Faculty News

Professor David Yermack's joint research on cryptocurrency's impact on monetary policy is featured

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Excerpt from Coin Telegraph -- "The existence of private decentralized cryptocurrencies like Bitcoin (BTC) has a healthy impact on governments’ fiscal and regulatory policy, a new analysis contends. The argument was put forth in a paper published on Aug. 16 by Max Raskin (NYU School of Law), Fahad Saleh (McGill University) and David Yermack (NYU Stern), entitled 'How Do Private Digital Currencies Affect Government Policy?'"
School News

Stern's addition of the Executive Assessment (EA) to its standardized test options for full-time MBA applicants is highlighted; Executive Director of MBA Admissions Rabia Ahmed is quoted

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Excerpt from Poets & Quants -- "According to Executive Director of MBA Admissions Rabia Ahmed, 'Stern has always been an early adopter. We were among the first programs to accept the GRE a decade ago, and now we are excited to add the EA to our full-time MBA admissions process. As a school on the move, we recognize that business is rapidly evolving, and we’ve responded with new program options as well as innovations in our admissions process, such as the EQ Endorsements, to ensure we are assessing talent for today’s changing workforce.'"
Press Releases

NYU Stern School of Business Now Accepting GMAC’s Executive Assessment as Part of Full-time MBA Application

Henry Kaufman Management Center
Today, New York University Stern School of Business announced that candidates applying to the School’s full-time MBA programs can now choose to take the Executive Assessment, designed by the Graduate Management Admissions Council (GMAC), to fulfill the application’s standardized test requirement.
Faculty News

Professor Thomas Philippon's joint research on the impact of globalization on wages is referenced

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Excerpt from Welt -- (translated from German using Google Translate) "In a recently published study, they correct the data series for three possible confounding factors - and come to twelve countries, including the US, France and Germany to a clear conclusion: 'We find no general decline in the wage share in our sample of highly developed economies.'"
Faculty News

Professor Paul Hardart offers insights on celebrity shout-out startup Cameo's business model and prospects for growth

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Excerpt from Fast Company -- "'The great thing about this compared to having a startup where you’ve got to build an audience and sell eyeballs is, this is a transaction,' says Paul Hardart, director of the entertainment, media, and technology program at New York University Stern School of Business. 'There is a real business model.'"
Faculty News

Professor Matthew Lee's joint research on gender bias and entrepreneurship is cited

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Excerpt from The New York Times -- "In their study of female entrepreneurs, the social scientists Matthew Lee and Laura Huang found that venture capitalists were more likely to fund companies led by women if those companies were presented as having a social impact. This provides a 'cover' that helps women overcome the perceived mismatch between the stereotypes of the good, community-focused woman and the hard-driving entrepreneur."
Faculty News

In an in-depth Q&A interview, Professor Tensie Whelan highlights the value of sustainability practices for businesses

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Excerpt from Barron's -- "ESG [environmental, social, and governance factors] is becoming part of investors’ understanding of risks and opportunities for business, and the regular way in which they analyze companies. That continues regardless of what’s happening in the markets. Something like 50% of growth in the CPG [consumer packaged goods] sector comes from sustainability marketed products. This is not a short-term thing; it’s an ongoing shift in consumer behavior, business behavior, investor behavior."
Faculty News

In a live interview, Professor Charles Schreger offers insights on television networks' legal battle with Locast to halt free streaming

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Excerpt from Bloomberg -- "Locast is a wonderful solution. It works. But it is a threat... let's talk about the timing. CBS was negotiating its re-transmission fees... Guess when it was solved. The opening day of the NFL is September 5th. And if you're watching CBS and you sat down in front of your television at 1 o'clock on September 8th and you're in Baltimore and the Ravens don't come on, that's a problem."
Faculty News

In a radio interview, Professor Arun Sundararajan offers insights on how the sharing economy is changing how we live and work

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Excerpt from CBC -- "A lot of different people have different conceptions of what this term [i.e. the sharing economy] means. I define it pretty broadly. I define it as any new way of organizing economic activity that uses a digital platform to tap into the time and assets of a distributed group of people. So Airbnb, for example, offers an alternative to traditional hotels, not by building hotels, but by connecting to millions of people who are willing to host a guest for a few days, either in a spare bedroom or by handing over their apartment to them for a few days."
Faculty News

In an interview, Professor Jonathan Haidt shares his views on free speech on college campuses, from his book, "The Coddling of the American Mind"

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Excerpt from NBC News -- "It's not everywhere. It's not a national crisis. But it is a severe problem at many of our most important schools. Students routinely say they're afraid to speak up. And if you keep your eye on the self-censorship, rather than the shout-downs, then I think it is a crisis."
Faculty News

In a radio interview, Professor Lawrence White discusses President Trump's decision to delay tariffs on some Chinese goods until December

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Excerpt from Knowledge@Wharton -- "Up till now, it's been easier to fuzz it up and—with tariffs on steel and aluminum, you know, economists, other trade-oriented people, understand that's going to basically work it through to... final prices. But now we've got the tariffs on the final goods themselves. Mr. Trump is trying to play both sides of the street by saying he still doesn't think that... he still believes that China is paying, but just in case, and so he's playing both sides of the street."
Faculty News

Professor Lawrence White is quoted in a feature article on Goldman Sachs entering into the subprime lending market with the Apple Card

