Faculty News

Professor Lawrence White shares his views on Bitcoin

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Excerpt from Yahoo Finance -- "For Bitcoin to gain traction, it has to achieve at least a semblance of steady value. 'We are reluctant to transact in something where the day-to-day value for our transactions’ purposes could vary substantially,' White said."
School News

The co-founders of Geopipe, winner of the 2017 Technology Venture Competition in NYU Stern’s $300K Entrepreneurs Challenge, are interviewed

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Excerpt from Cheddar -- "...being computer scientists, we started looking at how we can automatically generate virtual models of the real world. We went beyond video games and started looking at things like architecture, special effects, and training simulations for the military and first responders, where people need these virtual models for most of the projects they work on."
Faculty News

Professors Kim Corfman and Thomaï Serdari share insights on luxury marketing education

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Excerpt from Luxury Daily -- "'[From a school perspective,] partners keep us relevant,’ said Kim Corfman, professor of marketing and academic director of the Fashion & Luxury one-year MBA at NYU Stern School of Business, New York. 'They ensure that we are educating students to solve problems that matter and that the solutions they create are of value. At a more practical level, partners provide us with live cases and projects to which students can apply what they have learned.' ... 'Luxury brands need people who understand both the retail environment and the challenges a business faces in the industry,' said Thomaï Serdari, founder of PIQLuxury, co-editor of Luxury: History Culture Consumption and adjunct professor of luxury marketing at New York University, New York."
Faculty News

Professor Aswath Damodaran's work on equity risk premiums is referenced

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Excerpt from The Economist -- "The equity-risk premium, or the annual excess return that investors demand to hold shares rather than bonds, is 5.03 points, against a pre-crisis average of 3.45 points, notes Aswath Damodaran of the Stern School of Business at NYU."
Faculty News

Professor Michael Spence's research on the labor market and cost of goods is featured

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Excerpt from The Atlantic -- "Between 1990 and 2008, 98 percent of new jobs came from so-called 'nontradable' industries that aren't sensitive to international trade, according to the economist Michael Spence."
Faculty News

Professor Anindya Ghose shares his outlook on Amazon's future growth

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Excerpt from Business Insider -- "According to Anindya Ghose, a professor at NYU's Stern School of Business, the e-commerce giant could be the first company to break through the $1 trillion barrier for market capitalization. The company is currently worth about $476.07 billion, which means it would need a 110.1% increase in its stock price to reach that level. But Ghose thinks Amazon's rise will come at the expense of lots of retail jobs. 'In many ways, it might actually be a blessing in disguise because it's also simultaneously going to cost lots of jobs in the economy,' Ghose told Business Insider."
Faculty News

Professor Vasant Dhar and Arun Sundararajan's remarks at the Digital Future of Work Summit at Stern are highlighted

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Excerpt from Investing.com -- "Vasant Dhar: 'I worry that this time might in fact be different because we haven’t had intelligent machines in the past that we could trust with making decisions. That was in the domain of human beings. Machines assisted us. They helped us. But it’s different this time. And it’s going to be very challenging.' ... Arun Sundararajan: '…digital technology is changing how we organize work. It’s taking us from fulltime employment, which was the predominant way of earning a living in the 20th century, toward a wide variety of non-employment work arrangements.'"
Faculty News

Professor Kim Schoenholtz's co-authored blog post on the 10th anniversary of the financial crisis is referenced

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Excerpt from the Financial Times -- "As Stephen Cecchetti and Kermit Schoenholtz nicely show, BNP’s halting of redemptions was followed by an immediate tightening of lending between financial institutions. Below is their graph of the Libor-OIS spread, which measures the difference between the rate at which big banks reported to be lending to one another over a measure of the safest market interest rate."
Faculty News

Professor Stijn Van Nieuwerburgh shares insights from his research on the impact of out-of-town real estate buyers on cities

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Excerpt from BYU Radio -- "What my research points out is there is a crucial distinction between those two types of buyers: those who rent out their places - the apartment still remains available for the locals to live in, whereas those who leave their places vacant, in some sense, are literally reducing the supply of available real estate for the local residents."
Faculty News

