School News

MBA student Alice Schnurman shares the factors that attracted her to Stern in an article offering advice to prospective students

Poets and Quants logo
Excerpt from Poets & Quants -- "To make my decision, I created an Excel spreadsheet that ranked schools by: prestige (based on U.S. News reports), academic flexibility (from school websites), leadership development opportunities (from school websites), job prospects (based on employment reports), alumni willingness to help (based on conversations with friends at those programs), social life (based on conversations with friends), cost, and closeness to family. Highest weightings went to job prospects/alumni, social life, and closeness to family."
Faculty News

Professor Aswath Damodaran's valuation of the healthcare industry is cited

Wall Street Journal logo
Excerpt from The Wall Street Journal -- "Valuation guru Aswath Damodaran late last year figured it was worth about $38 billion, while analysts at Deutsche Bank thought a disposal of part of the business would fetch a little over $10 billion after taxes."
Faculty News

In a contributed article, Professor Anika Sharma makes the case that Alexa can host the Oscars, highlighting the growing role technology is playing in the entertainment industry

 AdAge India logo
Excerpt from Ad Age India -- "While you try and convince me that Matt Damon is the best person to host the Oscars, I want to put up my nomination for Alexa to play the part. She is smart, she has a soothing voice, she has an impeccable track record (outside of the unexplained sinister laugh once-in-a-while) and she is a lot of fun."
Faculty News

Professor Christopher Conlon's joint research on common ownership is featured

Harvard Law Blog logo
Exceprt from the Harvard Law blog -- "Our new working paper, Common Ownership in America: 1980–2017 provides a new analytical framework for this debate, by comprehensively analyzing the theoretical and empirical implications of the common ownership hypothesis among all S&P 500 firms from 1980–2017. Our paper identifies why common ownership presents such a tremendous challenge to markets and regulators if prevailing hypotheses are true, but we also identify important data problems, misconceptions and erroneous assumptions that call into question the reliability of existing research."
School News

In a feature article, Professor and Vice Dean for Online Learning Kim Corfman highlights the benefits of the format and structure of Stern's new online Master of Science in Quantitative Management program for working professional students

Metro MBA logo
Excerpt from MetroMBA -- "'NYU Stern’s new Master of Science in Quantitative Management program is primarily designed for early-career non-business majors who are interested in gaining the fundamental business knowledge and high-demand business analytics skills essential for fast-tracking their careers,' says Corfman.'"
School News

Entrepreneur and investor Mark Cuban's fireside chat with Professor Greg Coleman, Q&A with the Stern community and "Stern Tank" featuring three NYU startups is featured in a news roundup from top b-schools

Poets and Quants logo
Excerpt from Poets & Quants -- "NYU Stern’s Entertainment, Media and Technology (EMT) program and W. R. Berkley Innovation Labs hosted entrepreneur, investor and ABC ‘Shark Tank’ judge Mark Cuban for a fireside chat with Professor Greg Coleman, a Q&A with the Stern community and a first-ever ‘Stern Tank,’ featuring three NYU startups."
Research Center Events

Engaging with the Blue Economy

Kaufman Management Center
On February 25, the NYU Center for Sustainable Business will host a panel entitled, "Engaging with the Blue Economy."
School News

Senior Research Scholar Alain Bertaud is quoted in an article on New Zealand's housing crisis

Guardian logo
Excerpt from The Guardian -- "Alain Bertaud, a former World Bank principal urban planner, said despite New Zealand being an otherwise 'exceptionally well-managed country', its housing market was in a state of crisis. He said the government’s efforts were being closely watched because they were broadly following global best practice in improving housing affordability."
Faculty News

Professor Scott Galloway is quoted in an article on why "following your passion" is overrated

CNBC logo
Excerpt from CNBC -- "Instead, identify your talent and zero in there. 'Find out what you're good at and then invest 10,000 hours in it — and become great at it,' Galloway says."
Faculty News

In an excerpt from her forthcoming book, "The Big Nine," Professor Amy Webb stresses the importance of incorporating human values into AI development

Insider logo
Excerpt from Insider -- "Decades ago, when the frontiers of AI involved beating a human player at checkers, the decision variables were straightforward. Today, asking an AI to weigh in on a medical diagnosis or to predict the next financial market crash involves data and decisions that are orders of magnitude more complex. So instead, our systems are built for optimization. Implicit in optimizing is unpredictability—to make choices that deviate from our own human thinking."
Faculty News

Professor Adam Alter explains the addictive nature of technology and how the consumption of media has changed

Fox News Radio logo
Excerpt from Fox News Radio -- "I think the biggest change in the world of tech—in the world of screens—is that the consumers of screens are much more careful now about how they consume. We're paying a lot more attention to the way we spend our time, and I think we're starting to demand more from the companies that deliver those screens."
Faculty News

