Faculty News
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In a live interview, Professor Aswath Damodaran comments on the IPO market and the divergence between private and public pricing
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Excerpt from CNBC -- "'Both VCs and public market investors play what I call the pricing game. What VCs are pricing in, which is scaling up and not a great business model, is not what public market investors seem to be wanting at least for the moment.'"
Faculty News
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Faculty News
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Professor Baruch Lev's joint research on the demise of value investing is cited
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Excerpt from Yahoo Finance -- "Further, Neuman points to a recently published research paper by academics Baruch Lev and Anup Srivastava, "Explaining the Demise of Value Investing," which further supports the assertion that the likelihood of a resurgence in value investing seems low."
Faculty News
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Excerpt from Yahoo Finance -- "Further, Neuman points to a recently published research paper by academics Baruch Lev and Anup Srivastava, "Explaining the Demise of Value Investing," which further supports the assertion that the likelihood of a resurgence in value investing seems low."
Faculty News
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Professor Allen Adamson outlines how changes across the denim industry are impacting clothing company True Religion following its recent bankruptcy filing
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Excerpt from Glossy -- “'The denim market has changed since the early 2000s. [True Religion’s] old consumers aren’t as relevant [to the brand], and all these new users have no idea who the brand is or perhaps what it stands for, because they’ve seen a fragmented, scattered effort over the last eight years. It’s really hard for a brand to make a new first impression,' said Allen Adamson, co-founder of brand consulting firm Metaforce and NYU Stern adjunct professor."
Faculty News
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Excerpt from Glossy -- “'The denim market has changed since the early 2000s. [True Religion’s] old consumers aren’t as relevant [to the brand], and all these new users have no idea who the brand is or perhaps what it stands for, because they’ve seen a fragmented, scattered effort over the last eight years. It’s really hard for a brand to make a new first impression,' said Allen Adamson, co-founder of brand consulting firm Metaforce and NYU Stern adjunct professor."
Faculty News
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Professor David Yermack offers insights on University endowment investment strategies
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Excerpt from Barron's -- “'I think there is a general trend of exaggerating how well universities do,' says David Yermack, professor of finance at New York University Stern School of Business. 'Even the very top performers are lucky to do average, and as a group they do worse than average. They would all be better off if they just owned index funds.'”
Faculty News
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Excerpt from Barron's -- “'I think there is a general trend of exaggerating how well universities do,' says David Yermack, professor of finance at New York University Stern School of Business. 'Even the very top performers are lucky to do average, and as a group they do worse than average. They would all be better off if they just owned index funds.'”
Faculty News
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In a live interview, Professor Arun Sundararajan explains why trust is a crucial component of collaborative economies; his book, "The Sharing Economy," is referenced
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Excerpt from 24 Horas -- “‘I think part of the reason that trust in traditional institutions is falling is because people are getting used to using a different source of trust in their everyday economic activities… I think it’s very important to note that although we are basing a lot of the collaborative economy on digital trust systems, these can not exist in isolation.’”
Faculty News
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Excerpt from 24 Horas -- “‘I think part of the reason that trust in traditional institutions is falling is because people are getting used to using a different source of trust in their everyday economic activities… I think it’s very important to note that although we are basing a lot of the collaborative economy on digital trust systems, these can not exist in isolation.’”
Faculty News
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Professor Petra Moser's research on the economic effects stemming from the US' national immigration quota system of the 1920s is featured
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Excerpt from The New York Times -- "In recent research, the New York University economists Petra Moser and Shmuel San examined the economic effects of the national quota system of the 1920s. That was the last time the United States engaged in mass immigration restrictions based on ethnicity."
Faculty News
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Excerpt from The New York Times -- "In recent research, the New York University economists Petra Moser and Shmuel San examined the economic effects of the national quota system of the 1920s. That was the last time the United States engaged in mass immigration restrictions based on ethnicity."
School News
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Professor Anthony Marciano is quoted in a trend story highlighting the rise of socially-driven MBA-managed investment funds; Stern's Michael Price Student Investment Fund is spotlighted
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Excerpt from Find MBA -- "'Generationally, there seems to be more concern for these types of issues,' says NYU Stern School of Business professor Anthony Marciano, who is faculty advisor of the Michael Price Student Investment Fund (MPSIF). Indeed, 86 percent of millennials (20-somethings) say that sustainability is a priority for them in their investments, according to research by JPMorgan Private Bank."