Professor Scott Galloway discusses Google engineer James Damore's controversial memo and subsequent firing

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Excerpt from The New York Times -- "Scott Galloway, a professor of marketing at New York University’s Stern School of Business, said Mr. Damore’s comments carried additional weight to people on either side of the political spectrum because he was an engineer at Google, one of the world’s biggest technology companies. Alongside other giants such as Facebook, Amazon and Apple, these companies 'are seen as pillars of our society,' Mr. Galloway said. 'Controversy and statements that emanate from these employees take on a different heft.'"
Faculty News

Professor Arun Sundararajan's joint research on sharing economy platforms is referenced

Excerpt from the Sydney Morning Herald -- "It turns out that if the technology settings are right, we are far more likely to trust a stranger than their own colleagues or neighbours. Weird, huh? The findings are from a study co-authored by assistant professor Mareike Möhlmann at Warwick University, professor Arun Sundararajan at New York University, and two executives from BlaBlaCar, a ride-sharing platform that connects drivers and riders mainly for city-to-city travel. It's hitchhiking for the 21st century."
School News

Recent MBA graduate Stacey Han is named to the Poets & Quants 2017 "MBAs to Watch" list

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Excerpt from Poets & Quants -- "I enjoyed getting to know my classmates the most. Everyone is so inspiring – even though my classmates are pursuing completely different things than me, I am inspired by their passion, intellect, curiosity, and persistence. I see students pursuing dual degrees, starting their own businesses, and making real changes to improve their lives and the lives of others around them. Going to business school is also a great time to do some self-reflecting and to pursue personal growth. I can’t imagine how many years of working it would have taken me to learn as much as I have in the past two years – not just from a professional standpoint, but from a management and leadership perspective as well."
 
Faculty News

Professor Alixandra Barasch's joint research on the link between memory and taking photos is featured

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Excerpt from New York Magazine -- "In a study published in June in the journal Psychological Science, researchers recruited 294 participants to tour a museum exhibit of Etruscan artifacts while listening to an audio guide. Half of the participants were given cameras and told to take at least ten photos. At the end of the tour, all participants asked to answer a series of multiple-choice questions about the objects they had seen. Those who took photos, the researchers found, recognized almost 7 percent more objects than those who didn’t."
Faculty News

Professor Richard Sylla shares his outlook on interest rates and the economy

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Excerpt from ValueWalk -- "The rates we’ve had in recent years, including right now, are the lowest in history. The book that I co-authored on the history of interest rates traces back to the code of Hammurabi, Babylonian civilization, Greek and Roman civilization, the Middle Ages, the Renaissance, and early modern history right up to the present. And I can assure our listeners that the rates that they’re experiencing right now are the lowest in human history."
Faculty News

Professor Steven Koonin's "Red Team/Blue Team" climate exercise is cited

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Excerpt from Climate Wire -- "Koonin advocated for a 'red team' approach to climate science in another Wall Street Journal op-ed in April. The exercise would allow critics to test the 'consensus' around climate science. EPA Administrator Scott Pruitt has publicly expressed interest in the idea, and he's rumored to be considering hiring Koonin to lead the process.Koonin has met with Pruitt and other Trump administration officials to discuss the idea of a 'red team,' he told E&E News on Friday. He declined to comment on whether he's in talks about running such an operation, but he said he'd consider it if certain conditions were met."
Faculty News

Professor Adam Alter's TED Talk comments on the connection between mobile usage and happiness are featured

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Excerpt from CNBC -- "During a TED Talk earlier this year, New York University's Stern School of Business marketing professor and psychologist Adam Alter presented research which showed the online tools we spend the most time using don't make us happy. Highlighting data from the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, Alter demonstrates how the average 24-hour workday has looked about the same over the past ten years: We sleep between seven and eight hours a day, work between eight and nine hours a day and take care of 'survival activities' like eating and bathing for about three hours a day. The rest of the day — roughly five hours — is our personal time, made up of hobbies, close relationships, creativity and reflecting on whether 'our lives have been meaningful,' Alter says during his TED Talk, which has gotten over a million views."
Faculty News

