Faculty News

Professor Adam Alter shares tips on how to reduce online spending

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Excerpt from The Cut -- "'Anything you can do to minimize the amount of self-control you need to exert is a good thing,' Alter says. 'If you can make hard and fast rules that guide your purchasing behavior, but also license you to do it occasionally, you may have an easier time keeping it under control.'"
Faculty News

Professor Alixandra Barasch shares insights on how taking photos with the intention to share impacts experiences, based on her research

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Excerpt from Thrive Global -- "The study adds that intent to share a photo can sometimes trigger anxiety at the moment the photo is taken, even if that’s long before the photo is shared. 'Any time you’re trying to manage your impression, you’re going to get in between yourself and the experience,' explained behavioral scientist Alixandra Barasch, one of the authors of the study."
Faculty News

Professor Kenneth Bigel is quoted in an article on Jeffrey Epstein's ties to philanthropist Leslie Wexner

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Excerpt from Inside Philanthropy -- "The ethical problems at issue in the Wexner-Epstein relationship 'are greed, deception, overpromising, and the exploitation of people’s hopes,' Bigel said. 'Ethics is not a matter of logic, it’s a matter of emotion. Decisions we make, especially regarding the purse and love, are emotional. Wexner must have been caught up emotionally with this guy, must have talked about how they would help each other. Money is seductive.'"
Faculty News

Professor Robert Engle's work on financial volatility is featured

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Excerpt from Bloomberg -- "Forecasting asset returns in the financial markets is notoriously difficult, but, oddly enough, volatility is more predictable: both ARCH and GARCH models show that shocks to volatility are persistent and exhibit long half-lives. Such shocks can be extracted from volatility estimators and, with this in mind, Professor Engle has developed a new Geopolitical Volatility Factor (GPVF). The GPVF is based on the standardized residuals from a factor model with GARCH-style residuals. He then tested the model by applying estimation algorithms to nine U.S. sector ETFs and 45 MSCI country ETFs and studying the results through Monte Carlo simulations."
Faculty News

In a contributed article, Professor Robert Seamans and PhD candidate Manav Raj share insights from their research on AI's impact on various occupations

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Excerpt from Forbes -- "Overall, our findings suggest that the effects of AI on labor are not uniform across occupations, and that access to complementary skills and technologies may play an important role in determining the impact of AI on occupations."
Faculty News

Professor Jeanne Calderon's and Scholar-in-Residence Gary Friedland's research on the EB-5 Immigrant Investor Program is cited

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Excerpt from Vanity Fair -- "'EB-5 capital continues to thrive as a mainstream source of capital for real estate development projects,' according to the NYU study. 'It flourishes despite the uncertainty surrounding the EB-5 Program posed by the looming threat of reform.'"
School News

Center for Business and Human Rights Senior Program Manager Casey O'Connor is quoted in an article about improving labor conditions in the supply chains of large-scale retailers such as Walmart

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Excerpt from Retail Dive -- "'Audits are certainly important,' Casey O'Connor, senior program manager for New York University's Stern Center for Business and Human Rights, said in an interview with Retail Dive. 'But I think it's fair to say that there's industry consensus that audits alone have not really moved the needle on a lot of the kind of problematic labor conditions that remain fairly pervasive in the apparel industry.'"
Faculty News

Professor Robert Salomon shares his outlook on the global economy next year

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Excerpt from Folha de S. Paolo -- (translated from Portuguese using Google Translate) "'There is a real chance of plunging the global economy into recession. I think we'll see that in the first half of 2020,' Robert Salomon, professor at the New York University Stern School of Business, told Folha."
Faculty News

Professor Michael Spence's work on developing economies is cited

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Excerpt from Bloomberg-- "Only five developing countries have made the transition to advanced-nation status while maintaining high levels of growth since 1960, according to Nobel laureate Michael Spence, a professor at New York University’s Stern School of Business."
School News

Professor Amy Webb's book, "The Big Nine," is named to the longlist for the Financial Times and McKinsey Business Book of the Year award

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Excerpt from Financial Times -- "Amy Webb’s The Big Nine examines the largest US and Chinese companies dominating the introduction of AI into our lives. She offers dystopian and more optimistic scenarios for how machines may develop — and how humans could influence their development."
Faculty News

In a podcast interview, Professor Scott Galloway shares his outlook on Disney's earnings

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Excerpt from Bloomberg -- "There are only two companies in the world right now that are effectively landing punches on big tech. One of them is Walmart, landing some counter-blows on Amazon, and the other is Disney, that is probably the only content company that could effectively land counter-blows on Netflix."
School News

Recent MBA/MPA graduate Gabriel Ng shares his experience with NYU's Impact Investment Fund (NIIF), which made its first investment earlier this year

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Excerpt from Clear Admit -- "This past June, the NYU Impact Investment Fund (NIIF) completed its inaugural investment, subscribing for $30,000 of convertible notes issued by Sapient Industries, an exciting Philly-based start-up that uses a combination of smart hardware and machine learning algorithms to reduce energy waste in commercial real estate. I’m extremely honoured to have played a modest part in this deal, which demonstrates in very real terms the growing realization at graduate schools, and indeed, in society as a whole, that investing can align financial and social returns."
Faculty News

Professor Thomaï Serdari comments on Barneys New York's bankruptcy and the rapidly-changing retail landscape