School News
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Excerpt from Find MBA -- "'Generationally, there seems to be more concern for these types of issues,' says NYU Stern School of Business professor Anthony Marciano, who is faculty advisor of the Michael Price Student Investment Fund (MPSIF). Indeed, 86 percent of millennials (20-somethings) say that sustainability is a priority for them in their investments, according to research by JPMorgan Private Bank."
Faculty News
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Professor Scott Galloway offers commentary on the valuation of WeWork following former CEO Adam Neumann's departure
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Excerpt from Forbes -- “'No one will believe again that having an app for booking a conference makes you a tech company,' says Scott Galloway, a professor of marketing at NYU Stern School of Business and an outspoken WeWork critic. He adds, 'If the new co-CEOs come back with a harsh but feasible plan, they announce new capital from SoftBank, this could be a company where it's, I would call it, $5-to-$10 billion—if they execute perfectly.'”
Faculty News
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Excerpt from Forbes -- “'No one will believe again that having an app for booking a conference makes you a tech company,' says Scott Galloway, a professor of marketing at NYU Stern School of Business and an outspoken WeWork critic. He adds, 'If the new co-CEOs come back with a harsh but feasible plan, they announce new capital from SoftBank, this could be a company where it's, I would call it, $5-to-$10 billion—if they execute perfectly.'”
School News
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In a joint court filing, Professors Nicholas Economides, Thomas Philippon, Robert Seamans and Lawrence White argue against the U.S. Department of Justice's Sprint/T-Mobile merger proposal
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Excerpt from The Verge -- "In a new filing, a group of seven economists and antitrust experts say the court should reject the DOJ’s proposed solution, calling it 'doom[ed] ... to failure' and 'a remedy that does not meet the standard of restoring the competition currently provided by Sprint.'”
School News
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Excerpt from The Verge -- "In a new filing, a group of seven economists and antitrust experts say the court should reject the DOJ’s proposed solution, calling it 'doom[ed] ... to failure' and 'a remedy that does not meet the standard of restoring the competition currently provided by Sprint.'”
Faculty News
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Professor Tensie Whelan offers her perspective on how growing consumer concern about single-use packaging will impact the future of consumer goods companies
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Excerpt from CNN Business -- "'The challenge around packaging is not going to go away,' said Tensie Whelan, director of NYU Stern School of Business's Center for Sustainable Business. 'Growing regulatory scrutiny of it is not going to go away. Growing consumer concern about it is not going to go away. And growing cost of waste disposal and the environmental impact is not going to go away.'"
Faculty News
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Excerpt from CNN Business -- "'The challenge around packaging is not going to go away,' said Tensie Whelan, director of NYU Stern School of Business's Center for Sustainable Business. 'Growing regulatory scrutiny of it is not going to go away. Growing consumer concern about it is not going to go away. And growing cost of waste disposal and the environmental impact is not going to go away.'"
Faculty News
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Professor Adam Alter explains how advertisers use scarcity and exclusivity to market their products
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Excerpt from CNET -- "'Instagram is a FOMO engine. It shows you that other people are leading incredible lives and doing incredible things that you aren't doing,' Adam Alter, associate professor of marketing at the New York University Stern School of Business, said in an email.
Faculty News
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Excerpt from CNET -- "'Instagram is a FOMO engine. It shows you that other people are leading incredible lives and doing incredible things that you aren't doing,' Adam Alter, associate professor of marketing at the New York University Stern School of Business, said in an email.
Faculty News
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Professor Lawrence White offers advice to first-time credit card users
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Excerpt from WalletHub -- "A credit card can be useful: It allows an individual to delay the payments for purchases when cash-on-hand is short. But the use of a credit card also means taking on additional debt: If the individual is careless in spending and thus the accumulation of that debt, then repaying the debt can become difficult; late fees accumulate; personal bankruptcy and/or a bad debt record follows; and then other aspects of the individual's life become more difficult as well."
Faculty News
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Excerpt from WalletHub -- "A credit card can be useful: It allows an individual to delay the payments for purchases when cash-on-hand is short. But the use of a credit card also means taking on additional debt: If the individual is careless in spending and thus the accumulation of that debt, then repaying the debt can become difficult; late fees accumulate; personal bankruptcy and/or a bad debt record follows; and then other aspects of the individual's life become more difficult as well."
Faculty News
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Professor Aswath Damodaran comments on the state of Netflix as Apple and Disney prepare to launch their streaming platforms
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Excerpt from Los Angeles Times -- They know more about their subscribers than anybody else,' said Aswath Damodaran, a finance professor at New York University’s Stern School of Business. 'They need to figure out a way and take that information from their subscriber base and be more focused.'”