Professor Thomas Philippon's joint research on compensation in the finance industry is featured

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Excerpt from the Financial Times -- "Thomas Philippon and Ariell Reshef have shown how closely linked pay has been to deregulation of the sector. The chart shows wages in the finance industry relative to the rest of the US economy, plotted against the two academics’ own “deregulation index”, which is based on legislative activity related to finance."
Faculty News

Scholar-in-Residence Gary Friedland offers his thoughts on EB-5 investment in Boston based on joint research with Professor Jeanne Calderon

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Excerpt from the Boston Globe -- "The annual interest rate on a loan funded through the visa program typically runs about 5 percent, say EB-5 financing experts, about half the rate charged by more traditional investment firms. On a five-year, $225 million loan, the difference could easily top $50 million. 'It’s the cheapest source of capital they can find,' Friedland said. 'The reason it’s cheaper is because the immigrant investors are making the loan strictly to qualify for a visa. They’re willing to accept a negligible return."
Faculty News

Professor Lawrence White discusses the economy's growth since President Trump's election

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Excerpt from Fox Business -- "The market was pleased. The predictions had been for the job growth to be a little smaller. So when the actual exceeds the predictions, the market is going to take that into account and that's all well and good. In addition, we've now been below 5% unemployment for over a year. We're basically back to where we were in 2007. And people forget 2007 was a pretty good year."
Faculty News

Professor Kim Schoenholtz's co-authored op-ed on banking regulation is referenced

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Excerpt from Reuters -- "And don’t believe that the whole economic pie will grow if banks are freed up to make more loans. There is little evidence for that, as economists Stephen Cechetti and Kim Schoenholtz argue. ... They also say Mnuchin's plan would make the financial system less safe. Investors hoping the whole stock market will make them rich if banks lend more should look at how that worked out in 2005-2007."
Faculty News

Professor Thomas Philippon and PhD student Germán Gutiérrez's joint research on competition in US firms is featured

Excerpt from the Financial Post -- "The economists start with two facts. Competition has been declining in many U.S. industries, at least when measured by the number of competitors accounting for a given share of output (which they are quick to concede may not be the very best measure of competition). And investment has been lower than you’d expect, all else equal. In their view, these two trends are linked. Investment and innovation are things companies do when they have to, not when they want to."
School News

Isser Gallogly, Associate Dean, MBA Admissions and Program Innovation, shares tips for prospective applicants on how to spend the summer before applying to business school

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Excerpt from BusinessBecause -- "Prior to applying to business school, make sure you need an MBA in the first place. I've worked with applicants who don't like their jobs, and they know they want to do something different, but they're not exactly sure what that is. Is an MBA going to be the right path to make that career transition? Here's an example. You may be bored in your current job and attracted to the glamorous world of consulting, but how much do you know about consulting? Do you know how much travel is involved? Would you be happy on the road four days a week?"
Faculty News

Professor Adam Alter's research on the impact of mobile device usage on happiness is featured, from his book, "Irresistible"

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Excerpt from the Australian Financial Review -- "The few hours that remain are our discretionary time, when we might read a book, enjoy a hobby, call an old friend for a talk, play Monopoly with the family or get to the gym. According to Alter's research, our white space is increasingly consumed by computer screens and that's not making us happy."
School News

Center for Business and Human Rights Fellow Gabriel Ng and Associate Director Tara Wadhwa discuss internet regulation

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Excerpt from Kiro Radio -- "What we're worried about is that other countries that may not have the same democratic traditions as Germany, may see this as a justification and cover to introduce similar laws of their own to crack down on political dissent and news that they disagree with."
Faculty News

Professor Melissa Schilling explains Tesla's "S-curve" growth model

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Excerpt from CNBC -- "An S-curve like the one Musk has invoked compares what a company gets against the amount of effort or money spent to achieve it. Melissa Schilling, professor of management and organizations at NYU's Stern School of Business, said the curve starts low and slow because 'at first you don't know what the hell you're doing.' Companies experiment with designs, manufacturing methods, cope with failures and learn what works and what doesn't. 'You're pumping a lot of money in, and you're getting very little return,' Schilling said."