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Excerpt from CNN -- "The new card is unlikely to 'make a big dent in Goldman's financial position or even its public image,' said Lawrence J. White, economics professor at New York University Stern School of Business. 'There would have to be a lot of defaulting on the debt before this can become a big problem for Goldman and it doesn't appear that that's where they are going.'"
Faculty News

Professor Justin Kruger's joint research on self-perception, the Dunning-Kruger effect, is spotlighted

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Excerpt from Reader's Digest -- "Bad drivers think they’re good drivers. Awful cooks think they can host Thanksgiving dinner. A bad manager thinks he’s a leader, oblivious to his poor managerial skills. A tone-deaf singer thinks she’s as talented as a Grammy winner. This is Dunning-Kruger in action."
School News

NYU Stern Launches Diverse Pathways in Academia for Future Professors

Henry Kaufman Management Center
NYU Stern launched a new Diverse Pathways in Academia program for future professors in their penultimate doctoral year, with the mission of educating PhD students about faculty careers within business schools. The program invites scholars to participate in the initiative free of charge.
Faculty News

Professor Adam Alter shares tips on how to reduce online spending

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Excerpt from The Cut -- "'Anything you can do to minimize the amount of self-control you need to exert is a good thing,' Alter says. 'If you can make hard and fast rules that guide your purchasing behavior, but also license you to do it occasionally, you may have an easier time keeping it under control.'"
Faculty News

Professor Alixandra Barasch shares insights on how taking photos with the intention to share impacts experiences, based on her research

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Excerpt from Thrive Global -- "The study adds that intent to share a photo can sometimes trigger anxiety at the moment the photo is taken, even if that’s long before the photo is shared. 'Any time you’re trying to manage your impression, you’re going to get in between yourself and the experience,' explained behavioral scientist Alixandra Barasch, one of the authors of the study."
Faculty News

Professor Kenneth Bigel is quoted in an article on Jeffrey Epstein's ties to philanthropist Leslie Wexner

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Excerpt from Inside Philanthropy -- "The ethical problems at issue in the Wexner-Epstein relationship 'are greed, deception, overpromising, and the exploitation of people’s hopes,' Bigel said. 'Ethics is not a matter of logic, it’s a matter of emotion. Decisions we make, especially regarding the purse and love, are emotional. Wexner must have been caught up emotionally with this guy, must have talked about how they would help each other. Money is seductive.'"
Faculty News

Professor Robert Engle's work on financial volatility is featured

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Excerpt from Bloomberg -- "Forecasting asset returns in the financial markets is notoriously difficult, but, oddly enough, volatility is more predictable: both ARCH and GARCH models show that shocks to volatility are persistent and exhibit long half-lives. Such shocks can be extracted from volatility estimators and, with this in mind, Professor Engle has developed a new Geopolitical Volatility Factor (GPVF). The GPVF is based on the standardized residuals from a factor model with GARCH-style residuals. He then tested the model by applying estimation algorithms to nine U.S. sector ETFs and 45 MSCI country ETFs and studying the results through Monte Carlo simulations."
Faculty News

In a contributed article, Professor Robert Seamans and PhD candidate Manav Raj share insights from their research on AI's impact on various occupations

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Excerpt from Forbes -- "Overall, our findings suggest that the effects of AI on labor are not uniform across occupations, and that access to complementary skills and technologies may play an important role in determining the impact of AI on occupations."
Faculty News

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

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Excerpt from Vanity Fair -- "'EB-5 capital continues to thrive as a mainstream source of capital for real estate development projects,' according to the NYU study. 'It flourishes despite the uncertainty surrounding the EB-5 Program posed by the looming threat of reform.'"
School News

Center for Business and Human Rights Senior Program Manager Casey O'Connor is quoted in an article about improving labor conditions in the supply chains of large-scale retailers such as Walmart

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Excerpt from Retail Dive -- "'Audits are certainly important,' Casey O'Connor, senior program manager for New York University's Stern Center for Business and Human Rights, said in an interview with Retail Dive. 'But I think it's fair to say that there's industry consensus that audits alone have not really moved the needle on a lot of the kind of problematic labor conditions that remain fairly pervasive in the apparel industry.'"
Faculty News

Professor Robert Salomon shares his outlook on the global economy next year

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Excerpt from Folha de S. Paolo -- (translated from Portuguese using Google Translate) "'There is a real chance of plunging the global economy into recession. I think we'll see that in the first half of 2020,' Robert Salomon, professor at the New York University Stern School of Business, told Folha."
Faculty News

Professor Michael Spence's work on developing economies is cited

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Excerpt from Bloomberg-- "Only five developing countries have made the transition to advanced-nation status while maintaining high levels of growth since 1960, according to Nobel laureate Michael Spence, a professor at New York University’s Stern School of Business."
School News

Professor Amy Webb's book, "The Big Nine," is named to the longlist for the Financial Times and McKinsey Business Book of the Year award

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Excerpt from Financial Times -- "Amy Webb’s The Big Nine examines the largest US and Chinese companies dominating the introduction of AI into our lives. She offers dystopian and more optimistic scenarios for how machines may develop — and how humans could influence their development."
Faculty News

In a podcast interview, Professor Scott Galloway shares his outlook on Disney's earnings

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Excerpt from Bloomberg -- "There are only two companies in the world right now that are effectively landing punches on big tech. One of them is Walmart, landing some counter-blows on Amazon, and the other is Disney, that is probably the only content company that could effectively land counter-blows on Netflix."