Press Releases

NYU Stern and DoSomething.org Partner on “Give a Spit” Challenge

NYU Stern Undergraduate College and DoSomething.org, one of the largest organizations for young people and social change in the US, are combining efforts on the “Give a Spit” Challenge to register 5,000 plus potential donors with the national bone marrow registry. Their goal is to find a bone marrow match for Sheldon Mba, a college student who was diagnosed with aplastic anemia, a disease that requires a life-saving bone marrow match.
Business and Policy Leader Events

Danny Meyer, CEO of Union Square Hospitality Group, Joins MBAs for Block Lunch

Danny Meyer, CEO of Union Square Hospitality Group, joined Dean Peter Henry and MBA students for NYU Stern’s Block Lunch.
Faculty News

Prof. Roy Smith on Wall Street firms working with SAC Capital Advisors in spite of its legal issues

Bloomberg logo
Excerpt from Bloomberg -- “'The presumption is that if JPMorgan should resign the business, then someone else would do it,' said Roy Smith, a finance professor at New York University’s Stern School of Business and a former Goldman Sachs partner. 'These people all say we serve our clients, so if our clients get into trouble, we serve them as long as we can.'”
Faculty News

Prof. Scott Galloway on Amazon as a media company

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Excerpt from Bloomberg TV -- "There's a group of salespeople calling on advertisers selling them ads on the Amazon platform and the Kindle platform. They also own IMDB and several other sites, so they're like Yahoo or AOL or Facebook. They're selling ads on their platforms."
School News

A team of Stern undergraduate students wins the Ross Stock Pitch Competition

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Excerpt from Forbes -- "The Stern School of Business won, and they were represented by Thomas Li, Ador Michael Cristofi, Kapish Haldia and Joshua Cao. The students are involved in NYU Stern’s Investment Analysis Group, and they manage $25,000 that has been donated by Justin Pollack and other alumni. The group has a portfolio management team of 25 students and a club membership of 250 students."
Faculty News

Prof. Ralph Gomory's recent op-ed on US manufacturing was highlighted

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Excerpt from Forbes -- "BCG's analysis has been eviscerated by Ralph Gomory, an iconoclastic economic analyst whose authority is not diminished by the fact that in a previous life he headed IBM's research and development department. As Gomory points out, BCG based its analysis on a crucially false assumption that East Asian economies work on American free-market principles. His conclusion is chastening: 'A real manufacturing renaissance in America - at least one based on reshoring from China - is not something we can expect.'"
Faculty News

Prof. Ralph Gomory is interviewed about US corporations' profit model and obligations

Excerpt from PBS -- "I really don’t think globalization is the heart of the matter, it’s just a manifestation … a way in which corporations which are dedicated to profit only make a profit. It happens to be an unusually destructive way. But as long as that’s their dedication … then … that’s a problem."
Faculty News

In an op-ed, Research Scholar Robert Frank discusses the amendment to open new casinos in New York

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Excerpt from The New York Times -- "Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo argues that the amendment would create jobs, increase school aid and lower property taxes. And, yes, it would do all those things. But it’s still a bad idea. Other strategies would accomplish the same goals more effectively, without the disastrous spillovers that invariably accompany expanded gambling."
Business and Policy Leader Events

MBA Teams Compete in 1st Annual Stern Leadership Case Competition with Mike Indursky of Bliss

The NYU Stern Office of Career Development hosted the first annual Stern Leadership Case Competition, featuring Mike Indursky, president of Bliss, on Friday, November 1.
Faculty News

Prof. Thomas Philippon's research on the financial sector is cited

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Excerpt from Harvard Business Review -- "A few finance scholars, most persistently Thomas Philippon, of New York University, have also been looking into whether there’s a point at which the financial sector is simply too big and too rich—when it stops fueling economic growth and starts weighing on it."
Student Club Events

Stern Investment Management and Research (SIMR) Conference

The 2013 Stern Investment Management and Research Conference, themed "Finding Opportunities in Turbulent Times," will be hosted by student organization SIMR on Friday, November 1st.
Research Center Events

NYU Stern PhD Program Open House

Jill Kickul
Prospective doctoral candidates are invited to attend an Open House to learn more about the Stern PhD Program and meet Stern faculty and current PhD students.
Faculty News

Prof. Jonathan Haidt's moral foundations theory is highlighted

Excerpt from Bill Moyers -- "Jonathan Haidt is a pioneer in the psychology of morality and how that feeds into politics, and it really helps with something like this where you have strong emotional passions that are irreconcilable on the left and the right."
Faculty News

