Faculty News

Prof. Bruce Tuckman is interviewed about AIG

Excerpt from ZDF -- (Translated from German using Google Translate) "In the financial crisis of 2008, the U.S. insurance group AIG was rescued with $ 182 billion of taxpayer money before the collapse. The company is trying a new beginning."
Faculty News

In an op-ed, Research Scholar Sarah Labowitz explains why companies should protect user data

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Excerpt from San Francisco Chronicle -- "Recent advocacy by several major tech companies for government disclosure is in the public interest, and Americans should support their push for greater transparency."
Faculty News

Prof. Luis Cabral on austerity in Portugal

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Excerpt from The New York Times -- "Even though this week’s upheaval in Lisbon can be seen as 'a victory for the anti-austerity camp,' said Luis Cabral, a Portuguese economist who teaches at New York University, he suggested that the European policy debate would continue, as countries like France that have sought to steer away from drastic spending cuts fail to demonstrate that they have the capacity for the kind of government spending — what Mr. Cabral called 'a Keynesian magic wand' — that will solve Europe’s economic problems."
Faculty News

Prof. Aswath Damodaran's research on stocks and transparency is highlighted

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Excerpt from LiveMint -- "Aswath Damodaran of the Stern School of Business, in his paper titled The Value of Transparency and the Cost of Complexity, argues investors give a higher discount to a complex business model over a simpler one."
Faculty News

Prof. Arun Sundararajan is interviewed about the sharing economy

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Excerpt from NPR -- "It may have started out as something that was on the fringes, but the sharing economy is definitely going mainstream."
Faculty News

In an op-ed, Prof. Viral Acharya explains the impact of long-term low interest rates

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Excerpt from VoxEU -- "Many central banks have recently employed unprecedented expansionary monetary policy, keeping interest rates at near-zero levels for an extended period of time since the crisis of 2007-08. Quantitative easing interventions have been employed to affect asset prices directly, most notably in government-bond and mortgage markets, in order to keep sovereign and mortgage borrowing costs low. These interventions may have the beneficial aspect of generating wealth transfers to borrowers, notably banks and households with negative home equities. But they may also be stoking asset-price inflation, often in unexpected fashion, by inducing a ‘search for yield’ among savers and intermediaries who manage their savings."
Faculty News

Prof. JP Eggers on the opposing plans for Dell's future

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Excerpt from Bloomberg TV -- "These are huge polar opposite deals. Michael Dell wants to completely scrap the existing business and recreate the entire company from the ground up and Icahn wants to basically just milk the existing core PC business down to the last drop and they're so different and so distinct that the money kind of balancing becomes the big issue."
Faculty News

Professor Edward Altman's Z-Score research is highlighted

Excerpt from NASDAQ -- "Altman's Z-Score gives one simple number that tells you how a retailer is faring. Any reading above 3.0 implies good health in terms of balance sheet strength and profit results."
Faculty News

Prof. Russell Winer on product placement on TV

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Excerpt from BBC -- "I think Americans have accepted that when you watch a TV program, you're going to see somebody selling something in the context of the TV show. There's no doubt about that...with the number of digital video recorders that are here and the penetration rate around 50%, advertisers are looking for nontraditional ways of trying to show their brands being used in context because people are skipping ads, and that's why the market, in fact, is growing here rapidly: because of the ad-skipping that's going on."
Faculty News

Prof. William Baumol's "cost disease" research is featured

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Excerpt from Le Monde -- "Baumol's cost disease" has since been diagnosed in many fields, including education and healthcare. In a recent book on the continuing relevance of his discovery, Baumol says that the quantity of labour required to produce these services is difficult to reduce. He distinguishes two sectors. In the first, goods and services can be easily automated, and as machines have replaced humans, the amount of labour required to produce each additional unit has fallen."
Faculty News

In an op-ed, Dean Peter Henry explains why emerging economies need a voice in global governance

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Excerpt from Project Syndicate -- "Leaders in developed and developing countries alike must deepen their commitment to economic reform and integration. But only by giving emerging economies a real voice in global governance – thereby reducing the trust deficit and restoring legitimacy to multilateral institutions – can the global economy reach its potential."
Faculty News

Prof. Michael Posner explains the significance of labor rights regulations in Myanmar

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Excerpt from The New York Times -- “'This is part of a greater trend — not only in the business world, but in our world generally — toward transparency,' said Mr. Posner, who helped draft the requirements while at the State Department. 'I think it’s a very healthy trend.'”
Faculty News

In an op-ed, Prof. Nouriel Roubini explains the prevalence of economic risk

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Excerpt from Project Syndicate -- "A new period of uncertainty and volatility has begun, and it seems likely to lead to choppy economies and choppy markets. Indeed, a broader de-risking cycle for financial markets could be at hand."
Faculty News

