Faculty News

In an Q&A interview, Professor Robert Seamans notes that companies that don’t embrace AI are putting themselves at a competitive disadvantage

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Excerpt from The Modern Sale -- "So far, AI/ML has mostly been used to augment products that firms offer. For example, Gmail now includes a predictive typing feature that uses AI to “guess” at the next several words in sentences that I write. It is a nifty feature — not world-changing or anything like that, but certainly helpful. But, in the future, we will see lots more AI in lots more products/services/devices, and we will start to see firms reorganizing themselves in different ways to take advantage of what AI can do. It is still early days."
Faculty News

Professor Baruch Lev's research on the usefulness of financial reports is mentioned

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Excerpt from Moneyweb -- "In a study on the usefulness of published accounts, researcher Baruch Lev places much of the blame on the proliferation of estimates in financial reports: 'To a large extent, financial reports are based on estimates, judgements, and models rather than exact depictions,' he says."
Faculty News

Professor Aswath Damodaran offers insight into the recent stock performances of Uber and Beyond Meat in response to the expiration of their IPO lockups and initial earnings reports

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Excerpt from Bloomberg -- “'If you are a trader, you can try to take advantage of the price drop, but the drop is [typically] small and short-selling costs tend to be large' New York University professor Aswath Damodaran said in an interview."
 
Faculty News

Professor Dolly Chugh's book, "The Person You Mean To Be," is cited

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Excerpt from Harvard Business Review -- "To better understand the experience of women of color in the workplace in particular, see Minda Harts’s The Memo: What Women of Color Need to Know to Secure a Seat at The Table. For an exploration of identity, gender and race, read Jodi Patterson’s The Bold World. And for a more general look at how to lead in an inclusive way, take up Dolly Chugh’s The Person You Mean to Be: How Good People Fight Bias."
Faculty News

Professor Scott Galloway's recent blog post on the 2020 presidential election is published

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Excerpt from Business Insider -- "He says that Elizabeth Warren has run a 'masterclass' of a campaign and that she's 'impressive' and 'substantive.' But her 'attributes are viewed as negative simply because she is a she' — he thinks that the US is still too sexist to elect a woman.
School News

In a Q&A interview, Senior Director of Leadership Development Connie Kim discusses how Stern students develop leadership skills through experiential learning opportunities

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Excerpt from CIOReview -- "At the NYU Stern School of Business, we believe that leadership development is a great opportunity for students and organizations. And this experiential learning occurs as people get involved in it, instead of sitting in a workshop or a series of meetings."
School News

Stern's newly expanded Volatility and Risk Institute (VRI) is profiled; VRI Co-Directors Professors Robert Engle and Richard Berner are quoted on the VRI's expansion and core mission

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Excerpt from GARP.org -- "The Volatility Institute at New York University's Stern School of Business, founded in the aftermath of the 2008 financial crisis, has a new name – the Volatility and Risk Institute – signifying a focus beyond just financial risks. The institute and its Volatility Laboratory, or V-Lab, are renowned for continuous measurements and forecasts of volatility in financial markets, among them the SRISK systemic risk analytics...The expanded institute now has co-directors: Engle, who was director of the Volatility Institute; and Richard Berner, professor of management practice."
School News

The Center for Business and Human Rights' report on disinformation and the 2020 election is cited

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Excerpt from Forbes -- "As explained in the recent report by NYU Stern, the term deepfake comes from the combination of “deep learning” and “fake.” Deep learning has gained tremendous attention in recent years in the field of artificial intelligence due to outstanding results in many tasks, often outperforming human specialists in the fields of natural language and image processing."
School News

"As part of a ""Fridays from the Frontlines"" feature, Stern graduate student Natalie Ashbridge (MBA '21) shares how the Fertitta Veterans Program supported her transition to b-school from the Marine Corps. "

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Excerpt from Clear Admit -- "It feels great to be back in school and I am so grateful for this opportunity. Stern was my top choice immediately, and its Fertitta Veterans program, which supports military vets and active duty students in their transition to business school, is extraordinary."
 
Student Club Events

TechCon 2019

Poster for Tech Con 2019
On Friday November, 8th, the Stern Technology Association will host TechCon, featuring a conversation between MBA students and Tech industry leaders about the challenges, trends and innovations in the industry.
Faculty News

Joint research on asset iIliquidity from Professor Yakov Amihud is referenced

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Excerpt from The Economist -- "Illiquidity matters less if investors have longer horizons. A pioneering paper by Yakov Amihud and Haim Mendelson, published in 1986, posits that investors with the shortest horizons hold securities with the lowest trading costs; and bonds that are relatively illiquid are held by long-term investors, who can spread the higher trading costs over a longer holding period."
School News

Professor and Center Director Tensie Whelan and Senior Scholar of Marketing and Corporate Outreach Randi Kronthal-Sacco discuss key takeaways from the research

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Excerpt from Refrigerated & Frozen Foods Magazine -- "NYU Stern Center for Sustainable Business (CSB), New York, and IRI, Chicago, launched a new Sustainable Market Share Index, an in-depth analysis of consumer purchases of products marketed for their sustainable attributes. The research finds that sustainability-marketed products are responsible for more than half of the growth in consumer packaged goods (CPGs) since 2013."
Faculty News

Professor Priya Raghubir analyzes consumer purchasing behavior when shopping at Target

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Excerpt from Business Insider -- "But NYU Professor Priya Raghubir says the real key to Target's success is that you don't actually regret buying anything. Those unplanned purchases, they're often things people do want, they just haven't thought of putting them on their shopping list."
 