Faculty News
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Excerpt from Los Angeles Times -- They know more about their subscribers than anybody else,' said Aswath Damodaran, a finance professor at New York University’s Stern School of Business. 'They need to figure out a way and take that information from their subscriber base and be more focused.'”
Faculty News
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Professor Anindya Ghose discusses the future of India's luxury goods market following a recent slowdown in the country's growth rate
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Excerpt from Vogue Business -- "Still, India remains a promising untapped market for brands from Alexander McQueen to Valentino. 'These negative developments are short-term hiccups,' says Anindya Ghose, a business professor at New York University who studies Indian retail. 'I can see the battle lines being drawn between Amazon, Walmart and Reliance.'"
Faculty News
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Excerpt from Vogue Business -- "Still, India remains a promising untapped market for brands from Alexander McQueen to Valentino. 'These negative developments are short-term hiccups,' says Anindya Ghose, a business professor at New York University who studies Indian retail. 'I can see the battle lines being drawn between Amazon, Walmart and Reliance.'"
Faculty News
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In an op-ed, Lord Mervyn King shares his perspective on the 50-year history of the Nobel Prize in Economics
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Excerpt from Bloomberg -- "Next week marks the 50th anniversary of the Nobel Prize in Economics, as it has come to be known. It was first awarded in 1969 by the Swedish central bank as an addendum to the other, much older, Nobel prizes (and is correctly known as the Sveriges Riksbank Prize in Economic Sciences in Memory of Alfred Nobel). This upstart status subtracts nothing from the esteem, or cash, according to the laureates. The latest winner, or winners, will be announced Monday."
Faculty News
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Excerpt from Bloomberg -- "Next week marks the 50th anniversary of the Nobel Prize in Economics, as it has come to be known. It was first awarded in 1969 by the Swedish central bank as an addendum to the other, much older, Nobel prizes (and is correctly known as the Sveriges Riksbank Prize in Economic Sciences in Memory of Alfred Nobel). This upstart status subtracts nothing from the esteem, or cash, according to the laureates. The latest winner, or winners, will be announced Monday."
Business and Policy Leader Events
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NYU Stern's Management Communication Program Speaker Series Presents Lindsey Dietschi
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On Wednesday, October 9, NYU Stern's Management Communication Program will host its second Speaker Series featuring Lindsey Dietschi (MBA '11), Vice President of Global Health Partnerships at Pfizer and Stern Adjunct Faculty member.
Business and Policy Leader Events
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On Wednesday, October 9, NYU Stern's Management Communication Program will host its second Speaker Series featuring Lindsey Dietschi (MBA '11), Vice President of Global Health Partnerships at Pfizer and Stern Adjunct Faculty member.
Faculty News
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Professor Shelly London's course on ethics and professional responsibility is highlighted by recent graduate Parbs Anant (BS '19) as part of a P&Q story on the “Favorite Professors of Business Majors."
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Excerpt from Poets & Quants -- "At New York University, Parbs Anant always looked forward to her Professional Responsibility and Leadership course – despite the course being held in the morning and requiring her to take stands on 'controversial' issues. The reason? Her professor, Shelly London, fostered a comforting environment where students felt safe and supported in exploring and formulating their positions."
Faculty News
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Excerpt from Poets & Quants -- "At New York University, Parbs Anant always looked forward to her Professional Responsibility and Leadership course – despite the course being held in the morning and requiring her to take stands on 'controversial' issues. The reason? Her professor, Shelly London, fostered a comforting environment where students felt safe and supported in exploring and formulating their positions."
Faculty News
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Professor Edward Altman's SME Z-score research is featured
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Excerpt from This is Money -- "The SME Z-score, created by Altman and one of his former students, Gabriele Sabato, follows the same model but determines whether or not a small company is likely to fail. Currently it covers all unlisted businesses with an annual turnover starting around $1million (£815,000) up to $150million (£122million) across Europe."
Faculty News
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Excerpt from This is Money -- "The SME Z-score, created by Altman and one of his former students, Gabriele Sabato, follows the same model but determines whether or not a small company is likely to fail. Currently it covers all unlisted businesses with an annual turnover starting around $1million (£815,000) up to $150million (£122million) across Europe."
Faculty News
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Professor Sabrina Howell weighs in on the future of bitcoin
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Excerpt from Gizmodo -- "The bigger picture is that blockchain will affect all sectors that rely on secure data transacted among many participants, which is basically all sectors. This fall Walmart’s leafy green suppliers will be required to use the IBM blockchain built for supply chain logistics. This is not an accident, because leafy greens are often the site of food borne illnesses and the cause of expensive recalls."
