facebook's own stock is at a near historic high of $107 a share as of Wednesday afternoon, the timing makes sense. 'The gift date itself on average represents a turning point in the stock's trajectory, with company prices moving lower in the months after a gift is made,' David Yermack, a professor of finance at the NYU Stern School of Business, wrote in a 2008 article in the Journal of Financial Economics."
Faculty News

In a co-authored op-ed, Professor Jeanne Calderon and Scholar-in-Residence Gary Friedland outline the EB-5 investment process

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Excerpt from Commercial Observer -- "Since the market rebound, EB-5 capital has become the most attractive source for many real estate developers to fill the gap in the capital stack for their projects. The EB-5 program provides a path to permanent residency for foreign citizens who invest at least $500,000 (pending reform legislation would raise this amount to at least $800,000) in a project that creates at least 10 jobs for U.S. workers."
Faculty News

In a co-authored op-ed, Professor Richard Sylla examines the decline in the number of US banks

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Excerpt from World Financial Review -- "The disappearance of so many US banks, mostly by being absorbed into larger institutions, prompted us to write Genealogy of American Finance (2015). The book contains short, illustrated histories of the 50 largest financial holding companies recently operating in the United States, along with their 'family trees', that is, charts showing all the predecessor institutions that were acquired or merged together to form the current behemoths."
Faculty News

Professor Greg Coleman's digital media innovation course is featured

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Excerpt from Digiday -- "Greg Coleman, BuzzFeed president and former president of ad tech firm Criteo, has been teaching a class at NYU’s Stern School of Business called 'digital media innovation.' Every week, Coleman invites his “friends,” including Rent the Runway founder Jennifer Hyman or BuzzFeed founder Jonah Peretti to guest lecture, and 75 percent of students’ grades are decided based on a final media project judged by VCs."
Faculty News

Professor Jacob Jacoby explains how businesses can foster impulse buying

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Excerpt from The New York Observer -- "'Businesses often use words like "limited", "rare", and "only one left" in order to create panic in the brain,' says NYU Stern Business School professor of consumer behavior Dr. Jacob Jacoby, who spoke to the Observer by phone. 'They trigger a reaction called "Loss Aversion"; when you’re more concerned with losing something than gaining something.'"
Faculty News

Professor Jonathan Haidt's research on leadership is highlighted

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Excerpt from Harvard Business Review -- "Jonathan Haidt at New York University’s Stern School of Business shows in his research that when leaders are not just fair but self-sacrificing, their employees are actually moved and inspired to become more loyal and committed themselves. As a consequence, they are more likely to go out of their way to be helpful and friendly to other employees, thus creating a self-reinforcing cycle."
Faculty News

Professor Vasant Dhar discusses the use of sentiment analysis technology to study unstructured data as a risk management tool

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Excerpt from Risk Management Magazine -- "'Sentiment analysis has become a form of risk management and is emerging as a useful risk control tool for a variety of businesses,' said Vasant Dhar..."
Faculty News

Research Scholar Sarah Labowitz discusses how retailers can work with their supply chains to promote fair labor standards

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Excerpt from Bloomberg -- "'Even quality audits and a relationship with the factory only get you so far,' says Sarah Labowitz, co-director of New York University’s Stern Center for Business and Human Rights. 'You have to tie compliance to business incentives. If a supplier improves working conditions, they get bigger and longer-term orders.'"
Faculty News

In an op-ed, Professor Michelle Greenwald explains what makes Collette a successful retail store

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Excerpt from Forbes -- "Colette has been ahead of its time since its inception, trailblazing collaborations, new ways of merchandizing, fun combinations of product categories, and the embrace of constant change. As long as this mother daughter duo continues their complementary partnership, it will continue to be the one to watch. Other retailers can observe, learn, and be inspired to do their own experimenting."
Faculty News

In an op-ed, Professor Nouriel Roubini outlines the economic challenges facing the Eurozone

