Faculty News

Prof. Sam Craig weighs in on Netflix's acquisition of the rights to the "Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon" sequel and its implications for movie theaters

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Excerpt from Marketplace -- "'Anything that starts to erode or challenge the 90-day window could be disaster for them,' says Sam Craig, director of the Entertainment, Media and Technology program at NYU. According to Craig, if just 10 percent of theatergoers stayed home, it would mean a loss of more than a billion dollars in ticket sales."
Faculty News

Prof. Rosa Abrantes-Metz reacts to new measures by the Financial Stability Board to regulate benchmarks

Excerpt from Bloomberg -- "'The incentive to manipulate is always going to be there: what we have to make sure is the ability to actually do it is reduced,' Rosa Abrantes-Metz, a professor at New York University’s Stern School of Business, said in a telephone interview. The FSB report 'talks about many things, such as no sharing of information among traders beyond what is necessary, but that should have been in place for a long time.'"
School News

Stern's "Changing Face of Wall Street" panel, hosted by Dean Peter Henry and Chairman of the Board of Overseers Bill Berkley, is featured

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Excerpt from The Wall Street Journal -- "'Regulators probably don’t want to see big banks get bigger,' [Citigroup CEO Michael] Corbat said. '… And if you don’t have scale in a particular product line or business line today, you probably can’t buy it' – and it’s tough to build from scratch in an era of low interest rates and slow growth."
Faculty News

Research coauthored by Prof. Joe Magee is featured

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Excerpt from Fast Company -- "Researchers found the teams where the bosses were asked to take the perspective of their employees did a better job of sharing information and making decisions than their counterparts."
Faculty News

Prof. JP Eggers discusses the evolution of tech companies

Excerpt from Bloomberg -- "The cycle certainly seems to be faster. The pattern is still relative to what we see in other industries. The challenge is that, in many industries, the dynamics just don't move as fast. Things don't replace new technologies, steel and airlines and things like that, as often, whereas in the tech world, the life cycles are much more compressed. But the same basic pattern shows up whether we look at manufacturing or retail or technology."
Research Center Events

A Public Talk with Lord Mervyn King, Former Governor of the Bank of England

NYU Stern's Center for Global Economy and Business welcomes Lord Mervyn King, former governor of the Bank of England, to speak at a public talk.
Faculty News

Prof. Kim Schoenholtz's research on the global impact of the US dollar is featured

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Excerpt from Financial Times -- "That significant parts of the global financial system are running on dollars is no surprise. We discussed some of the basics – the fact that the dollar accounts for 80% of trade finance and 87% of foreign currency market transactions – in an earlier post on the reserve currencies. But there is more, much more. The fact of the matter is that there is a parallel dollar-based financial system – call it the 'Global Dollar system' – that operates outside the United States."
Faculty News

Prof. Arun Sundararajan argues that investments in the sharing economy can help cities prepare for large events

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Excerpt from CityLab -- "Cities can invest in 'invisible infrastructure,' said Arun Sundararajan, professor of information sciences at New York University, 'without having to spend on steel and concrete.'"
Faculty News

Prof. Kim Schoenholtz's blog post on the investment of a college education is featured

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Excerpt from The Huffington Post -- "For investing in college, the analysis is complicated by the fact that you need to compute the difference between expected income with and without going to college. People have done that, and the answer is that the payoff usually remains quite attractive, but it depends on where and what you study, and whether you complete your degree."
Business and Policy Leader Events

"The Changing Face of Wall Street: From Universal Banks to Shadow Banks"

Dean Peter Henry and William R. Berkley (BS '66), Chair-Designate of NYU Trustees and Chairman of NYU Stern's Board of Overseers, hosted "The Changing Face of Wall Street: From Universal Banks to Shadow Banks," the first installment of NYU Stern's speaker series on the future of finance on Monday, September 29.
Faculty News

Prof. Jonathan Haidt's book, "The Righteous Mind," is quoted

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Excerpt from Salon -- "Rationality is not hardwired. Indeed, when isolated from one another, we are not particularly good at reasoning. But as even Jonathan Haidt acknowledges, 'if you put individuals together in the right way, such that some individuals can use their reasoning powers to disconfirm the claims of others, and all individuals feel some common bond or shared fate that allows them to interact civilly, you can create a group that ends up producing good reasoning as an emergent property of the social system.'"
Faculty News

Prof. Lawrence White discusses subprime lending in the auto loan market

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Excerpt from USA Today -- "'The overall size of the auto loan market is less than one-tenth of the overall size of the mortgage market,' White said. 'The magnitude is smaller. Nobody expects the price of the underlying collateral to be always going up.' He added, 'I can't imagine the same economy-shaking consequences that the collapse of subprime mortgage lending had.'"
Faculty News

Prof. Kim Schoenholtz's research on monetary policy is cited

Excerpt from Bloomberg -- "When the Fed eventually tightens credit, it risks causing financial-market turmoil similar to the 'tantrum' that occurred last year after the central bank said it was considering trimming its bond purchases, according to the paper, which was also written by Anil Kashyap of the University of Chicago, Kermit Schoenholtz of New York University’s Stern School of Business and Hyun Song Shin of Princeton University."
Faculty News