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Excerpt from Retail Dive -- "'It's very avant-garde, and that sort of avant-garde fashion needs a different type of consumer, which there aren't that many of anymore,' she said. 'It was sort of a three-dimensional glossy magazine, with a curatorial point of view and a very specific urban selection of apparel.'"
Faculty News

In an interview, Professor Priya Raghubir provides insights on how dollar stores encourage customer spending

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Excerpt from Business Insider -- "...If you buy something which is really cheap, then after that, the likelihood of you buying something else that is more expensive will increase. So, shopping creates a momentum."
Faculty News

In a live interview, Professor Arun Sundararajan discusses the importance of Uber and Lyft's expansion into suburban areas

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Excerpt from Bloomberg -- "I think over the next year we'll see both Uber and Lyft demonstrate that in the densely populated cities, they have a profitable business model. I think the big open question is, how big can this business be? How much can they expand out of the cities into the suburbs... get into that budget that is not just urban transportation but is the trillions of dollars that people are spending on buying and maintaining their cars?"
Faculty News

Professor Allen Adamson discusses Simon Property Group's investment in Aeropostale

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Excerpt from Retail Dive -- "'It's a Catch 22 — as retail falls apart, that's the core of Simon's mall business, without retailers they own too much real estate,' he said in an interview. 'They can put in pop up stores or entertainment but there's only so many fitness centers. So it makes sense for them to try to help retailers survive because Simon would benefit.'"
Faculty News

Professor Scott Galloway explains the significance of FedEx ending its business relationship with Amazon

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Excerpt from The New York Times -- "'FedEx has made the decision that is no longer wants to sharpen its executioner’s sword,' said Scott Galloway, a professor at New York University’s Stern School of Business. 'It’s another reflection of this winner-take-all "Hunger Games" economy that is dominated by an increasingly few number of companies.'"
Faculty News

Professor Joseph Foudy offers his perspective on the US Treasury's designation of China as a "currency manipulator"

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Excerpt from Xinhua -- (translated from Chinese using Google Translate) "Joseph Foudy, a professor at the Stern School of Business at New York University, said that in recent years, China has always been committed to keeping the RMB exchange rate basically stable. The US’s move to list China as a 'currency manipulator' is a political act and the US has upgraded its economic and trade frictions."
Faculty News

Professor Jonathan Haidt's books, "The Righteous Mind" and "The Happiness Hypothesis," are referenced

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Excerpt from Project Syndicate -- "Jonathan Haidt, author of The Happiness Hypothesis and The Righteous Mind, uses a metaphor reminiscent of Plato, but in support of a view closer to Hume, to illustrate what he calls the social intuitionist perspective on ethics: 'The mind is divided, like a rider on an elephant,' he writes on the first page of The Righteous Mind, 'and the rider’s job is to serve the elephant.'"
School News

NYU Stern's William R. Berkley Scholarship Program is featured in an article on MBA programs for new college graduates

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Excerpt from Accepted.com -- "There are also scholarship programmes, such as NYU’s William R. Berkley Scholarship Program, which not only provides early entry to their MBA, Tech MBA, or Fashion & Luxury MBA, but also full funding."
Faculty News

Professor Dolly Chugh is interviewed about how she evaluates requests with the support of her peer group

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Excerpt from The New York Times -- "'We started the club because we tended to feel clear and confident about advice we would give others about when to say no, but were less likely to take that advice ourselves,' Chugh said. 'The No Club gives us a confidential place to get that advice and be held accountable for acting on it.'"
School News

Center for Business and Human Rights Deputy Director Paul Barrett shares his views on how social media platforms can prevent the spread of false information

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Excerpt from The Hill -- "'I think it would be important for the major social media platforms to more prominently and continually warn their users that some of what they are likely to see in their feeds is phony,' Barrett said. 'I think there should be regular digital literacy education going on, on the sites themselves in a way that will warn people.'"
Faculty News

In a podcast interview, Professor Robert Seamans shares his outlook on AI's impact on the economy

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Excerpt from Working Capital Review -- "I’m excited about the potential for AI to spur economic growth, but I think that the effects on labor, they get talked about in the popular press, have been misleading. There will be some substitution, but I think it’s going to far more be the case that there’ll be a lot more complementarities between AI and jobs. I think that there’ll be, as a result, a lot of employment growth. Those stories don’t get told enough, but I’m pretty optimistic about the net effect of AI on jobs."
Faculty News

In a contributed blog post, Professor Edward Altman offers insights on the current credit cycle, based on his research

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Except from the CFA Institute blog -- "History shows that even with positive GDP growth, default rates on US corporate debt can and will start rising prior to a recession. The current cycle has also been extended by numerous out-of-court restructurings, the covenant-lite environment, and expectations that the US Federal Reserve will respond to signs of an economic slowdown or increased market volatility, or both, with aggressive monetary stimulus."
Faculty News

Professor Rosa Abrantes-Metz comments on the Department of Justice's allegations of price manipulation by Tyson Foods Inc. and other chicken companies

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Excerpt from The Wall Street Journal -- "The DOJ’s review of internal company documents in previous collusion cases has often preceded criminal charges, said Rosa Abrantes-Metz, an adjunct associate professor at New York University’s business school who has researched and worked on corporate collusion cases. 'The fact that there is a request for documents means the suspicions are strong,' she said."