Prof. Aswath Damodaran discusses Snapchat's value

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Excerpt from The Washington Post -- "'It's like a waterfall: If you think Facebook's worth $110 billion, then Twitter's worth $50 billion, and Snapchat's worth $4 billion,' says Aswath Damodaran, a finance professor at New York University's Stern School of Business. 'If you change your frame of reference, are they paying because they think it's worth $4 billion, or are they paying because they think they can flip it to someone else to $6 billion? As long as I can sell it to someone else for more in six months, who cares what it's really worth?'"
Faculty News

Prof. Aswath Damodaran's views on Tesla's value are cited

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Excerpt from Seeking Alpha -- "Aswath Damodaran, a Professor of Finance at the New York University, may not be a household name, but he's made some of the most accurate share valuations in the recent past - predicting Apple's peak and Facebook's low, to name a couple. And now, after doing his math on Tesla, Damodaran concluded that Tesla is worth $67.12. When he came up with this figure, Tesla was trading at $170.62, and after working out a comparative index, I believe he may be right."
Faculty News

Prof. Robert Engle is highlighted in a story on b-school trivia

Excerpt from Bloomberg Businessweek -- "Robert Engle, who won the Nobel prize in 2003 for his method of analyzing unpredictable movements in financial market prices, has a few unpredictable movements of his own: He won a celebrity skating competition in New York in May."
Faculty News

Prof. Arun Sundararajan's research about the economic impacts of the sharing economy is showcased

Excerpt from The Atlantic Cities -- "'If something becomes better,' Sundararajan says, 'people want more of it, not less.' In other words, an expansion of consumption possibilities leads to an increase in consumption. This is essentially a story of economic progress, Sundararajan says: new technology leads to more efficiency, which leads to an expansion in production and consumption possibilities."
Faculty News

In an op-ed, Prof. Nouriel Roubini examines the rise in unconventional monetary policy

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Excerpt from Project Syndicate -- "For now, policymakers in countries with frothy credit, equity, and housing markets have avoided raising policy rates, given slow economic growth. But it is still too early to tell whether the macro-pru [macro-prudential] policies on which they are relying will ensure financial stability."
Faculty News

Prof. Thomas Cooley on the regulation and fines of global banks

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Excerpt from Bloomberg -- “'Some of this is just old deeds coming home to roost, and it’s taken this amount of time,' Thomas F. Cooley, the former dean of New York University’s Stern School of Business, said about the recent onslaught of fines. Cooley, who now teaches economics there, said he wonders if the global banks have the right oversight and compliance now. 'We’re a long way from there yet.'”
Faculty News

Prof. Jonathan Haidt is profiled

Excerpt from This View of Life -- "Professor Haidt is one of the world’s most famous psychologists and leading public intellectuals—having been named, for example, a 'top world thinker' by Prospect magazine and a 'top global thinker' by Foreign Policy magazine. He is especially well-known for his work on the foundations of the moral emotions. In his 2012 book, The Righteous Mind: Why Good People Are Divided by Politics and Religion, he goes further than he ever had previously in theorizing about the evolutionary origins of these emotions, and his interview proved to be a rich source of insights about the nature and development of his theoretical approach."
Faculty News

Prof. Aswath Damodaran on Facebook's stock price

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Excerpt from The Wall Street Journal -- "Mr. Damodaran sees Facebook as worth between $25 and $30 a share. The shift to mobile advertising doesn’t excite him because that is integral to the 40% or so revenue growth that analysts project for the next few years. 'You’d need evidence that Facebook is entering a new business' to raise those forecasts, Mr. Damodaran says. 'Nothing that Facebook has said in their quarterly reports leads me to believe that’s changed.'”
Faculty News

Anindya Ghose on Amazon's Vine program for top reviewers

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Excerpt from NPR -- "Anindya Ghose, an NYU professor who studies consumer reviews, said Vine members might review things more positively than people who had to pay for their stuff. 'As humans we are hard-wired to give in to this sort of enticement where if you continuously get things for free, then you're more likely to be biased positively than biased negatively,' he said."
Business and Policy Leader Events

Investors Mo Koyfman & Jeremy Philips Share Tips on How to Make Your Own Luck at MBA Block Lunch

Mo Koyfman, general partner at Spark Capital, a venture capital firm; and Jeremy Philips, managing partner of Occam Partners, which invests in technology and media, and a member of the Board of Directors of TripAdvisor, joined Dean Peter Henry and MBA students for NYU Stern’s Block Lunch event series.
Faculty News

In an op-ed, Prof. Hal Hershfield explains the factors affecting time-travel desire preferences

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Excerpt from Psychology Today -- "There’s a fundamental asymmetry between the past and the future: the past represents a collection of definitive events, while the future is unpredictable, unknown, and not fixed. The authors reasoned that people who more actively seek out risk in their daily lives would also be more likely to want to travel to the 'less known and predictable future, relative to the more familiar and more predictable past.'”