Prof. Michael Spence's research on Brazil's economic growth is highlighted

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Excerpt from The Huffington Post -- "In 2008 the Growth Commission--a group of prominent economists chaired by Nobel Prize winner Michael Spence--included Brazil in a group of just thirteen countries that stood out by achieving very high growth over a 30-year period."
Faculty News

Visiting Scholar Michael Cohen discusses Pepsi and Coca-Cola's promises to reduce the sugar in their products

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Excerpt from CBC Radio -- "It really comes down to the four entities of the marketing environment. One is the consumer and their shifting tastes and preferences towards healthier products. The other is the company and what makes sense for their marketing and production efficiencies. What the company's competitors are doing is something that is always on their radar. They don't want the competition to move too far ahead or beyond them. And then, finally, there's the public voice, or community, and the educational initiatives, efforts, and governmental policies and initiatives that have worked to educate the consumer on the importance of proper nutrition for adults and children."
Faculty News

In an op-ed, Profs Roy Smith and Ingo Walter discuss how Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi can foster the country's economic growth

Excerpt from The BRICS Post -- "Mr. Modi has political capital to spend in India, and he ought to use some of it to winnow government subsidies, reduce protection of certain economic sectors, and to do all he can to increase basic competition in goods and services. Infrastructure and education are important too, but these take a long time to improve. The most immediate need is to get the growth rate back to a 9-10 per cent level."
Faculty News

Prof. Anindya Ghose discusses peer-to-peer lending

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Excerpt from NHK -- "It is possible that only those people that have bad credit who cannot get loans from banks are the ones who borrow from these platforms. And so, if I'm the lender, my risk is a high default rate."
School News

Assistant Dean Isser Gallogly discusses Stern's collaborative culture

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Excerpt from Clear Admit -- "I think the surprise that people get when they experience Stern is that the culture is very collaborative, very diverse and very team based. We have people from all over the globe who come to Stern with diverse backgrounds and bring experience from a range of industries, from investment banking to entertainment to marketing to the military. But as different as they all are, what these people all have in common is that they respect one another and work together. We aim to shape our community with people who possess what we call IQ + EQ—the combination of strong intellectual and interpersonal strengths."
Faculty News

Prof. Scott Galloway's "Zero to One" presentation is featured

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Excerpt from Business Insider -- "...Galloway’s basic premise is this: Everyone thinks the 'digital age' is a rising tide that will lift all boats. But really, it’s a shift in tides that favors a few super yachts and will leave everyone else stuck in the sand or worse. With this perspective, he examines the players in three arenas: Social media, retail, and the world economy."
Faculty News

Senior Research Scholar Shlomo Angel's research on Manhattan's population density is featured

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Excerpt from New York Observer -- "Manhattan is home to some of the world’s most iconic skyscrapers. But despite its abundance of upward real-estate, a map created by Shlomo Angel shows the city actually has a lower population density as of 2010 versus 1910. Mr. Angel’s map comes from his book Planet of Cities, part of an upcoming New York Public Library presentation by the NYU Stern Urbanization Project and the NYU Marron Institute for Urban Management."
Faculty News

Prof. Scott Galloway's comments on Apple at L2's "Winners And Losers In A Digital Age" conference are highlighted

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Excerpt from Forbes -- "Apple has become the ultimate symbol of luxury. And as the luxury sector has been the most robust part of the retail industry, particularly amid the nation’s vanishing middle class, the darling of the tech world is poised for explosion growth — particularly as it tip toes into upscale fashion accessories with its new smart watch, Scott Galloway, founder and chairman of L2 and clinical professor of marketing at NYU Stern, said during the conference. More than Cartier or Hermes, 'Apple is becoming the new indicator of wealth in our society,” said Galloway, who called Apple the hands-down winner today in the digital age."
Faculty News

Prof. Aswath Damodaran's blog post about stock buybacks is spotlighted

Excerpt from Bloomberg View -- "Today's chart comes from a very interesting article on stock buybacks from Aswath Damodaran, a professor at New York University. He writes: This has been a big year for stock buybacks, continuing a return to a trend that started more than two decades ago and was broken only briefly by the crisis in 2008."
Faculty News

Prof. Batia Wiesenfeld discusses the impact of telecommuting on work performance

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Excerpt from Reuters -- "'What we don’t know, or we feel like it varies, is whether the benefit comes from working longer hours, or not being able to turn off, working evenings and weekends, or from something else,' [Wiesenfeld] told Reuters Health. 'It could be there’s higher wellbeing, there could be creativity benefits too,' she said. Working parents have lower stress levels when they have the option to work remotely, she noted."
Faculty News

Prof. Panos Ipeirotis's research on crowdsourcing is cited

Excerpt from IT Business Edge -- "Panos Ipeirotis describes a similar, but much more complicated approach, in 'Crowdsourcing: Achieving Data Quality with Imperfect Humans,' which is available on YouTube. Ipeirotis holds a Ph.D. in computer science from Columbia and is now an associate professor and George A. Kellner Faculty Fellow for the Department of Information, Operations, and Management Sciences at Leonard N. Stern School of Business at New York University."
Faculty News

Prof. Robert Seamans discusses his research on entrepreneurship, credit cards and race

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Excerpt from CityLab -- "'This increase in black entrepreneurship is unambiguously a good thing. Anything we can [do] to expand that is a good thing,' Seamans says."