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Excerpt from Project Syndicate -- "...there is light at the end of the tunnel for the eurozone. A cyclical recovery is underway, supported by monetary easing for years to come and increasingly flexible fiscal rules. More risk sharing will start in the banking sector (with EU-wide deposit insurance up next), and eventually more ambitious proposals for a fiscal union will be adopted. Structural reforms – however slowly – will continue and gradually increase potential and actual growth."
Faculty News

Professor Ari Ginsberg discusses "unicorn" business ventures

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Excerpt from Nikkei -- "Ginsberg posits that it is difficult if not impossible for powerful new ventures to take root in a country that does not welcome challenges to the status quo. Japan appears to fit that description, and, sure enough, the country has no unicorns -- yet."
Press Releases

New Research Demonstrates Link between Poor Corporate Governance and Toxic Mortgages

Claudine Gartenberg
In a new study, Professor Claudine Gartenberg of the NYU Stern School of Business and Professor Lamar Pierce of the Olin Business School at Washington University in St. Louis find that integrated banks – firms that both originate and then securitize a mortgage – with poor corporate governance are twice as likely to issue loans that will default compared to similar firms with strong governance.
Business and Policy Leader Events

The Amazon Way: Innovating at High Speed

Street View of Tisch Hall
NYU Stern welcomes David Nenke, WW Director of Product and Marketing at Amazon Cloud Drive, Amazon.com, who joins first-year MBAs for a special Block Time discussion on Monday, November 30.
Faculty News

Professor Pankaj Ghemawat ​quantifies the globalization of the ASEAN region

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Excerpt from HQ Asia -- "The extent of a country’s globalisation can be quantified, says Ghemawat, using four central pillars or indicators: trade, capital, information and people. The higher a country’s score in each pillar, the greater its integration into the globalised system. He argues that the impact of ‘globaloney’ on how leaders think can be witnessed in the ASEAN region, which is less integrated and interconnected than one might assume."
Faculty News

In a co-authored op-ed, Professor Scott Galloway shares six common mistakes that retailers make on mobile

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Excerpt from Chain Store Age -- "Given mobile is the primary access point to online retail, brands must position mobile as a higher priority than desktop. Mobile users’ native experiences fit smaller screens, therefore graphics and navigation tools become more important. Mobile experience also requires frequent refreshing, since online customers have come to expect novelty and change."
Faculty News

Professor Robert Engle's remarks at the First Annual Volatility Conference at NYU Shanghai are highlighted

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Excerpt from China Business News -- "...Robert Engle believes that there are presently ideal economic conditions for ‘mixed operations’ in China. Though there hasn’t been an expansion of development, the right time has come. Engle ... imparts that the biggest challenge for 2016 is the threat of economic slowdown and that China should avoid systematic financial risks."
Faculty News

In an op-ed, Professor Aswath Damodaran cautions against Pfizer's acquisition of Allergan

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Excerpt from Forbes -- "The bottom line is that this looks like a bad deal for the wrong company, at the wrong time and at the wrong price -- the wrong company because Allergan’s accounting statements are a mine field due to acquisition accounting, the wrong time because we may actually be on the verge of a major change in US corporate tax code and at the wrong price because of the premium on an already large market capitalization."
Faculty News

Professor Justin Kruger's research on cognitive bias is cited

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Excerpt from Gizmodo -- "The original Dunning-Kruger effect ... showed up when participants were asked to rate their performance after a task had been completed. It relies on the fact that the lack of knowledge exhibited by those scoring in the bottom percentile would render them ill-equipped to accurately evaluate their own performance."
Faculty News

In an op-ed, Professor Michael Posner advocates a shared-responsibility model for protecting factory workers' rights in Bangladesh

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Excerpt from The Wall Street Journal -- "For most global industries, the shared responsibility model would be a bold step forward. In Bangladesh, it should start locally with the government and local manufacturers convening all the main stakeholders to develop a common plan of action."