Faculty News

Prof. Marti Subrahmanyam on recent allegations of international exchange-rate fixing

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Excerpt from Business News Network -- "[The foreign exchange market] is pretty much an unregulated market for the most part. There are some national regulations, but if you ask who is the global policeman for the foreign exchange market, there is none. So this is the problem -- I think this is the same problem, or a similar problem, in the case of the LIBOR scandal. There is no clear policeman, although, nominally, the Bank of England and other British regulators, UK regulators, have been in charge, but they haven't really been following the details. So there is really no one in charge."
School News

Ian Bremmer is named a Global Research Professor at NYU and will teach at Stern

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Excerpt from Clear Admit -- “'Ian Bremmer and the Eurasia Group set the standard of excellence for political risk analysis in business,' Stern Dean Peter Henry said in a statement. 'In coming to teach at Stern, Ian brings significant experience to our classroom on the interplay between political risk, economic policy and growth, and helps us in our mission to prepare students for effective global engagement.'”
School News

Stern venture Keen Home is chosen for Techstars's Connected Devices Accelerator

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Excerpt from Fast Company -- "R/GA, the agency behind Nike’s pioneering FuelBand, signaled its intentions to, well, accelerate this bridging of the digital and physical by launching Connected Devices Accelerator--a three-month intensive program for 10 tech startups, powered by Techstars methodology--earlier this year."
Faculty News

Prof. Prasanna Tambe's book, "The Talent Equation," is highlighted

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Excerpt from Forbes -- "Employers often complain that it’s tough to find qualified candidates not simply because there’s a lack of degrees, but because many jobs now require a hybrid mix of higher-order skills – even in areas that didn’t always require them years ago. As Ferguson, Hitt, and Tambe found in a big data study for The Talent Equation, just a small increase in the number of employees with college degrees in certain areas can have a considerable return on investment."
Business and Policy Leader Events

Jacob Silverman, President of Duff & Phelps, Shares Career Tips with MBA Students

As part of NYU Stern’s “Leadership Off the Record” series, Jacob Silverman, who was recently appointed president of Duff & Phelps, a financial advisory and investment banking firm, spoke with MBA students about his career in finance and technology.
Faculty News

Prof. Hal Hershfield's research on how to foster environmentally friendly behavior is featured

Excerpt from The Weather Channel -- "'Our research suggests to rely less on end-of-world scenarios and to emphasize instead the various ways in which our country – and our planet – has a rich and long history that deserves to be preserved,' said NYU Stern researcher Hal Hershfield, Ph.D., in a press release. 'By highlighting the shadow of the past, we may actually help illuminate the path to an environmentally sustainable future.'"
Faculty News

Prof. Scott Galloway on Apple's market share

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Excerpt from Bloomberg TV -- "The top 20% of income-earning households control 80% of the wealth. And, effectively, Apple controls those people from a technology standpoint. So while everyone's talking about Apple pricing too high and how Android has taken a ton of market share away, the reality is almost everyone that matters, at least economically, is carrying an Apple product. And also, moving to the tablet, three-quarters of the sales done off the iOS platform were done off of tablets, specifically Apple tablets."
Faculty News

Prof. Nouriel Roubini's op-ed on housing bubbles is highlighted

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Excerpt from Barron's -- "'What we are witnessing in many countries looks like a slow-motion replay of the last housing-market train wreck,' Roubini concludes. 'And, like last time, the bigger the bubbles become, the nastier the collision with reality will be..'"
Faculty News

Profs. Frazzini and Pedersen's research on Warren Buffett's investments is featured

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Excerpt from Business Insider -- "'Indeed, a new NBER paper via Counterparties shows that 'Buffett's returns appear to be neither luck nor magic, but, rather, reward for the use of leverage [combined] with a focus on cheap, safe, quality stocks.' In other words, he buys boring stocks that offer steady, low returns, but he amplifies those returns by betting with borrowed money. 'We estimate that Buffett's leverage is about 1.6-to-1 on average,' write authors Andrea Frazzini, David Kabiller and Lasse H. Pedersen."
Faculty News

Prof. Michael Spence's book, "The Next Convergence," is mentioned

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Excerpt from Strategy + Business -- "As Nobel prize–winning economist A. Michael Spence pointed out in his book The Next Convergence: The Future of Economic Growth in a Multispeed World (Farrar, Straus and Giroux)—selected by strategy+business as one of the best business books of 2011—we are living in the middle of a century-long journey during which the rest of the world will catch up with the developed economies of the West."
Faculty News

Prof. Aswath Damodaran on the pressures Wall Street stock analysts face

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Excerpt from The Wall Street Journal -- "Putting sell ratings on stocks can make an analyst's job tougher, said Aswath Damodaran, professor of finance at NYU's Leonard N. Stern School of Business. 'You're given this small group of companies to track, and the very little edge you have comes from the access you have to the company,' he said. 'If you put a sell recommendation on the stock, you're burning bridges.'"
Faculty News

Prof. Durairaj Maheswaran on how Chinese companies can compete globally

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Excerpt from Forbes India -- "China is the second-largest economy in the world. Chinese companies are becoming larger so it’s only natural that they would want to expand out of the country. It’s a process of evolution. But there is a major challenge in going from a domestic market to an international market. The domestic market has a lot of fixed variables such as government policies and economic policies for competition. But when you globalize, you have to get used to the dynamics of the global marketplace, a lot of moving parts, and it’s very hard to do that."
Faculty News

