School News

Stern Venture Keen Home is named to Inc.'s Coolest College Startups list

Inc. logo
Excerpt from Inc. -- "Keen Home builds proactive hardware devices that aim to enhance the core functions of the home, so that your home can start to take care of you. For our first product, we are focusing on a home's heating and cooling system."
Faculty News

Prof. Aswath Damodaran's views on valuation are highlighted

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Excerpt from LiveMint -- "Professor Aswath Damodaran of Stern School at New York University neatly segregates the two camps into investors and traders—the former believe in value, the latter in price and he cautions that it can be dangerous to think that you can control or even explain how the other side works."
Faculty News

Prof. Viral Acharya's research on stress-testing European banks is cited

Financial Times logo
Excerpt from Financial Times -- "A detailed study by financial economists Viral Acharya and Sascha Steffen came up with an estimate of €510bn-€770bn for the shortfall."
Faculty News

Prof. Alexander Ljungqvist's research on hedge funds is mentioned

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Excerpt from Barron's -- "Traditionally, hedge funds profited on proprietary research and fought to maintain that edge as long as possible. Lately, however, some short-sellers have been freely posting investment research on the Internet. Are they crazy? If a recent working paper by Alexander Ljungqvist and Wenlan Qian, respectively of New York University and the National University of Singapore, is any indication, they might be crazily successful."
Faculty News

Prof. Michael Posner on the United States's stance on human rights provisions worldwide

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Excerpt from The Huffington Post -- "Both Michael Posner, the former Assistant Secretary of State for the Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights and Labor at the State Department, and Harold Koh, the former top State Department Lawyer, have said that there are no reasons for the US to maintain an 'increasingly implausible legal interpretation.'"
Faculty News

Prof. Anat Lechner discusses employee morale at Metro North in light of recent accidents

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Excerpt from WNYC -- “'I would not be feeling very proud belonging to an organization that, because of some level of carelessness, [people] lost their lives,' she said. 'People who trusted us with their lives, lost lives. That must be traumatic.' But that trauma, she said, can be used to send a message that could be helpful in changing the organization’s culture to one that is more safety oriented. 'You start a campaign that says, never again.'”
School News

Undergraduate student Ashika Kalra blogs about NYU's Entrepreneurs Festival

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Excerpt from Forbes -- "HireCanvas, an emerging startup, aims to make that hunt more efficient by connecting the right employers to the right candidates. This Manhattan-based venture was one of 80 startups showcased at the New York University Entrepreneurs Festival earlier this month."
Faculty News

In an op-ed, Profs. Viral Acharya and Robert Engle discuss banking stress tests

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Excerpt from Vox -- "This column argues that macro stress tests would be more effective if capital requirements were measured differently from the current regulatory risk weight-based approach, and in particular, were based on total assets and on market risks."
Faculty News

Prof. Vasant Dhar on technology's impact on the job market

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Excerpt from Bloomberg -- "There is a huge demand for these kinds of courses that train people for the new emerging economy. The real question really is whether the destruction of jobs that's caused by technology will be far faster than the creation of these new jobs in the long run."
Faculty News

In an op-ed, NYU Global Research Prof. Ian Bremmer weighs possible outcomes to Ukraine’s conflict

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Excerpt from Reuters -- "It wasn't until the crisis truly erupted that the West began to open its pocketbook. What happens when the next global tension flares and the international media's attention shifts? Will Western diplomatic efforts shift with it? Are the United States and Europe prepared to backstop a Ukrainian economy in free-fall when they have pressing economic concerns back home?"
Faculty News

Prof. Michael Spence on economic reform in China

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Excerpt from China Daily -- "A. Michael Spence, who was awarded the Nobel Prize for economics in 2001 and chaired the World Bank's Commission on Growth and Development, said the growth target mentioned in Chinese Premier Li Keqiang's government work report during the two sessions was a 'reasonable' goal. 'This figure seems a very reasonable estimate and goal for growth this year, provided there isn't some major crisis outside - somewhere in the global economy or financial system,' said Spence."
Faculty News

Prof. Hal Hershfield's research on saving for retirement is featured

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Excerpt from The Huffington Post -- "However, Hal Hershfield, assistant professor of marketing at NYU's Stern School of Business, has found that when people can realistically imagine their future selves in a clear and positive light they are increasingly able to make choices that will benefit that future self."
Faculty News

Prof. Thomas Philippon on French President François Hollande's unpopularity

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Excerpt from Financial Times -- "Thomas Philippon, a professor at New York’s Stern Business School and a former adviser to Pierre Moscovici, the finance minister, says Mr Hollande’s unpopularity is more a function of a general disaffection that has emerged post-crisis than his own policies. 'Where Hollande is now says more about the country than about him. All the issues that were not properly dealt with in the past have crystallised now. It happened to occur under his presidency.'”
Faculty News

