Faculty News

Professor Aswath Damodaran's book, "The Little Book of Valuation," is featured

Excerpt from GuruFocus -- "Damodaran wrote that too many investors think valuing an asset is too complex and complicated to master; as a result, they leave valuation to others, or simply ignore it. Yet, he argues, 'I believe that valuation, at its core, is simple, and anyone who is willing to spend time collecting and analyzing information can do it.'"
 
Faculty News

Professor Priya Raghubir is interviewed about the controversy around Fridababy’s advertising campaign for its product, the Momwasher

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Excerpt from Vox -- "'My first thought was, "Seriously? In this day and age? A person cannot say vagina without it being a bad word?" I thought we’d gotten over that with the Vagina Monologues, but we clearly haven’t,' Priya Raghubir, a professor of marketing at the NYU Stern School of Business, says of the Momwasher controversy."
Faculty News

Professor Batia Wiesenfeld is interviewed on the value of reframing one's thinking to find meaning at work, drawing from her research on role integration

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Excerpt from Fast Company -- "Wiesenfeld, who studies how people adapt to challenges in organizational life, explains that recognizing your true overarching goal gives your actions meaning, and 'people who are thinking in terms of meaning are more cognitively flexible and adapt better.'"
Faculty News

Professor Panos Ipeirotis is recognized as one of "45 under 45" Greek scientists producing the highest-impact publications worldwide

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Excerpt from Kathimerini -- (Translated from Greek using Google Translate) "Forty-five Greek scientists born from 1974 onwards have published papers with an influence on the top 0.1% of world science. Can we learn something if we look at where they are, where they are trained, what they are doing? Thirty-seven were born and/or grew up in Greece. Six have become members of the faculty here.... Out of the 40 who are abroad, 19 are in the US, seven in Great Britain. Most executives are top universities or research institutes."
School News

A panel discussion on "Innovating Investments for Climate Resilience," hosted by the Center for Sustainable Business, featuring Professor Robert Engle and moderated by Professor Tensie Whelan, is covered

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Excerpt from Sustainable Brands -- "As Engle pointed out, 'People living by the sea are worried about sea level rise, but the rest of us aren’t; people in California worried about wildfires, but the rest of us aren’t. What does it take to get everyone on the same page?'"
Faculty News

Professor John Horton's joint research on reputation inflation is included in a story on Amazon’s new 4-star store and online ratings

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Excerpt from Forbes -- "'On Uber and Lyft, it is widely known that anything less than 5 stars is considered "bad" feedback,' declared an academic paper released earlier this year by New York University's Stern School of Business. '…Nearly 90% of UberX Chicago trips in early 2017 had a perfect 5-star rating.'"
Faculty News

On the first episode of Pivot, a new podcast with Recode, Professor Scott Galloway predicts a potential acquisition of Snap Inc.

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Excerpt from Recode -- "'Snap needs something,' he said. 'I believe this company is going out of business ... Snap will not be an independent company by the end of 2019.'"
Faculty News

Professor Nouriel Roubini shares his views on why he believes the economy will experience a sharp economic slowdown and likely recession by 2020

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Excerpt from Fox Business -- "'I do expect a sharp economic slowdown and the likelihood of a recession by 2020,' said Roubini during an interview with FOX Business’ Maria Bartiromo. Because of an impending decrease in fiscal stimulus, this financial drag will get 'bigger and bigger' by 2025, he warned."
Faculty News

Professor Thomas Pugel explains how tariffs on Chinese goods are passed on to consumers

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Excerpt from Bloomberg Businessweek -- "Says Pugel: 'If U.S. buyers are desperate to get a Chinese product, the price in the U.S. is going to go up.'"
Faculty News

Professor Anindya Ghose assesses the competitive landscape for the home-sharing market in India

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Excerpt from Quartz India -- "'(It) has to go up against Jin Jiang, the world’s fifth largest hospitality company,' said Anindya Ghose, the Heinz Riehl professor of business at New York University’s Stern school of business. 'There is also Airbnb and their big rival, Tujia.'"
Faculty News

Speaking at a conference in Cabo Verde, Africa, Professor Luis Cabral underscores the importance of investing in education and technological infrastructure

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Excerpt from SAPO Cabo Verde -- "For [Cabral], it is important that governments, businesses and the general population are prepared for the ongoing digital revolution, which, he said, will have a 'far greater' impact than computers and the Internet, but also in artificial intelligence. 'It is fundamental to invest in the infrastructure...' he added, adding the importance of investing in education so that people are prepared for the new phenomena and technologies."
Research Center Events

Tackling Global Imbalances: Focusing on Global Monetary Policies, Capital Markets, Trump’s Trade War and European Populism

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The NYU Stern Department of Information, Operations and Management Sciences will host a seminar by Professor John (Iannis) Mourmouras, Deputy Governor of the Bank of Greece, on September 28, 2018
Faculty News

