School News

Winner of 2004 New Venture Competition, Rickshaw Dumpling, founded by alums David Weber & Kenny Lao

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Excerpt from The New York Times -- "Mr. Weber, a former World Bank consultant with an M.B.A. in management from the Stern School of Business at New York University, believes that food trucks 'can help create neighborhoods.'"
Faculty News

Prof. Ralph Gomory on the consequences of unbalanced trade

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Excerpt from The Huffington Post -- "Gomory, who is co-author of the book 'Global Trade and Conflicting National Interests,' pointed out: 'With unbalanced trade, we are consuming more than we produce and that cannot go on without us being poor and in debt to everyone else.'"
Faculty News

An op-ed by Prof. Nouriel Roubini on breaking up the euro zone

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Excerpt from Financial Times -- "The eurozone still lacks essential features of monetary unions that have stood the test of time; and planned reforms may exacerbate latent fiscal, banking and external imbalances, leaving it less, rather than more, resilient to regional shocks."
Faculty News

Prof. April Klein's paper on hedge fund activism is highlighted

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Excerpt from Fortune -- "In a paper published in 2009, NYU Stern School of Business professor April Klein looked at 151 activist hedge fund targets between 2003 and 2005. She found that out of those 151 targets, activist shareholders received a seat on the board about 44% of the time."
Faculty News

Prof. Lawrence White on ratings agencies

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Excerpt from Global Finance Magazine -- "Pay for the ratings with advertising. This could be lucrative if ratings agencies were to publish their ratings on a website in real time and the ads were online, notes Lawrence White, an economics professor at the NYU Stern School of Business."
School News

Vice Chairman, NYU Trustees & Chairman of the Overseers William Berkley (BS '66) is featured

Excerpt from Leaders Edge Magazine -- “The fact that I ended up going to NYU because someone I never knew decided that I should get financial aid was a real eye-opening experience,” Berkley says. “What an incredible thing to have happen. It’s something I remember all the time.”
Faculty News

"A History of Interest Rates," co-authored by Prof. Richard Sylla, is cited

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Excerpt from Financial Times -- " ... the US Treasury market after the end of the Second World War ... yields on long-term Treasuries hovered around 2 percent. 'This was the crest of the 26-year bull bond market,' write Sidney Homer and Richard Sylla in 'A History of Interest Rates.'"
Faculty News

Prof. Paul Romer is highlighted for leading the new growth theory

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Excerpt from Harvard Business Review -- "The economist Paul Romer is credited with leading the new growth theory, which holds that growth has no natural limits because the capacity for technological innovation is unlimited. Investments in human capital increase rates of return, in his view."
Faculty News

Prof. Jonathan Haidt on why we like to lose ourselves in religion

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Excerpt from CNN -- " ... every known religion has some sort of rite or procedure for taking people out of their ordinary lives and opening them up to something larger than themselves. It was almost as if there was an "off" switch for the self, buried deep in our minds, and the world's religions were a thousand different ways of pressing the switch."
Faculty News

Nobel Laureate Prof. Michael Spence's co-analyses of markets with asymmetric information is cited

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Excerpt from The New York Times -- " ... even when unconstrained, price movements are often insufficient to clear markets, as pointed out by George Akerlof, A. Michael Spence and Joseph Stiglitz in work that garnered them the Nobel Prize. This outcome is particularly likely in markets where both sides of an economic transaction have differing sets of information, like in the credit market."
Faculty News

Prof. Priya Raghubir's "denomination effect" is cited

Excerpt from All You Magazine -- "Research [by Professor Priya Raghubir] shows that you might be less likely to break a $50 bill for a spur-of-the-moment purchase than smaller currency."
Faculty News

Prof. Richard Sylla on the 1940 US census data

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Excerpt from Barron's -- "'Income taxes were quite low, and most people didn't pay them at all,' says Richard Sylla, professor of economics and financial history at NYU's Stern School of Business. Wages were much lower, too."
Faculty News

Prof. Dolly Chugh's co-authored research on marriage structure and the workplace is featured