Professor Samuel Craig weighs in on Paula Deen's loss of business partnerships

Excerpt from New York Daily News -- "Retailers 'don't want anything that can possibly tarnish their brand because they've worked so hard at it,' Sam Craig, a marketing professor at NYU, told the Daily News. 'There are a number of taboo topics, and if you cross the line on those, you become a liability rather than an asset.'"
Faculty News

Prof. Richard Levich on currency risk

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Excerpt from BBC Capital -- “'[Investors] get a lot of exposure to currency indirectly by buying equities and bonds,' said Richard Levich, professor of finance and international business at New York University’s Stern School of Business."
Faculty News

In an op-ed, Prof. Ralph Gomory explains why altruism is good for business

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Excerpt from Washington Post -- "The laws of evolution and the experiences of daily life suggest that humans have an inherent desire to contribute to others. Organizations that take this side of human nature into account may well function better than those whose single goal is profit. And the people in those corporations, using both sides of their natures, will also lead more fulfilling lives."
Faculty News

Prof. Michael Posner reacts to the US's measures to halt trade with Bangladesh

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Excerpt from The New York Times -- “'The U.S. decision sends a very strong signal to the government of Bangladesh that they have to do things differently, that there’s a consequence to the way they’ve been operating,' said Michael H. Posner, a former assistant secretary of state of human and labor rights in the Obama administration."
Faculty News

Prof. Aswath Damodaran explains why some commodity stocks are a good investment

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Excerpt from CNBC -- "'I think in a sense you've got to play the cycles, commodity-price cycles and economic cycles, so I would go to commodity companies and cyclical companies,' he said. 'Not all of them are cheap, but I think your best chance of finding bargains are in those segments.'"
School News

Executive MBA student Tim Reid blogs about his experience on the Global Study Tour

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Excerpt from Poets & Quants -- "These international learning opportunities were a deciding factor in my decision to enroll at NYU Stern last August."
Faculty News

Prof. Nouriel Roubini discusses his recent op-ed, "The New Abnormal"

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Excerpt from Charlie Rose -- "After the global financial crisis, somepeople like Mohamed El-Erian, who is the co-CEO of PIMCO, said we are entering the new normal, a period of time where economic growth in advanced economies would be low, anemic, sub-par and so on...Our point is that this situation is one that is not a stable equilibrium. It is not even a stable disequilibirium. It is an unstable disequilibrium. Take for example the eurozone. You can't have just a monetary union without banking, political, economic, fiscal union. Either you move towards more integration, or you are going to have fragmentation disintegration."
Faculty News

Prof. Jamyn Edis's venture, Dash, is profiled

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Excerpt from Mashable -- "'We saw a huge opportunity for the installed base of cars,' Jamyn Edis, co-founder and CEO of Dash, told Mashable in an interview. 'We've only scratched the surface around what you can do with all that data.' Edis described Dash as being like a 'Fitbit for cars,' and said it aims to help people drive more safely through real-time feedback, and to better track the wear and tear on their car, so they know when to bring it in for repairs."
Faculty News

Prof. Scott Galloway on transparency and the Federal Reserve

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Excerpt from Bloomberg TV -- "It feels like in this instance it's one of the few environments you look at where transparency doesn't help because they can never be fully transparent. And people start, there's sort of this kabuki dance where everyone is interpreting it a different way so it feels to me like you need one voice and that voice should probably be Bernanke and then we can all interpret it how we want. But my sense is we spent a lot of time staring at our navel trying to figure out every single piece of information and interpret it and it doesn't really add to the dialogue."
Faculty News

Prof. Scott Galloway on how Americans prioritize privacy

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Excerpt from Bloomberg TV -- "American violations of privacy were usually about the bad guys and it was going to be used against us. Now, the bottom line is, Americans have their privacy violated every day and they're fine with it as long as they get a coupon at the end of the violation or they feel more secure. Americans have been forced to signal what are their priorities. They've put security well ahead of privacy."
Faculty News

At Stern's Global Alumni Conference in Shanghai, Prof. Robert Engle is interviewed on risk in China

Excerpt from China Economic Review -- "In Asia, risk is increasing, and has been increasing for a decade. The financial crisis did not show up very much in Asian banks, but they look substantially riskier today than they did five years ago. And in China, the rate of increase is very high. Its banking sector is taking on a risk at a very rapid rate. This is by publicly available accounting numbers. So, my feeling is, at the moment, that China is big enough, strong enough that they could recapitalize the banks."
Faculty News

Prof. Arun Sundararajan on the legal challenges presented by the sharing economy

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Excerpt from TIME -- "'These are new models, and they don't fit into the old boxes,' says Arun Sundararajan, a professor at New York University's Stern School of Business who studies the sharing economy."