Professor Paul Romer's research on macroeconomics is referenced in a new book on climate change

Business Insider logo
Excerpt from Business Insider -- "The same year, Paul Romer, the chief economist of the World Bank, proposed that macroeconomics — the 'science' of capitalism — was perhaps a fantasy field of study equivalent to string theory, which no longer had any legitimate claim to describing the workings of the real economy."
Research Center Events

The 15th Annual NYU/Penn Conference on Law and Finance

NYU Stern Professor David Yermack, director of the NYU Pollack Center, presents his co-authored research
The 15th Annual NYU/Penn Conference on Law and Finance, jointly sponsored by the NYU Pollack Center for Law & Business and the University of Pennsylvania Institute for Law and Economics, was held February 22-23 at NYU Stern.
Student Club Events

NYU Stern's 14th Annual Private Equity & Venture Capital Conference

Kaufman Management Center
On Friday, February 22, NYU Stern's Private Equity Club will host their 14th Annual Private Equity & Venture Capital Conference.
Faculty News

Professor Ingo Walter's joint research on public pension funds and infrastructure investments is featured

Excerpt from The Bond Buyer -- "In that report Clive Lipshitz, a managing partner at Tradewind Interstate Advisors and Ingo Walter, a finance professor at New York University studied the 25 largest public pension plans and found that managers are becoming increasingly interested in investing in infrastructure."
Faculty News

Professor Paul Hardart provides advice for companies looking to gain media exposure at SXSW

Excerpt from Adweek -- "'You also have most of the press from around the world there. If you have a story to tell, it’s like shooting fish in the barrel. The press come[s] to you. You have everybody there,' Hardart said. 'There’s a huge benefit; it’s just a question of how much you can cut through because there’s a lot of people trying to do the exact same thing.'"
Faculty News

Professor Aswath Damodaran discusses Amazon's stock price, business strategy and prospects for future growth

Yahoo Finance logo
Excerpt from Yahoo Finance -- "'I think Amazon's biggest problem right now is it has a target on its back. Target on its back politically, economically,' Damodaran told Yahoo Finance’s The Final Round, several days after the e-commerce giant decided not to build a second headquarters in New York City amid fierce opposition from local advocates."
Faculty News

Professor Baruch Lev's book, "The End of Accounting," is referenced

Canadian Accountant logo
Excerpt from Canadian Accountant -- "Entire industries that are largely intangible, including software, biotech and Internet services, came into being during the 1980s and 1990s, Lev points out in The End of Accounting. 'And for all other business, the major value drivers shifted from property, plant, machinery, and inventories, to patents, brands, information technology, and human resources.'"
Research Center Events

17th Annual New Venture Showcase

17th Annual NYU Venture Showcase Event Flyer
On Thursday, February 21, NYU Stern's W.R. Berkley Innovation Labs will welcome NYU alumni, investors and entrepreneurs to the 17th Annual New Venture Showcase.
Faculty News

Professor Thomas Philippon and PhD student Germán Gutiérrez's joint research on competition and investment in US firms is cited

Reuters logo
Excerpt from Reuters -- "A paper by German Gutierrez and Thomas Philippon looked at the largest American companies, both overall and by industry. They found that the trend lines for these “star” firms changed dramatically around the year 2000."
Faculty News

Professor Richard Berner's joint research on financial data standardization is featured

Reuters logo
Excerpt from Reuters -- "'Data standardization is critical to that undertaking. This is one of the core lessons of 2008 that has only been partially realized thus far,' adds Berner, who is now at New York University’s Stern Business School."
Faculty News

Professor Nicholas Economides explains why he believes the Federal Reserve is taking a "wait and see" approach to interest rates

Yahoo Finance logo
Excerpt from Yahoo Finance --"I think that the general expectation is that GDP growth is going to slow down, but I don't think we are going to have a recession. So, again, the language that I hear says that the Fed is going to be cautious and patient."
Faculty News

Professor Al Lieberman is quoted in an article on the factors brands should consider when choosing a spokesperson

Excerpt from Adweek -- "Al Lieberman, an academic authority in entertainment marketing and the head of the Entertainment, Media and Technology Initiative at New York University’s Stern School of Business said, 'Global markets have their own form of barriers to certain celebrities due to ethnicity, gender, sexual orientation, background and on occasion even roles they have played.'"
Faculty News

Professor Allen Adamson is interviewed for a story on designer Karl Lagerfeld's legacy

Luxury Daily logo
Excerpt from Luxury Daily --  "Not only was he able to steward and curate and energize the Chanel brand, but at the same time he was able to build his own brand separate and distinct from Chanel, which is a very tricky, balancing act to do," said Allen Adamson, cofounder of marketing firm Metaforce and adjunct professor at NYU Stern School of Business."