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Excerpt from Financial Times -- "From their findings [Chugh and co-authors] suggest that men in traditional marriages are more likely to consider companies that have women leaders to be relatively unattractive and are also more likely to deny qualified female employees opportunities for promotion."
School News

Maria Bartiromo is highlighted as the 2012 NYU Stern Graduate Convocation speaker

Excerpt from Bloomberg Businessweek -- "NYU Stern School of Business, Maria Bartiromo, anchor of CNBC’s Closing Bell and anchor/managing editor of the Wall Street Journal Report with Maria Bartiromo, on May 17."
Faculty News

Co-authored research by Prof. Lasse Pedersen finds taking fewer risks leads to higher returns

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Excerpt from Financial Times -- "Prof Pedersen and Frazzini found this anomaly works in every market they tried. In all cases, taking less risk leads to higher returns relative to the amount of risk taken."
Faculty News

Prof. Nouriel Roubini says the euro must depreciate

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Excerpt from CNBC -- “The euro zone needs a real depreciation in the periphery to achieve the restoration of growth, external balance and competitiveness. ... The periphery needs to have the euro closer to parity with the US dollar.”
Faculty News

Prof. Richard Levich's co-authored research on the trading styles of fund managers is highlighted

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Excerpt from Financial Times -- "Mr Pojarliev and co-author Richard Levich conclude: 'We find no evidence to support alpha persistence; a manager’s alpha in one year is not significantly related to his alpha in the prior year. On the other hand, there is substantial evidence for style persistence; funds that rely on carry, trend or value trading or with a long/short bias toward currency volatility are likely to maintain that style in the following year.'"
Student Club Events

The First Annual Stern Hedge Fund Association Summit

The First Annual Stern Hedge Fund Association (SHFA) Summit, themed "Headwinds and Tailwinds: Capitalizing on Volatile Markets," will provide a forum for leaders within the hedge fund and alternative investment industries to discuss opportunities and challenges facing investors in the post-2008 financial environment.
Research Center Events

Ben Kaufman, CEO & Founder of Quirky.com, Talks New Product Development at Himelberg Speaker Series

Budding entrepreneurs from across NYU convened in Stern’s Paulson Auditorium to hear from Ben Kaufman, CEO and founder of Quirky.com.
School News

Data compiled by NYU Stern faculty on US treasury returns is cited

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Excerpt from US News & World Report -- "Bonds have rallied too, with US treasuries returning an average of 8.5 percent in 2010 and 16 percent in 2011, according to data compiled by New York University's Stern School of Business."
Research Center Events

Research Director Craig Stacey Examines How to Measure Return on Marketing Investment

Graduate marketing students gathered for a forum with E. Craig Stacey, research director for the NYU Stern Center for Measurable Marketing and founding partner of The Marketing Productivity Group.
Research Center Events

Society for Financial Econometrics Hosts Conference on Measuring & Understanding Asset Price Changes

Academics and practitioners in the field of financial econometrics from around the world gathered in the Netherlands for a conference on "Measuring and Understanding Asset Price Changes: The Price of Liquidity, and the Liquidity of Price." Co-hosted by The Society for Financial Econometrics (SoFiE), which is housed within the NYU Stern Volatility Institute, and the Tinbergen University in Amsterdam, the event featured keynote speakers Thierry Foucault, HEC, Paris; Pete Kyle, University of Maryland; and Richardo Lagos, NYU. Nobel Laureate Professor Robert Engle’s co-authored research on “Liquidity and Volatility in the US Treasury Market: Evidence from a New Class of Dynamic Order Book Models?” was also presented.
Faculty News

An op-ed by Prof. Jonathan Haidt on how humans became religious

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Excerpt from TIME -- "If the human capacity for self-transcendence is an evolutionary adaptation, then the implications are profound. It suggests that religiosity may be a deep part of human nature."
Faculty News

A webinar presented by Prof. Marti Subrahmanyam on credit default swaps is cited

Excerpt from Minyanville.com -- "I had the pleasure of listening to a webinar presented by Professor Marti Subrahmanyam of the NYU Stern School of Business last week. Some of the incentives created by CDS include what is referred to as an “empty creditor” problem; this is someone who is both long the bond and the CDS protection and therefore has no net economic exposure."