Faculty News

Professor Arun Sundararajan is interviewed about China’s ride sharing industry

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Excerpt from CGTN -- "'I think that we need to look beyond the rent-a-car from a station model and towards the peer-to-peer models. So if you take the analogy of the United States, look beyond the Car2go model or the Drive Now model and towards the models of Getaround and Turo, where an individual can rent a car from another individual rather than picking it up off a station on the street.'"
Faculty News

Professor Scott Galloway discusses the departure of several CEOs from President Trump's advisory councils

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Excerpt from The New York Times -- "'The risk calculus has changed dramatically,' said Scott Galloway, a professor at New York University Business School, who sits on several corporate boards. 'Yes, you may risk a tweet from Trump. But his tweets are increasingly flaccid.'"
Faculty News

Professor Richard Sylla discusses why business leaders are leaving President Donald Trump's manufacturing advisory councils

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Excerpt from NBC News -- "So while there are disagreements, 'Usually it's over business issues,' said Richard Sylla, a professor of economics at the New York University Stern School of Business. But here, 'the business leaders are taking a moral stance on fundamental American issues.'"
School News

Ally Cheung shares how studying at Stern as an exchange MBA student shaped her career path

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Excerpt from BusinessBecause -- "During my MBA exchange in NYU Stern, I was stunned by the startup culture in New York. Hackathons, coding boot camps and Meetups are all over the place. I believe there are more disruptions coming and more are driven by the new tech startups. They are poised to change the way we live, work and learn."
Faculty News

Professor Aswath Damodaran's thoughts on Tesla's market valuation are featured

Excerpt from NASDAQ -- "Despite the bullish Tesla takes on Monday, a New York University finance professor said on Friday that he thinks one of the company's recent moves is very strange. Aswath Damodaran, who is regarded as a company valuation expert said he doesn't understand why a company that is losing cash, like Tesla, chose to raise its debt total and not sell stock."
Research Center Events

Executive Education Short Course: Valuation

 The program will address discounted cash flow valuation and the estimation issues that arise when information is imprecise or unavailable, value enhancement through the prism of discounted cash flow models, and contrast techniques. It will also delve into other valuation approaches, such as the use of multiples and comparables in relative valuation, and the use of option pricing to value certain types of stocks and businesses.
Faculty News

Professor Alixandra Barasch's research on photo taking and memory is featured

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Excerpt from WIRED -- "'People feel very strongly that when they take photos it’s taking them out of the moment,' says Alixandra Barasch, a researcher at NYU who studies the effects of taking photos. 'Yet after years of running studies, we kept on finding over and over again that there were all of these positive aspects of photo-taking, as well.'"
Faculty News

Professor Stijn Van Nieuwerburgh's work on European Safe Bonds is referenced

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Excerpt from the Financial Times -- "European safe bonds were first proposed by a group of European economists in 2011. In May this year a European Commission paper advocated the creation of a market for the debt, which could generate bonds with varying levels of risk."
Faculty News

Professor Alixandra Barasch's research on photo taking and visual memory and Professor Tom Meyvis' research on the impact of physical memorabilia are featured

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Excerpt from MetroMBA -- "In a study entitled, 'Forgetting to Remember Our Experiences: People Overestimate How Much They Will Retrospect About Personal Events,” Mevvis and Tully investigated “how people’s expectations of how often they would recall an experience compared to how often they actually did recall it.' ... Barasch and her co-authors Kristin Diehl, Jackie Silverman, and Gal Zauberman, conducted an experiment framed around participants use of cameras. Their work, similar to Meyvis and Tully, found that those who did not take photos had 'more enhanced visual memory' than those that did take photos."
Faculty News

Professor Lawrence White comments on the impact of tensions with North Korea on financial markets

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Excerpt from NBC News -- "'I think a lot of people do believe this is just huffing and puffing — and when push comes to shove, there’s not going to be any pushing,' Lawrence White, professor of economics at New York University's Stern School of Business, told NBC News."
School News

MBA student TJ Herrle shares how he transitioned from a non-traditional business background to a summer internship in management consulting with Accenture

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Excerpt from Clear Admit -- "It wasn’t all that long ago that I was wondering what management consulting even was, and now I’m halfway through my summer internship in that exact field. My time at Accenture has taught me a lot, and I’m thrilled that I am exploring this path. If you’re considering making a change to enter management consulting, from where I sit, Stern is a great place for you to make it happen."
Faculty News

Professor Scott Galloway shares insights on advertising, Amazon and technology

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Excerpt from the Financial Times -- "We are effectively entering an era where I call 'the death of the advertising industrial complex.' I think advertising has become a tax that the poor and the digitally illiterate pay. If you're wealthy you get to opt out of advertising and brands are still depending on it."
Faculty News

Professor Jeffrey Wurgler's research on index-linked investing is mentioned

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Excerpt from Fund Strategy -- "The average country reclassified to a more-benchmarked index gains 23.2 per cent between the announcement and the reshuffle, but loses 12.4 per cent in the year that follows its inclusion in the new index, research out of NYU’s Stern School of Business, Chapman University and Acadian Asset Management shows."
Faculty News

Professor Arun Sundararajan discusses the impact of Benchmark's lawsuit against Uber on the company

