Faculty News

Prof. Lawrence White discusses the Volcker rule banning proprietary trading

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Excerpt from Fox Business -- "Grass is not going to grow in the streets of America, but at the same time, this is not a good rule. It makes these activities even more expensive or just impossible and drives them either offshore or into shadows somewhere. It's just not a sensible way to proceed."
Faculty News

In an op-ed, Prof. Adam Alter discusses how cultural beliefs shape financial decision-making

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Excerpt from The New Yorker -- "Easterners are puzzled by the Western preoccupation with the number thirteen, but many people in China, Taiwan, Singapore, and other East Asian countries similarly fear the number four. One analysis, to be published late next year, found that U.S. copper, cotton, and soybeans experience lower commodities-market returns on the fourth day of each month, when superstitious Chinese brokers prefer to postpone their trading decisions. Both Samsung and Nokia avoid cell phone-model numbers containing the digit four, and Nokia’s S60 software platform released its fifth edition immediately after its third edition."
Faculty News

Prof. Anindya Ghose's NPR interview on how free products influence reviews is cited

Excerpt from iVillage -- "Anindya Ghose, an NYU professor who studies consumer reviews, said Vine members might review things more positively than people who had to pay for their stuff. 'As humans we are hard-wired to give in to this sort of enticement where if you continuously get things for free, then you're more likely to be biased positively than biased negatively,' he said."
Faculty News

Prof. Baruch Lev explains how investors and executives can learn from each other

Excerpt from BDLive -- "'Interacting with investors is not only about giving information,' says Lev. 'Information flows both ways: executives can learn from investors. Stock price movements around earnings announcements reveal a lot about investors’ growth expectations and their perceptions of management’s credibility.'"
Faculty News

In an op-ed, NYU Research Prof. Ian Bremmer reacts to China's claim to a wider air zone

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Excerpt from Reuters -- "The air zone declaration and its aftermath make it clear that China intends for its security position to win out in the East China Sea, and expects it to be a faster process, given the shift of the regional security and economic power balance in its favor."
Research Center Events

Conversations on Urbanization: Shlomo Angel and Joan Clos

As a part of the Conversations on Urbanization series held by NYU Stern’s Urbanization Project, Senior Research Scholar Shlomo (Solly) Angel spoke with Dr. Joan Clos, United Nations Under-Secretary-General and Executive Director of UN-Habitat and former mayor of Barcelona, in a public presentation on December 9.
Faculty News

Prof. William Silber on the Volcker rule

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Excerpt from The Wall Street Journal -- "The Volcker rule will certainly usher in change on Wall Street. As William Silber, a New York University professor and author of 'Volcker: The Triumph of Persistence,' a biography of Mr. Volcker, says: 'If a firm like Goldman Sachs, which is now a bank, can’t speculate, then the pendulum will swing.'"
Faculty News

Prof. Scott Galloway discusses the importance of a digital presence for luxury brands

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Excerpt from Bloomberg TV -- "If you become more data-driven, you start thinking about a younger consumer, you understand emerging technologies and platforms...those kinds of skills lend themselves well to all kinds of things in addition to ecommerce. So what we're seeing is the firms that are really committing to strong digital have this sort of rising-tide effect across the entire enterprise and we're seeing it linked to greater shareholder returns. So digital is moving to the center and firms are really thinking about, 'How do we make this part of our culture?'"
Faculty News

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

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Excerpt from CBN -- "2013 CBN Financial Books of the Year 'Big Winner' goes to: Volcker: The Triumph of Persistence, by William L. Silber."
Faculty News

Prof. Xavier Gabaix's research on choosing products and services is cited

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Excerpt from The New York Times -- "A paper by two economists, Xavier Gabaix of New York University and David Laibson of Harvard, provides an explanation. When people are choosing a product or service, they don’t pay close attention to all of its features. When I signed up for cable, I wasn’t thinking about the headaches of canceling down the road."
Faculty News

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

Excerpt from Motley Fool -- "After analyzing the universe of stocks that traded publicly for at least 30 years between 1926 and 2011, the authors concluded that Berkshire Hathaway, under Buffett's stewardship, had the highest Sharpe ratio (which measures risk-adjusted performance) of them all. On top of this, the authors found that Buffett had a higher Sharpe ratio than 'all U.S. mutual funds that have been around for more than 30 years.'"
Faculty News

