Faculty News

Professor Scott Galloway anticipates Yahoo's sale of its core business based on Marissa Mayer's recent statements

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Excerpt from Bloomberg -- "This is a siren call saying everybody should get out their pencils and if they're interested in Yahoo, to reach out to their banker. But this is fairly explicit, extraordinary behavior for the chairman to say essentially, 'We're for sale.'"
Faculty News

In an in-depth interview, Professor Jonathan Haidt illustrates how ethical conduct benefits businesses

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Excerpt from Forbes -- “We will make success easier for well-meaning business leaders who know that in the long run, ethics pays. It is they who will change the world.”
Research Center Events

MISSION: APPOSSIBLE Kick-off Draws Growing Community of Mobile App Developers at NYU

Mission Appossible
More than 150 students, alumni, faculty and staff gathered at NYU Sternon February 3 for the kickoff of the First Annual MISSION: APPOSSIBLE Mobile App Contest.
Faculty News

Research Scholar Sarah Labowitz comments on a recent fire at a factory in Bangladesh and its implications for continued danger to workers

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Excerpt from Refinery29 -- "'This fire is also a reminder that paying to fix factories is as important as inspecting them,' Sarah Labowitz, co-director of the NYU Stern Center for Business and Human Rights, said in a statement. 'It is not enough to identify deficiencies. Factory owners and brands are locked in a stalemate over the costs of remediation that should be urgently resolved.'"
Faculty News

Professor Scott Galloway explains why the traditional advertising industry is declining

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Excerpt from Marketing Magazine -- "One reason, says Galloway, is that if you are willing to pay, you can now easily avoid advertising. Sign up to Spotify and you can skip the ads. Buy a pricey iPhone and ad blockers are fitted as standard. Download your favourite TV show from iTunes and you get it without the annoying ads. As Galloway puts it: 'Advertising is becoming a tax only poor people pay.'"
Faculty News

Professor Joseph Foudy comments on China National Chemical Corporation's possible acquisition of Syngenta

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Excerpt from The New York Times -- "'Normally, the biggest worry is market concentration, but in this case, it’s the Chinese government,' said Joseph Foudy, a professor of Asian economics at the Stern School of Business at New York University. 'Are we comfortable with the Chinese government controlling our genetically modified seeds? What if they limit to countries they don’t like?'"
Faculty News

As part of a working group to combat poverty, Professor Jonathan Haidt worked to develop bipartisan policy recommendations

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Excerpt from The New York Times -- "Even as substantive legislation in Washington remained largely bogged down by bitter partisan mistrust, some of the leading thinkers on opposite sides of the ideological divide — experts on the right who have advised Republican policy makers alongside left-leaning scholars who have Democrats’ ear — came together to champion an increase in the minimum wage... Preserving the bipartisan balance — drafted over the course of 14 months, with New York University’s Jonathan Haidt in the role of ideological mediator…"
Faculty News

Professor Edward Altman is interviewed about his Z-Score research

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Excerpt from the CFA Institute blog -- "At that time, there were a lot of variables in the literature that you could choose to predict insolvency. But I decided there are two variables that were potentially very powerful but had not been used yet. One was the retained earnings: The argument there being a firm that has grown its assets mainly by reinvesting earnings is healthier than a firm that has grown the assets by using 'other people’s money.'"
Research Center Events

Economic Outlook Forum

NYU flags outside of the Henry Kaufman Management Center
The NYU Stern Center for Global Economy and Business will host the Economic Outlook Forum on February 2, 2016.
Faculty News

Professor George Smith discusses the history of the private equity industry

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Excerpt from The Daily Deal -- "Whitney and ARDC ... 'They're really venture capital firms,' said George David Smith, Clinical Professor of Economics and International Business at the New York University Stern School of Business. 'It wasn't until the mid 1980s that you began to see the big takeovers by [leveraged buyout] firms.' In fact, Smith said, the term 'private equity' itself wasn't widely embraced. Most firms used the moniker LBO shops."
Faculty News

Professor Aswath Damodaran's research on corporate earnings and investments is referenced

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Excerpt from The Wall Street Journal -- "More than half—55%—of nearly 42,000 companies around the world didn’t generate returns on their invested capital last year that were high enough to cover the cost of their borrowings and stock, according to Aswath Damodaran, a finance professor at New York University’s Stern School of Business."
Faculty News

Professor Tom Meyvis discusses new research showing the impact of a company's logo on customer perception

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Excerpt from Fast Company -- "'It makes sense that the features of your logo are going to have this effect,' Meyvis says. 'It’s what’s called priming—the idea that you prime certain concepts in someone’s mind by showing them something that’s associated with this concept.'"
Faculty News

Professor Roy Smith discusses Goldman Sachs's contributions to Jeb Bush's presidential campaign

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Excerpt from Bloomberg -- "'The money he raised early was largely in order to give him the chance to blow the others away early, which we know he did not do,' said Roy Smith, a finance professor at New York University’s Stern School of Business who was a Goldman Sachs partner until 1987. 'In hindsight, they may regret giving the money -- or not, I don’t know. Maybe this isn’t over.'"
Faculty News

In an in-depth interview, Professor Luke Williams illustrates the W.R. Berkley Innovation Lab's commitment to ​cultivating a mindset of innovative entrepreneurship among Stern students