Faculty News
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Excerpt from Gizmodo -- "The bigger picture is that blockchain will affect all sectors that rely on secure data transacted among many participants, which is basically all sectors. This fall Walmart’s leafy green suppliers will be required to use the IBM blockchain built for supply chain logistics. This is not an accident, because leafy greens are often the site of food borne illnesses and the cause of expensive recalls."
Faculty News
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In an op-ed, Professor Paul Tice outlines steps the Trump administration can take to streamline the oil and gas pipeline process
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Excerpt from The Wall Street Journal -- "America has a severe plumbing problem. When it comes to crude oil and natural gas, the country can’t seem to replace its aging pipes or put in new lines to meet market demand on a timely and cost-efficient basis. For all the current administration’s vocal support of the industry, the situation has worsened under President Trump."
Faculty News
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Excerpt from The Wall Street Journal -- "America has a severe plumbing problem. When it comes to crude oil and natural gas, the country can’t seem to replace its aging pipes or put in new lines to meet market demand on a timely and cost-efficient basis. For all the current administration’s vocal support of the industry, the situation has worsened under President Trump."
Faculty News
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Professor Michael Waugh's newly-published research on the economic impact of the US-China trade war is spotlighted
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Excerpt from The New York Times -- "In a paper published Monday, Michael Waugh, a professor of economics at the New York University Leonard N. Stern School of Business, argued that China’s retaliatory tariffs were also having an effect on spending by Americans. The paper showed that parts of the United States that were most exposed to the tariffs China had put on American products in response to the trade war — including the upper Midwest, the West Coast, and parts of Texas, Kansas, Oklahoma and Nebraska — had also seen a drop in consumer spending on automobiles, as well as job creation."
Faculty News
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Excerpt from The New York Times -- "In a paper published Monday, Michael Waugh, a professor of economics at the New York University Leonard N. Stern School of Business, argued that China’s retaliatory tariffs were also having an effect on spending by Americans. The paper showed that parts of the United States that were most exposed to the tariffs China had put on American products in response to the trade war — including the upper Midwest, the West Coast, and parts of Texas, Kansas, Oklahoma and Nebraska — had also seen a drop in consumer spending on automobiles, as well as job creation."
Faculty News
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In an op-ed, Center for Business and Human Rights Deputy Director Paul Barrett argues that Colt's recent decision to stop selling its AR-15 semiautomatic rifle to the general public is driven by market forces rather than societal pressure
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Excerpt from The Conversation -- "When the Colt gun manufacturing corporation announced in September that it would stop producing its AR-15 semiautomatic rifle for sale to the general public — to focus on handguns and military production — some gun-control advocates declared victory, saying the move would help limit the availability of assault weapons in the US."
Faculty News
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Excerpt from The Conversation -- "When the Colt gun manufacturing corporation announced in September that it would stop producing its AR-15 semiautomatic rifle for sale to the general public — to focus on handguns and military production — some gun-control advocates declared victory, saying the move would help limit the availability of assault weapons in the US."
Faculty News
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Professor Pankaj Ghemaway's book, "The New Global Road Map," is referenced
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Excerpt from Strategy + Business -- "Globalization and international commerce have faced strong headwinds before, as author Pankaj Ghemawat notes in his book The New Global Road Map: Enduring Strategies for Turbulent Times (Harvard Business Review Press, 2018)."
Faculty News
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Excerpt from Strategy + Business -- "Globalization and international commerce have faced strong headwinds before, as author Pankaj Ghemawat notes in his book The New Global Road Map: Enduring Strategies for Turbulent Times (Harvard Business Review Press, 2018)."
Faculty News
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In a Q&A interview, Professor Greg Besner offers advice for how employers can create a positive work culture
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Excerpt from Medium -- In my experience employees today, more so than ever before, aspire to join organizations that are purpose-driven. Employees are much more likely to be engaged and happy at their company if the organization’s mission and values resonates with their own personal values. Organizations that work to align their culture with their business strategy achieve happy and engaged employees, but it requires a meaningful commitment and unfortunately many organizations fall short.
Faculty News
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Excerpt from Medium -- In my experience employees today, more so than ever before, aspire to join organizations that are purpose-driven. Employees are much more likely to be engaged and happy at their company if the organization’s mission and values resonates with their own personal values. Organizations that work to align their culture with their business strategy achieve happy and engaged employees, but it requires a meaningful commitment and unfortunately many organizations fall short.