Business and Policy Leader Events

Abenomics: Could This Time Be Different?

Kim Schoenholtz
Professor Kim Schoenholtz moderated a panel discussion at Japan Society on April 23, entitled, "Abenomics: Could This Time Be Different," featuring Paul Sheard, Chief Global Economist and Head of Global Economics and Research, Standard& Poor's, and Nathan Sheets, Global Head of International Economics, Citi.
School News

NYU Stern's Entrepreneurs Challenge finalists are announced

Forbes logo
Excerpt from Forbes -- "Cynthia Franklin, the senior associate director at the NYU Berkley Center for Entrepreneurship & Innovation at Stern, announced the finalist for the Entrepreneur’s Challenge to a room full of anxious entrepreneurs in the Kaufman Management Center last Friday."
Faculty News

Dean Peter Henry dicusses the impact of the Eurozone on the global economy

Bloomberg logo
Excerpt from Bloomberg TV -- "We live in an interconnected world and the Eurozone is the largest economic block in the world. So with a, frankly a misplaced focus on austerity, people have made the mistake of thinking that discipline means fiscal austerity. It doesn't. Discipline means doing what you need to do to advance the economy and the focus on growth, I think the renewed focus on growth and moving in that direction is welcome."
Faculty News

Prof. Luke Williams on disruptive innovation

CNBC logo
Excerpt from CNBC -- "'I always say if you want to study disruptive thinking … it's best to study the work of professional comedians,' said Luke Williams, professor of innovation at New York University's Leonard N. Stern School of Business. 'They're master disruptors. Their whole job is to determine what an audience is thinking and break those expectations. And that break in expectation is where humor comes from. As soon as you hear the punch line, it's obvious in hindsight. … But a comedian doesn't stop with one joke. They have to do them again and again. [Businesses] can't just disrupt the market once and sit back and go, "Everyone's going to use our business model for the next decade."'"
Faculty News

Dean Henry outlines the economic lessons we can learn from the developing world

Newsweek Logo
Excerpt from Newsweek -- "In decades past, First World countries have lectured the rest of the world about how to stabilize and grow their economies. Today, in a startling turnaround, the developed world buckles under high debt and slow growth, while countries such as South Korea, India, Chile, Mexico, and even tiny Barbados provide vital lessons for recovery."
Faculty News

Prof. Adam Alter's book, "Drunk Tank Pink," is highlighted

Forbes logo
Excerpt from Forbes -- "This means that brand names that are short and easy to pronounce will have a built-in advantage over brands with long, difficult names. Indeed, in his new book Drunk Tank Pink, Princeton psychologist Adam Alter describes his research project that showed companies with fluent names generated higher returns in the stock market in short-term trading."
Faculty News

Prof. Nouriel Roubini on the US economy

Bloomberg logo
Excerpt from Bloomberg TV -- "I'm quite concerned about the US economy. Certainly, people underestimated how much the increase in taxes, payroll and income and now the sequester would affect the economy. My view was the debt would imply a fiscal drag of at least 1.6-1.7% this year and therefore the economy this year is not going to grow much more than 1.6% given the significant fiscal drag."
Faculty News

Dean Peter Henry discusses lessons from emerging markets, from his book, "Turnaround"

Council on Foreign Relations blog logo
Excerpt from the Council on Foreign Relations -- "The reason why I called the book 'Turnaround: Third World Lessons for First World Growth' is because if we take kind of a unifying message across...the last three decades, going back to roughly the late 1970s until now, how is it that countries that were formally called third world countries...became emerging markets? And I think the central point to take away is they did that through what I would call discipline."
Research Center Events

Experts Convene for Workshop on “Darwin’s Business: New Evolutionary Thinking”

NYU Stern’s Business & Society Program Area and the Evolution Institute co-hosted a workshop to assess the possible applications of evolutionary thinking – including gene-culture co-evolution, multi-level selection and the multiple paths by which humans became ultrasocial creatures – for business and business ethics.
School News

Celebrate Possible

A team of NYU Stern MBA students comprising Nazly Havez, Zeev Krieger, Amy Nelson and Matthew Seden took the top spot in the 2013 Aspen Business & Society International MBA Case Competition.
Faculty News

Professor Stijn Van Nieuwerburgh on REITs and systemic risk

Wall Street Journal logo
Excerpt from The Wall Street Journal -- "'I'm not convinced there's a big problem because these REITs are holding relatively liquid securities and represent a modest part of the mortgage market,' said Stijn Van Nieuwerburgh, director of New York University's Stern Center for real estate finance research."
Faculty News