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Excerpt from Bloomberg -- "'It puts the company in limbo and prevents them from moving forward,' said Arun Sundararajan, a New York University professor and author of The Sharing Economy. 'This kind of fight is going to hurt Uber significantly in the short term.'"
Faculty News

Professor Anat Lechner's comments on MBA change management courses are featured

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Excerpt from US News & World Report -- "Change management courses help MBA students understand the psychology of change, including both the motivation of a company's visionaries and the resistance of people who are frightened of a company's transformation, says Anat Lechner, clinical associate professor of management and organizations with New York University's Stern School of Business."
School News

Research Scholar Shlomo Angel discusses the NYU Urbanization Project's work in Valledupar, Colombia

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Excerpt from Bloomberg -- "The street-planning idea was dreamed up by Shlomo 'Solly' Angel, who leads the Urban Expansion program at New York University’s Marron Institute of Urban Management. It’s virtually costless because ranchers and farmers are happy to donate land that will be adjacent to a main road, Angel says. NYU has landed a contract to train 109 other Colombian cities in planning for expansion and is working with 18 cities in Ethiopia. 'It is impossible to cut a road through a built-up area,' he says. 'Either we do it now or we don’t do it at all.'"
Faculty News

Professor Lawrence White shares his views on Bitcoin

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Excerpt from Yahoo Finance -- "For Bitcoin to gain traction, it has to achieve at least a semblance of steady value. 'We are reluctant to transact in something where the day-to-day value for our transactions’ purposes could vary substantially,' White said."
School News

The co-founders of Geopipe, winner of the 2017 Technology Venture Competition in NYU Stern’s $300K Entrepreneurs Challenge, are interviewed

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Excerpt from Cheddar -- "...being computer scientists, we started looking at how we can automatically generate virtual models of the real world. We went beyond video games and started looking at things like architecture, special effects, and training simulations for the military and first responders, where people need these virtual models for most of the projects they work on."
Faculty News

Professors Kim Corfman and Thomaï Serdari share insights on luxury marketing education

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Excerpt from Luxury Daily -- "'[From a school perspective,] partners keep us relevant,’ said Kim Corfman, professor of marketing and academic director of the Fashion & Luxury one-year MBA at NYU Stern School of Business, New York. 'They ensure that we are educating students to solve problems that matter and that the solutions they create are of value. At a more practical level, partners provide us with live cases and projects to which students can apply what they have learned.' ... 'Luxury brands need people who understand both the retail environment and the challenges a business faces in the industry,' said Thomaï Serdari, founder of PIQLuxury, co-editor of Luxury: History Culture Consumption and adjunct professor of luxury marketing at New York University, New York."
Faculty News

Professor Aswath Damodaran's work on equity risk premiums is referenced

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Excerpt from The Economist -- "The equity-risk premium, or the annual excess return that investors demand to hold shares rather than bonds, is 5.03 points, against a pre-crisis average of 3.45 points, notes Aswath Damodaran of the Stern School of Business at NYU."
Faculty News

Professor Michael Spence's research on the labor market and cost of goods is featured

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Excerpt from The Atlantic -- "Between 1990 and 2008, 98 percent of new jobs came from so-called 'nontradable' industries that aren't sensitive to international trade, according to the economist Michael Spence."
Faculty News

Professor Anindya Ghose shares his outlook on Amazon's future growth

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Excerpt from Business Insider -- "According to Anindya Ghose, a professor at NYU's Stern School of Business, the e-commerce giant could be the first company to break through the $1 trillion barrier for market capitalization. The company is currently worth about $476.07 billion, which means it would need a 110.1% increase in its stock price to reach that level. But Ghose thinks Amazon's rise will come at the expense of lots of retail jobs. 'In many ways, it might actually be a blessing in disguise because it's also simultaneously going to cost lots of jobs in the economy,' Ghose told Business Insider."
Faculty News

Professor Vasant Dhar and Arun Sundararajan's remarks at the Digital Future of Work Summit at Stern are highlighted

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Excerpt from Investing.com -- "Vasant Dhar: 'I worry that this time might in fact be different because we haven’t had intelligent machines in the past that we could trust with making decisions. That was in the domain of human beings. Machines assisted us. They helped us. But it’s different this time. And it’s going to be very challenging.' ... Arun Sundararajan: '…digital technology is changing how we organize work. It’s taking us from fulltime employment, which was the predominant way of earning a living in the 20th century, toward a wide variety of non-employment work arrangements.'"
Faculty News

Professor Kim Schoenholtz's co-authored blog post on the 10th anniversary of the financial crisis is referenced

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Excerpt from the Financial Times -- "As Stephen Cecchetti and Kermit Schoenholtz nicely show, BNP’s halting of redemptions was followed by an immediate tightening of lending between financial institutions. Below is their graph of the Libor-OIS spread, which measures the difference between the rate at which big banks reported to be lending to one another over a measure of the safest market interest rate."
Faculty News

Professor Stijn Van Nieuwerburgh shares insights from his research on the impact of out-of-town real estate buyers on cities

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Excerpt from BYU Radio -- "What my research points out is there is a crucial distinction between those two types of buyers: those who rent out their places - the apartment still remains available for the locals to live in, whereas those who leave their places vacant, in some sense, are literally reducing the supply of available real estate for the local residents."