Profs. Frazzini and Pedersen's research on Warren Buffett's investment strategy is highlighted

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Excerpt from Bloomberg -- “'Buffett’s performance appears not to be luck, but an expression that value and quality investing can be implemented,' said Andrea Frazzini and David Kabiller of AQR Capital Management LLC and Lasse H. Pedersen of Copenhagen Business School. 'If you travel back in time and pick one stock in 1976, Berkshire would be your pick.'”
Student Club Events

MBA Student Teams Vie for Top Spot in 2013 Amazon.com Innovation Competition

Three teams of first-year MBA students went head-to-head, pitching their ideas for future business endeavors in the finals of Amazon’s 2013 Innovation Competition.
School News

Stern MBA graduates' job outlook is highlighted

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Excerpt from Poets & Quants -- "New York University’s Stern School, whose fortunes are also somewhat tied to Wall Street, had its best MBA placement year in the past four years, with 96.0% of this year’s class with job offers three months after commencement."
School News

Stern's Masters in Business Analytics program is featured

Excerpt from Data Informed -- "Students come from various functions, such as IT, human resources and marketing, and a range of industries, from automotive, banking, retail, health care, government and consulting. More than 15 nationalities are represented."
Research Center Events

Center for Business Analytics Hosts Revenue Management Roundtable

NYU flags outside of the Henry Kaufman Management Center
On December 5, Associate Professor of IOMS Rene Caldentey, CBA Executive in Residence Rick Zeni, Professor of IOMS and Marketing and Co-director of the Center for Business Analytics Anindya Ghose, and Associate Director of the Center for Business Analytics Mandy Osborne, hosted a revenue management roundtable discussion.
School News

Assistant Dean Pamela Mittman shares winter-break career tips for MBA students

Excerpt from Bloomberg Businessweek -- "If you’re traveling back to where you used to work, visit your previous employer, suggests Pamela Mittman, assistant dean of Career Services and Leadership Development at New York University’s Stern School of Business. You can also send personalized notes inviting alumni in the area to coffee or an informational meeting, she adds."
Faculty News

In an op-ed, Research Scholar Sarah Labowitz discusses H&M's plan to pay its factory workers more

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"Many of the problems with low wages and poor working conditions stem from the purchasing practices of global retailers. But too often, efforts to solve the problem focus on noncompliant factories and an endless cycle of inspections. The H&M announcement is another acknowledgement that the supply chain operations of global retailers are perhaps the most important place to look for improvements in wages and working conditions."
Faculty News

Prof. Jonathan Haidt discusses why some people want to listen to the Newtown 911 tapes

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Excerpt from TIME -- “'Our lives are circumscribed by our everyday circumstances,' says Jonathan Haidt, a psychologist and ethicist at New York University’s Stern School of Business. 'When bad things happen, we want to know about them. This is why people rubberneck at traffic accidents.'”
Faculty News

Prof. Michael Spence discusses the state of the US economy

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Excerpt from Bloomberg TV -- "Right now, the American economy is growing at, let's call it 2%, its potential is probably 3.5. It's all private sector. The economy's flexible, dynamic and restructuring, but the thing is still fiscally constrained, although I think the fiscal drag is coming off. And on a longer-term basis, the American economy, the American government, has been under-investing. Governments make complimentary investments in human capital and infrastructure and things like that in all economies, including developing ones, and we're under-investing. So as long as we continue that pattern, I think the growth will be below the potential and it's very hard to break that pattern when you've got high unemployment and people who are feeling stressed."
Faculty News

Vice Dean Adam Brandenburger's book, "Co-opetition," is highlighted

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Excerpt from The Huffington Post -- "Some may believe I am obsessed with collaboration. In my work and in my life I encourage CEOs, companies, organizations and individuals to come together to collaborate for the best results. Books like Co-opetition (Adam Brandenburger) and The Death of Competition (James F. Moore), as well as my own book Link Out report that when competitors work together, innovation results."
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."