Prof. Scott Galloway weighs in on the conflicts among eBay's investors

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Excerpt from Bloomberg -- “'Both sides have personalized the issues,' said Scott Galloway, a professor of marketing at New York University."
Faculty News

In an op-ed, Prof. Michelle Greenwald discusses innovation

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Excerpt from Forbes -- "Bases for new products and services innovation can be ground-breaking and revolutionary, resulting from major new technologies such as 3D printing or nanotechnology, or small, simple, and seemingly obvious, like turning a ketchup bottle upside down, adding a 4th ball to a tennis ball can, or offering bright colors to items previously only white, black, or monochromatic. Innovations can involve simply taking something that has long been utilized or enjoyed in one market, such as a food, or face cream, and introducing it to a market that has never seen it."
Faculty News

Prof. Michael Spence's views on high-frequency trading are highlighted

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Excerpt from CNBC -- "One noted economist, Michael Spence, has argued high-frequency trading should be banned. And regulators have periodically expressed qualms about the practice and its effect on markets, particularly regarding the Flash Crash."
Faculty News

Prof. Anindya Ghose discusses the regulation of peer-to-peer lending in China

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Excerpt from CNC World -- "In a market like China, you would want some sort of government regulation to enforce that only accredited investors can come and participate in these markets and on of top that, you also want a self-policing community system in place."
Faculty News

Dear Prudence recommends Prof. Jonathan Haidt's book to a reader

Excerpt from Slate -- "Dear Blues, I have a suggestion for a birthday present: Get yourself a copy of Jonathan Haidt’s The Happiness Hypothesis and read how all of us struggle like riders atop an elephant to control our thoughts."
Faculty News

Prof. Yaacov Trope's reserach on gift giving is cited

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Excerpt from Science Codex -- "'We predict that in a gift-giving situation, both the gift givers and gift receivers will focus on the gift receivers when thinking about the gift. Givers will choose gifts that are more desirable over gifts that are more practical, whereas receivers will give greater weight to the gift's practicality,' write authors Ernest Baskin (Yale University), Cheryl J. Wakslak (University of Southern California), Yaacov Trope (New York University), and Nathan Novemsky (Yale University)."
Faculty News

Prof. Viral Acharya on fire-sale risk in financial markets

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Excerpt from Bloomberg -- “'The Fed is right to worry about fire-sale risk,' Viral Acharya, a finance professor who focuses on liquidity risk and regulation at New York University’s Stern School of Business, said in a telephone interview on Feb. 25. Lehman and Bear Stearns showed the consequences when 'creditors in the repo market started worrying about these counterparties.'”
Faculty News

Prof. Jacob Jacoby weighs in on a Brooklyn coffee shop's high-end latte offering

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Excerpt from The New York Post -- “'This thing is nuts,' says NYU Stern professor and psychologist Jacob Jacoby, who likens the lakkris latte to an ostentatious Gucci or Hermès belt. 'It’s about conspicuous consumption — displaying wealth. It says something about themselves: 'Look, I can do this,' he explains."
Business and Policy Leader Events

Tom Bernstein, President & Co-Founder of Chelsea Piers, Joins MBA Students for Block Lunch

Tom Bernstein, president and co-founder of Chelsea Piers, joined Dean Peter Henry and MBA students for NYU Stern’s Block Lunch event series this spring.
Faculty News

Prof. Nouriel Roubini's views on Bitcoin are highlighted

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Excerpt from The Wall Street Journal -- "The NYU economist and professor, nicknamed Dr. Doom for accurately forecasting the 2008 financial crisis, called bitcoin a 'Ponzi game.'”
Faculty News

Prof. Richard Levich on forex trading in Asia

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Excerpt from Risk.net -- "'Herstatt risk is greater for Asian currencies trading against the euro or US dollar because the time difference between the two legs of the trade is greater, so it's actually more important for Asian currencies to have some sort of risk mitigation in place than for European currencies,' says Richard Levich, professor of finance and international business at New York University's Stern School of Business, and author of a forthcoming paper for the Bank for International Settlements (BIS) on forex market developments in Asia."
Faculty News

Prof. Adam Alter's op-ed on wealth and a meaningful life is cited

Excerpt from LinkedIn -- "Adam Alter, in this recent online New Yorker piece about whether the poor have more meaningful lives than the rich, noted that if happiness was all that mattered, people wouldn't do ultramarathons or Tough Mudder events: 'Some of the most rewarding life experiences are popular because they favor meaningful hardship over simple pleasure.'"