In an in-depth interview, Professor Dolly Chugh shares takeaways on how to fight unconscious bias, from her book, "The Person You Mean to Be"

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Excerpt from Knowledge@Wharton -- "I call it the smart, semi-bold person’s guide for diversity and inclusion. It’s an approach to thinking about diversity and inclusion that really begins with thinking about yourself and the ways in which you may inadvertently be holding some unconscious biases or benefiting from systemic bias."
Faculty News

Professor Aswath Damodaran's contributed essay in "The Best Investment Writing – Vol. 2," edited by Meb Farber, is referenced

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Excerpt from ThinkAdvisor -- "'The Bitcoin Boom: Asset, Currency, Commodity or Collectible?' by Aswath Damodaran, finance professor, NYU Stern School of Business: 'Bitcoin is not an asset class. You don’t invest in Bitcoin; you trade it. Bitcoin is a young currency.'"
Faculty News

Professor Aswath Damodaran's contributed essay in "The Best Investment Writing – Vol. 2," is referenced

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Excerpt from ThinkAdvisor -- "'The Bitcoin Boom: Asset, Currency, Commodity or Collectible' by Aswath Damodaran, finance professor, NYU Stern School of Business: 'Bitcoin is not an asset class. You don’t invest in Bitcoin; you trade it. Bitcoin is a young currency.'"
Faculty News

Professor Jonathan Haidt's co-authored book, "The Coddling of the American Mind," is reviewed

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Excerpt from The Economist -- "Three basic misconceptions underpin this hypochondriacal outlook, Mr Haidt and Mr Lukianoff write. First, that a person’s feelings, such as over whether a remark is racist, are always right. Second, that humankind can be split into good and bad people, whereas, as Solzhenitsyn put it, 'the line dividing good and evil cuts through the heart of every human being'. Finally, that risk is best avoided, or 'What doesn’t kill you makes you weaker'."
Faculty News

Professor Baruch Lev's comments on the value of intangible assets at the Oscar Pomilio Blumm forum are highlighted

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Excerpt from Yahoo -- (Translated from Italian using Google Translate) "Professor Lev, before receiving the Ethics Award from the hands of Massimo Pomilio, managing director of Pomilio Blumm, said: 'Intangible assets are not just patents and licenses, but also innovations in the organizational model, like WalMart, which sends updates on the supply of a given asset directly to the supplier.'"
Research Center Events

Powering Partnerships for the SDGs: Uniting Students and Business

M. S. Peters, M. van Loggerenberg, Li. Manley, H. Medina, N. Africa, H. Baijal, S. Fallender, M. Statler
NYU Stern, UNA-USA and Business Council for the UN convened a solutions-focused lunch focusing on the implementation of SDG 17, “Partnerships for the Goals” on Thursday, September 27, 2018.
Research Center Events

Executive Education Short Course: Strategy for Executives: Creating and Capturing Value in a Competitive Environment

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This program provides the foundation for managers to think strategically about creating and capturing value within their organization.
Research Center Events

Executive Education Short Course: Strategy for Executives: Creating and Capturing Value in a Competitive Environment

This program provides the foundation for managers to think strategically about creating and capturing value within their organization. 
Faculty News

Professor Arun Sundararajan discusses his research findings in an article about proposed legislation in Boston to restrict Airbnb; his book, "The Sharing Economy," is also referenced

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Excerpt from The Christian Science Monitor -- "'In cities like New York and Boston, given the high cost of residential housing, there is little or no evidence that you can actually take a unit off the longer term market, run it as an Airbnb, and make money,' says Arun Sundararajan, a professor of business at New York University and author of 'The Sharing Economy,' a book that explores how on-demand platforms will change society."
 
Faculty News

Professor Scott Galloway comments on Google and the future of tech regulation

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Excerpt from The New York Times -- "It was the 'worst business decision of 2018,' said Scott Galloway, a founder of the business research firm Gartner L2 and a professor of marketing at New York University Stern School of Business. 'It feels like the tide has turned substantially,' Mr. Galloway said. 'They’ve sort of poked the bear.'"
Faculty News

Lord Mervyn King's predictions on the future of central banks, from his book, "The End of Alchemy," are referenced

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Excerpt from Quartz -- "We assume that the way money works now—fiat currency controlled by central banks—is a law of nature. It isn’t. It is a particular set of man-made, transient institutional arrangements. The former governor of the Bank of England Mervyn King says in his recent book The End of Alchemy that central banks’ 'extinction cannot be ruled out altogether.'"
Faculty News

Professor Michael Spence shares his views on how China is handling its trade conflict with the US

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Excerpt from Bloomberg -- (:10) "China is struggling with the American tariffs, they're trying to find a way through this. The United States, I think by general agreement, has the capacity to hurt them in the short run..."