In an op-ed, Prof. Roy Smith discusses how to address misdeeds in the foreign exchange market

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Excerpt from Financial News -- "Libor rate-setting rules are being revised, as they should be. The FX investigation may discover individuals that need to be punished, and maybe some market conduct rules that should be changed. But that does not mean that the FX investigations should be allowed to turn into another instance of vengeance against banks to be settled by a round of multibillion-dollar fines paid by their shareholders."
Press Releases

Ian Bremmer, President of Eurasia Group, Named NYU Global Research Professor

New York University has named Ian Bremmer – political scientist, expert on foreign policy and political risk, and president of Eurasia Group – as a Global Research Professor.
Faculty News

Prof. Vasant Dhar attempts to define data science with a perspective of predictive modeling

Excerpt from Association for Computing Machinery -- "Data science might therefore imply a focus involving data and, by extension, statistics, or the systematic study of the organization, properties, and analysis of data and its role in inference, including our confidence in the inference. Why then do we need a new term like data science when we have had statistics for centuries? The fact that we now have huge amounts of data should not in and of itself justify the need for a new term. The short answer is data science is different from statistics and other existing disciplines in several important ways."
Faculty News

Dean Peter Henry is profiled

Excerpt from International Monetary Fund -- “'There is a whole host of problems that are fundamentally global in nature, but that require the additional tools of business to be applied with a broader lens,' Henry says. 'What role does finance play in helping us figure out how to allocate capital efficiently around the world? What role does marketing play in helping us think about how we reach poor consumers through digital media? How do we think about luxury consumers as not just high-income people in the United States and Europe, but also newly salaried female entrepreneurs in Nigeria and Indonesia?'”
News

In an op-ed, Prof. Gavin Kilduff discusses his research on leadership within groups

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Excerpt from Harvard Business Review -- "Research tells us there are certain 'competence cues,' such as speaking up, taking the initiative, and expressing confidence, that suggest leadership potential. These proactive behaviors can be good indications that a person has useful expertise and experience, or they might simply reflect deep-seated personality traits such as extroversion and dominance. However, there’s increasing evidence that people can propel themselves into proactivity by temporarily shifting their psychological frame of mind."
Faculty News

In an op-ed, Research Scholar Robert Frank argues for workplace safety regulations

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Excerpt from The New York Times -- "We all value freedom. But while classical economics encourages the complaint that safety regulations violate workers’ freedom, that complaint is misguided. It is little different from complaining that helmet rules violate athletes’ freedom. Of course they do — but with athletes as with workers, that’s precisely what people wanted."
Faculty News

Prof. Aswath Damodaran on direct investing vs. private-equity funds

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Excerpt from The Wall Street Journal -- [Speaking of direct investing] "'You have to ask yourself, "Do I want to be a mini venture-capital firm?" and if the answer is no, then you're biting off more than you can chew,' says Aswath Damodaran, a finance professor at New York University."
Faculty News

In an op-ed, Prof. Nouriel Roubini argues that housing bubbles are reappearing in some countries

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Excerpt from Project Syndicate -- "Signs that home prices are entering bubble territory in these economies include fast-rising home prices, high and rising price-to-income ratios, and high levels of mortgage debt as a share of household debt. In most advanced economies, bubbles are being inflated by very low short- and long-term interest rates. Given anemic GDP growth, high unemployment, and low inflation, the wall of liquidity generated by conventional and unconventional monetary easing is driving up asset prices, starting with home prices."
Faculty News

Prof. William Silber's book, "Volcker: The Triumph of Persistence," is featured

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Excerpt from The New York Times -- "Silber’s account of Volcker’s indispensable role in economic history shows how he retained his integrity in the face of relentless political pressure."
Faculty News

Prof. Aswath Damodaran's research on risk management is cited

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Excerpt from CFO -- "In a 2010 study of risk management, Aswath Damodaran, a professor of finance at New York University’s Stern School of Business, breaks risk down into three categories: risks that firms can pass through to investors, risks they can avoid or hedge, and risks they can exploit more effectively than their competitors can. 'Successful firms, over time, can attribute their successes not to avoiding risk but to seeking out and taking the ‘right risks,’ writes Damodaran."
Faculty News

In an op-ed, Prof. Nouriel Roubini discusses the state of the European Union

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Excerpt from The New York Times -- "Perhaps the marriage was doomed from the start. The partners had marriage rings  —  a common currency  —  but they did not have the common values of marital behavior. Historically, successful monetary unions also include a banking union with common deposit insurance and rules for bailing out banks; a fiscal union in which rich regions transfer resources to poor ones and where revenue and spending are pooled; an economic union with a single market, with policies in place to ensure convergence of economic growth rates; and a political union to give democratic legitimacy to the central fiscal and economic management."
Faculty News

Prof. Jeffrey Carr identifies an essential element of branding

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Excerpt from The New York Times -- “'You can connect a brand to a product,' he said, 'but branding today is a lot more about emotional attachment.'”
Faculty News

In an op-ed, Prof. Adam Alter explains why some shoppers are impatient in advance of Black Friday

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Excerpt from The New Yorker -- "When you remind people that they’re deprived, they become drawn to whatever happens to be scarce nearby, as though possessing a scarce object corrects the imbalance. Of course, nature also plays a role in determining how people respond to scarcity, as do a number of other factors. Yet a lifetime of waiting also appears to teach you to snatch fleeting opportunities that other people might ignore."