Prof. Nouriel Roubini on US fiscal policy

Bloomberg logo
Excerpt from Bloomberg -- “'The U.S. right now is doing the opposite of the optimal, because we have no medium-term plan for fiscal consolidation' due to political gridlock, 'and we don’t have actual short-term stimulus,' Roubini said."
Faculty News

Prof. Robert Engle and the NYU Stern Systemic Risk Rankings are featured

Financial Times logo
Excerpt from the Financial Times -- "In fact volatility supremo and NYU Stern professor Robert Engle, who led the development of the SRISK system, expressed scepticism about this when we asked him about it at a conference in Sydney late last year."
Faculty News

Prof. Anindya Ghose on user engagement with mobile ads

Excerpt from MIT Technology Review -- "For example, Anindya Ghose, codirector of New York University’s Center for Business Analytics, cites a startup called C3metrics that is perfecting ways to track not only people across multiple devices, but also to track their “engagement” with mobile ads by determining whether they scrolled down far enough to even see it, or whether they hovered their mouse over the ad on a webpage."
School News

Stern MBAs' career preferences are highlighted

Excerpt from Bloomberg Businessweek -- "If there’s one big winner in the demise of finance, it is consulting, probably the only industry in which salaries match or exceed those in financial services. For example, 22 percent of 2012 MBA graduates from New York University’s Stern School of Business took jobs in investment banking, down from 31 percent in 2010. Over the same period, the proportion snagging jobs in consulting rose from 15 percent in 2010 to 22 percent in 2012. In 2012, salaries for Stern grads in investment banking jobs averaged $103,254; consulting salaries averaged $126,696."
School News

Stern's Part-time MBA program & MBA students Jessica Chan & Yue Xi are profiled

Poets and Quants logo
Excerpt from Poets & Quants for Execs -- "Chan plans to finish her MBA in 2.5 years. Like Xi, she finds the work-school-home travel triangle highly doable, and feels participation in Stern’s MBA clubs is vital. She belongs to the Part-Time Leadership Forum."
Business and Policy Leader Events

Nobel Laureate Professor Muhammad Yunus Addresses NYU Wagner and Stern MBA Students

Nobel Laureate Muhammad Yunus, founder of Grameen Bank, addressed students from the NYU Stern School of Business and NYU Wagner School of Public Service during a special lecture and Q&A session.
Research Center Events

Ross Roundtable Discusses Trends in Securities Litigation

Some 50 academics, practitioners and policymakers gathered at NYU Stern on April 15 for a roundtable discussion on “The Inside Scoop on Securities Litigation for 2013.” Industry experts discussed new litigation trends and anticipated the SEC’s main areas of focus this year.
Faculty News

Prof. Rosa Abrantes-Metz on Libor rates and conflicts of interest

Bloomberg logo
Excerpt from Bloomberg -- “'There are hundreds of benchmarks with different features, but a common issue with some of the indices not based on actual transactions is the potential conflict of interest by the administrator who represents the market players and submitters themselves,' said Rosa Abrantes-Metz, an economist with New York-based consulting firm Global Economics Group Inc. and a professor at New York University’s Stern School of Business."
Faculty News

In an op-ed, Prof. Michael Spence evaluates President Obama's proposed budget

Project Syndicate logo
Excerpt from Project Syndicate -- "The world’s developed economies, of which the United States is by far the largest and systemically most important, face a range of difficult political and social choices. President Barack Obama’s proposed US budget acknowledges and addresses those choices and tradeoffs directly and fully for the first time in the post-crisis period."
Faculty News

Prof. Sinan Aral on the importance of social media and data-driven decisions

PR Week Logo
Excerpt from PR Week -- "Aral demonstrated how social influence – defined as the extent to which one's peers change the likelihood that one engages in a particular behavior – is the primary driver of influence today through social conversations that have usurped the traditional influence power of organizations."
Faculty News

Prof. Aswath Damodaran on the connection between interest rates and stock prices

Wall Street Journal logo
Excerpt from The Wall Street Journal -- "Whether rising rates lead to rising stock prices also will depend on why rates increase, notes Aswath Damodaran, a finance professor at New York University's Stern School of Business who has looked at the relationship between Treasurys and stocks. If interest rates rise because the economy is improving, stock prices might indeed go up. But if it's because inflation fears are rising, stocks could fall, he says. 'Interest rates don't rise for no reason,' he says."
Faculty News

Prof. Arun Sundararajan on Facebook's advertising strategy

Excerpt from GigaOm -- "NYU Stern School of Business professor Arun Sundararajan nicely summed up the risks of ignoring user intent leading up to Facebook’s IPO last year. He compared annoying — and possibly offending — users with ads at every possible turn with playing the stock market and only thinking about making money."