Faculty News

Professor Alixandra Barasch's joint research on the factors that influence a donor's decision to give to a charity is spotlighted

Philanthropy Journal logo
Excerpt from the Philanthropy Journal -- "The studies show that people will still choose more personally gratifying charities to donate to over more effective ones. The researchers found that this pattern was only disrupted in two situations: if the donor occupied some role of responsibility, such as being responsible for allocating official funds, or if the donor was choosing between charities that supported the same cause."
Faculty News

Professor John Horton's joint research on Uber drivers is referenced in an article about the sharing economy workforce

ABC News logo
Excerpt from ABC News -- "Research by Uber's chief economist, Jonathan Hall, and John Horton of New York University found that when Uber raised its fares, drivers initially earned more money. But there were offsetting effects: The higher rates attracted more drivers while reducing the number of trips consumers made. Overall earnings for drivers soon fell back to their previous levels."
 
Faculty News

Professors Tülin Erdem and Luke Williams offer insights on Papa John’s new logo

CNNMoney logo
Excerpt from CNNMoney -- "Erdem said that when companies change their names, they lose valuable brand recognition. 'There's so much awareness around the name,' said Erdem. 'I think a company would do that only if really, really the brand is so tarnished, you want to be forgotten.'"
Faculty News

Professor Adam Alter offers perspective on the intrusive power of technology in today's society

HuffPost logo
Excerpt from HuffPost -- "We give our phones immense power when we allow them to nudge us with updates throughout the day,' Professor Adam Alter from New York University, who has done research in this area, tells me. 'We’d never give the same power to another person - imagine telling someone that you’re happy for them to tap you on the shoulder every few minutes. Our phones are just as intrusive, and we give them that power.'"
 
Faculty News

Insights on the causes of today's polarized political climate from Professor Jonathan Haidt's new book, "The Coddling of the American Mind," are spotlighted

New York Magazine logo
Excerpt from New York Magazine -- "Haidt and Lukianoff note how humans are constructed genetically for this kind of tribal warfare, to divide the world instinctively into in-groups and out-groups almost from infancy. For homo sapiens, it is natural to see the world, as Rabbi Jonathan Sacks put it, as radically 'divided into the unimpeachably good and the irredeemably bad.'”
Faculty News

Professor Stephen Brown's joint research on the link between a hedge fund manager's choice of vehicle and market performance is highlighted

Institutional Investor logo
Excerpt from Institutional Investor -- "Although higher risk can sometimes lead to higher returns, the additional risks taken by sports car drivers “ultimately hurt their investors,” authors Stephen Brown, Yan Lu, Sugata Ray, and Melvyn Teo, who are all finance professors, wrote in the paper. They found that sports car owners delivered lower Sharpe ratios and alphas, and traded 'more frequently, actively, and unconventionally.'"
Faculty News

Professor Maher Said explains blind auction strategies in an article about the fate of Sky

Wall Street Journal logo
Excerpt from The Wall Street Journal -- "Maher Said, a New York University Stern School of Business professor who focuses on auctions, said the first step in an auction like this is figuring out how much the asset is really worth to you, and then what you think it’s worth to your rival. Next is gaming out a range of possible bids from your rival. 'The concern is you don’t want to raise the price so high and end up holding the bag,' he said."
Faculty News

Professor Roy Smith weighs in on some of the recent leadership changes at Bank of America

Bloomberg logo
Excerpt from Bloomberg -- "'That is not what the investment bankers signed on to be; they wanted to be "masters of the universe" and make big bucks,' said Roy Smith, emeritus professor of management practice at New York University’s Stern School of Business. 'They didn’t sign on to be low-risk public utilities.'"
Faculty News

Professor David Yermack is quoted in a story about cryptocurrency regulation

MarketWatch logo
Excerpt from MarketWatch -- "'It would be good for the government to take a unified approach to regulating crypto assets, but given the byzantine structure of our financial regulation, I would not expect miracles,' said Yermack."
Faculty News

Speaking at the World Economic Forum’s annual meeting in China, Professor Arun Sundararajan shares his views on China's economy compared to the US

CNBC logo
Excerpt from CNBC -- "'I see China as five years ahead of the U.S. when it comes to the extent to which digitalization is integrated into this economy,' Arun Sundararajan, professor at New York University's Stern School of Business, said during the same panel discussion Thursday."
Faculty News

Professor Adam Alter's comments on the gamification elements used in dating apps in the HBO documentary, "Swiped," are featured

Refinery 29 logo
Excerpt from Refinery29 -- "'When you're playing a slot machine, the machine will tell you when you've won with ringing bells and flashing lights,' Adam Alter, a social psychologist at New York University, said in the documentary. 'And a lot of the apps we use now have elements of that built in, even when they aren't really about games.'"
School News

Micah Steiger (MBA '18), co-founder of Resprana and winner of the $300K Entrepreneurs Challenge 2017 New Venture competition, shares how an MBA has helped him as an entrepreneur

BusinessBecause logo
Excerpt from BusinessBecause -- "Where a lot of people get caught up day to day, going from task to task, an MBA helps you view business and society on more of a global, long-term scale. You are encouraged to think about where various industries and sectors will be in the future, what are the trends that we can see emerging, and to see society and business from a birds-eye view."
Faculty News

Professor Alixandra Barasch is featured in a video interview on how taking photos for social media impacts a visitor's experience at a museum, referencing her research

Vox logo
Excerpt from Vox -- (2:17) "People who work at museums are very concerned. It changes the nature of what artwork is most attractive to consumers. In order to compete with the trendy colorful exhibits that are popping up, you have to add some of those components to the more traditional exhibits."
Faculty News

Professor Johannes Stroebel is interviewed about his joint research with Professor Theresa Kuchler on social connectedness