Faculty News

Professor Robert Engle's comments on the global state of geopolitical risk are featured

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Excerpt from Risk.net -- "From tariff spats to terrorist threats, geopolitical risk is a persistent driver of securities prices and financial markets. But according to Robert Engle – the NYU Stern economist who won the Nobel prize for his work on measuring volatility – market-watchers may be overestimating the impact of global tensions."
Faculty News

Professor Thomas Philippon's new book, "The Great Reversal," is reviewed

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Excerpt from The Wall Street Journal -- "‘The idea that US markets are the most competitive in the world has been widely accepted in economics for several decades,' economist Thomas Philippon writes in 'The Great Reversal.' The thrust of his argument is that this idea is largely a myth. Even before the financial crash of 2007-08, he says, many Americans felt that there was something not right about the economy—that it wasn’t performing as advertised."
 
School News

Dean Raghu Sundaram discusses how the focused Andre Koo Technology and Entrepreneurship MBA was developed in partnership with executives from top tech firms to prepare graduates to meet industry needs at the intersection of business and technology

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Excerpt from Bloomberg Quint -- "Raghu Sundaram, dean of New York University’s Stern School of Business, No. 13 in the ranking, says he heard from the director of operations and technology at Citigroup Inc. and the chief information officer of Goldman Sachs Group Inc. 'They had people with an excellent grasp of business or an excellent grasp of technology, but not both,' he says. 'One of the first things we did was set up an advisory board and ask them what we should be doing.' The result is the 12-month Andre Koo Technology and Entrepreneurship MBA, which started in May 2018 and prepares 40 students for technology roles."
Faculty News

Professor Tensie Whelan highlights key takeaways from the Center for Sustainable Business' Sustainable Market Share Index™

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Excerpt from Fortune -- "Luckily for the planet, research from the New York University Center for Sustainable Business (CSB) shows shoppers aren't all talk but are actually following through with buying more sustainable goods. 'Across virtually every category of consumer packaged goods (CPG), sustainability is where the growth is, which I think tells you something about where consumers are,' CSB Director Tensie Whelan tells Fortune."
Faculty News

Professor David Yermack's joint research on the investment returns and distribution rates for U.S. non-profit endowment funds is highlighted

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Excerpt from Poets and Quants -- "That was the stunning finding of a paper by Poets & Quants’ Professor of the Week, Sandeep Dahiya of the McDonough School of Business at Georgetown University, along with David Yermack of New York University Stern School of Business. Their working paper, 'Investment Returns and Distribution Policies of Non-Profit Endowment Funds,' was published in May by the European Corporate Governance Institute."
Faculty News

Professor Thomai Serdari weighs in on ABG CEO Jamie Salter's strategic plan to utilize the Barneys New York brand

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Excerpt from Retail Dive -- "'[ABG CEO] Jamie Salter's openness to evaluate a strategy that had not been in consideration just a week ago shows he brings promise with a business model that otherwise could have meant that the Barneys brand as we know it would die a slow death,' Thomai Serdari, professor of luxury marketing and branding at New York University's Stern School of Business, said in an email to Retail Dive."
 
Faculty News

In a live interview, Professor Nicholas Economides shares his thoughts on the latest round of US-China trade negotiations

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Excerpt from Yahoo Finance -- "'I think it's likely that there will be some deal. It might not be a 100% deal, but it's likely to be an 80% or 90% deal by December. That would mean that tariffs would fall, and I don't think I agree 100% with Goldman when they say they expect tariffs to persist... My expectation is that there is going to be a deal and a big percentage of the tariffs are going to disappear by the beginning of 2020.'"
Faculty News

"In a live interview, Professor Arun Sundararajan shares his views on Uber's business model in relation to the company’s future path to profitability. "

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Excerpt from Bloomberg -- "'At this point it looks like Uber is trading of growth for profitability. I think that in the long run once autonomous vehicles actually become a reality, the growth potential of this sector is going to be immense. What I've been hoping is that Uber can hold on, continue to grow steadily until that point without paring back on user growth and going after profits too soon. I think today's numbers are telling us that their CEO is focused very heavily on profitability, whether than taking the Amazon strategy of saying 'we're profitable in some of these markets, let's sacrifice profits for growth.'"
Faculty News

Professor Thomas Philippon discusses the EU's latest move to combat digital market abuse; his new book, "The Great Reversal," is referenced

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Excerpt from Financial Times -- "The policy would dovetail with Ms Vestager’s revival of so-called interim measures to stop alleged market abuse during an investigation. That was a very welcome decision, says Thomas Philippon, a New York University finance professor and author of a book arguing Europe’s antitrust policy has overtaken America’s."
Faculty News

Professor Arun Sundararajan shares his thoughts on Walmart's strategic approach to public policy issues

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Excerpt from The New York Times -- “'My impression is that this is a company that does seem to care beyond the bottom line,' said Arun Sundararajan, a professor at New York University’s Stern School of Business. 'But you also have to keep in mind, it is still a highly efficient competitor.'”
School News

Data for the Sustainable Market Share Index™, research by the Center for Sustainable Business and IRI, is spotlighted

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Excerpt from Green Biz -- "Consumers today are putting their money where their mouths are. NYU Stern’s Center for Sustainable Business did in-depth research into U.S. consumers’ actual purchasing from 2013 to 2018 and found that a full 50 percent of the growth in consumer-packaged goods came from sustainability-marketed products."