The New York Times Logo
Excerpt from The New York Times -- "'But distance is the thing that shows up everywhere,' said Johannes Stroebel, a professor at N.Y.U.’s Stern School of Business and a co-author of the research, along with Michael Bailey at Facebook, Rachel Cao at Harvard, Theresa Kuchler at N.Y.U. and Arlene Wong at Princeton. 'Distance matters,' Mr. Stroebel said, 'in explaining every single county’s connectedness.'"
Faculty News

Lord Mervyn King is featured in a story on the strength of the British banking system

Bloomberg logo
Excerpt from Bloomberg -- "King’s recipe to prevent a re-run: ensure lenders have enough collateral in place at the central bank to justify it acting as lender of last resort, restoring liquidity to the financial system. 'It is vital to sort out the conditions under which those loans will be made in advance, to make sure that banks do have enough collateral or security to justify those loans, and that it’s big enough to let the central bank lend enough money to prevent a bank run and collapse of the system,' said King, who was succeeded by Mark Carney in 2013 and has now returned to academia."
Faculty News

Professor Kristen Sosulski is quoted in a story on how computer programming will change over the next 10 years

TechRepublic logo
Excerpt from TechRepublic -- "Developers of the future will need to learn more skills, particularly in data analysis, said Kristen Sosulski, clinical associate professor of information, operations, and management sciences in the Leonard N. Stern School of Business at New York University, and author of Data Visualization Made Simple. 'Everything from statistical data analysis, to non-linear and linear data analysis, to machine learning and even artificial intelligence,' Sosulski said. 'It's really not just learning how to code, it's also learning how to analyze data and sell different models.'"
Faculty News

Professor Scott Galloway points out how the tech and fashion industries influence each other ahead of the simultaneous product launches by Apple and Adidas

Financial Times logo
Excerpt from the Financial Times -- "'Apple is not a tech company, it’s a luxury brand,' said Scott Galloway, professor of marketing at the New York University Stern School of Business. 'Just as Apple copied Louis Vuitton, you’re going to see Nike and Adidas copy Apple.'"
School News

Alumni Nicole Rodriguez (BS ‘18), Justin Lochan (BS ‘18) and Dana Li (BS ’18) reflect on their time at Stern in an interview with current undergraduate student Alex Grieco

Poets and Quants logo
Excerpt from Poets & Quants -- "As I go into my final semester here at NYU, I have to say that I agree with all the advice and reflections made by these recent graduates. However, I would like to add one piece of advice: do not rush. That may seem very vague, but as my time at Stern comes to an end, I realize there are so many opportunities I said no to or didn’t explore because I thought it was a 'waste of time.' Make the most of the four years you have and don’t feel pressure from your peers or family to do something that won’t make you happy in the long-run."
Faculty News

Professor Maxime Cohen's and PhD student Baek Jung Kim's joint research on the effectiveness of frustration-based promotions for ridesharing customers is featured

Quartz logo
Excerpt from Quartz -- "The results are strikingly similar to the findings of a February 2018 paper from researchers at NYU and Via, a ride-hail app that operates in New York, Chicago, and Washington, DC, with exclusively shared rides. In that experiment, the researchers considered how best to compensate several thousand 'frustrated' riders who were picked up at least 8 minutes later than Via estimated in New York and DC (the Uber paper, remember, dealt with late drop-offs)."
Faculty News

Professor Richard Sylla discusses why there has been a rise in the frequency of international financial crises and weighs in on timing for another

Vox logo
Excerpt from Vox -- "That’s another feature of financial history, i.e., taking tough measures in the wake of a crisis and then watering them down over time. What’s different this time is that the watering-down began almost immediately instead of waiting a bit. That makes me think that we will not again have to wait half a century or more before the next large-scale financial crisis arrives."
Faculty News

Professor Nicholas Economides is interviewed about the economic impact of Hurricane Florence

CGTN logo
Excerpt from CGTN -- (:34) "It's the beginning of estimating the damage, this storm has a tendency to linger for a long time and drop a lot of rainfall so there will be, I'm afraid, a multiple of the estimate of damage that we have right now."
Faculty News

In a Q&A interview, Professor Amy Webb shares how technology and artificial intelligence will change business

ThinkAdvisor logo
Excerpt from ThinkAdvisor -- "As with every technology, there’s always risk and opportunity. When people talk about AI, [most] focus on what they [perceive] as people losing their jobs. There’s a potential for AI to be weaponized; and, obviously, it will eliminate some jobs. However, there are also tons of economic opportunities that it creates."
Faculty News

Professor Lawrence White explains how the health of the US economy has changed since the 2008 financial crisis

Bloomberg logo
Excerpt from Bloomberg -- (:24) "There's certainly been the improvement in the economy, well not so much from 2007, but from the depths of the great recession which was roughly 2010 but also a greatly improved financial sector, more capital, more liquidity, more resilience generally. So both the economy at large and the financial sector specifically, much improvement since roughly 2008."
Faculty News

Professor Anindya Ghose shares his outlook on Instagram's new ecommerce features

CNNMoney logo
Excerpt from CNNMoney -- "'The whole phenomenon is very promising,' said Anindya Ghose, a professor at NYU's Stern School of Business who teaches a course on e-commerce and social media. 'A number of companies have tried it with mixed results. The potential is much higher than what we have seen so far.'"
Faculty News

Stern's course offerings in data science are featured among the "16 Best Big Data Programs at Prestigious MBA Schools"

Dataconomy logo
Excerpt from Dataconomy -- "Located in New York City, the financial heart of the United States, students at NYU’s Stern School of Business must take just one course related to Big Data but have the option to take 16 more classes to build a foundation in theory and hands-on applications of data science."