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Excerpt from Poets & Quants -- "...the real question for students as they go through their education at an MBA program is not, 'Will I have a successful business at the end of this program or am I on my way to an episode of Shark Tank or a big valuation with a VC?' The real question is, 'How many bold new experiments did I get started during my educational journey here?' Those experiments, that constant moving arrangement of ingredients into new recipes to test, is a form of what we often call innovation capital. So it’s treating every idea that you come up with as an item of investment in its own right."
Faculty News

Professor Thomaï Serdari comments on Bulgari's new B.zero1 collection

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Excerpt from Luxury Daily -- "'The piece that was introduced [at the start of the millennium] was innovative in its symbolism (zero one, the binary code that describes all life and allows it to evolve as well) but safe in its choice of material, a uniform shade of gold,' said Thomaï Serdari, Ph.D., founder of PIQLuxury, Co-editor of Luxury: History Culture Consumption and adjunct professor of luxury marketing at New York University, New York."
School News

Stern's MBA​/​MFA ​dual ​degree​ program​ is highlighted

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Excerpt from the Financial Times -- "Aimed at budding film producers and entertainment industry executives, this degree covers financing and filmmaking. The course is a partnership between NYU Stern School of Business and Kanbar Institute of Film & Television at the Tisch School of the Arts. Students also get a chance to attend the Cannes Film Festival."
Faculty News

During an in-depth interview, Professor Jonathan Haidt discusses his research on business ethics and his forthcoming book, "Three Stories about Capitalism"

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Excerpt from Strategy + Business -- "Business ethics today is, in some ways, like medical practice was 50 years ago. It is based more on clinical experience than on evidence. This impedes our ability to design regulations and management systems that reward effective and ethical business behavior. It can be changed only through interdisciplinary research. Business and regulators need to collaborate in thinking about the results. And the research has to have a direct connection to practical issues."
Faculty News

In an op-ed, Professor Michael Posner examines the impact of political corruption in China on its economy

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Excerpt from CNBC -- "China's economy will soon be the largest in the world. China is by far the largest manufacturing center globally, and it has the largest consumer market, with hundreds of millions of people joining its middle class. These should be heady days for Chinese leaders. And yet they cling to an outdated political model, which is neither wise, nor sustainable. Western companies doing business in China need both to understand the magnitude of these challenges and to develop business models and practices that reinforce and support constructive changes."
School News

Samir Goel (BS '16) and Teri Tan (BS '16) share the most important lessons they've learned in business school

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Excerpt from Poets & Quants for Undergrads -- "'The number one lesson I learned was the importance of building meaningful relationships. People are what drive business and opportunities. My first exposure to this was simply in interacting with other college students where I observed how much of a difference trust and perception made in all engagements business and personal. This realization was further supplemented by the social impact business core where we focused on thought leadership and communications' – Samir Goel ... 'I believe that capitalism is a game where not everyone has equal starting points, yet everyone is subjected to the same standards – wealth. Studying business has allowed me to understand the game and navigate my life accordingly so as to ensure my survival while hopefully creating some positive externalities along the way.' – Teri Tan"
Faculty News

Professor Deepak Hegde and Alexander Ljungqvist's research on patents and the growth of start-up businesses is cited

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Excerpt from the Inquisitr -- "A new study of patents and their effects on business claims that the U.S. patent system has significant benefits for start-up businesses. 'The Bright Side of Patents' by Joan Farre-Mensa of Harvard Business School, Deepak Hegde, and Alexander Ljungqvist of New York University’s Stern School of Business found that the employment and sales growth of U.S. startups was enhanced by patents."
Faculty News

Professors Susan Stehlik and Aline Wolff are interviewed about corporate culture during a visit to Aozora Bank in Japan

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Excerpt from The Japan Financial News -- "At the meeting, Professor Wolff pointed out that the most dangerous phrase [for corporate culture] is, 'We've always done it this way'. … Professor Stehlik said, 'Employees [versus top executives] are the greatest asset in establishment of corporate culture.'"
Faculty News

Professor Nouriel Roubini is interviewed about his views on the global economy

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Excerpt from the Economic Times -- "Advanced and emerging economies are slowing because of macro imbalances, financial excesses, debt and leverage, lack of structural reform and aging populations. Emerging economies are going to grow at 4-5% compared with 5-6% earlier. This is a new 'abnormal' for the global economy. This will continue for a few years with maybe bright spots here and there but they would be exceptions as there are more downside risks than upside risks in the global economy."
Faculty News

Professor Aswath Damodaran's blog post on Uber's market share is cited

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Excerpt from Bloomberg -- "Uber’s most obvious market is taxi and limousine services, which the company already has been entering and in some cases disrupting. Damodaran sizes that entire market at $125 billion in annual global revenue and believes it’s possible for Uber to take a 40 percent share of it -- or $50 billion."
Faculty News

Roxanne Hori, Associate Dean of Corporate Relations, Career Services and Leadership Development, shares how Stern helps prepare MBA students for careers in consulting

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Excerpt from MetroMBA -- "'The nature of consulting work is a great match with our student profile,' said Hori. 'We seek applicants who possess both strong intellectual and interpersonal strengths—what we call IQ + EQ.' She also noted that consultants must be very smart, good with clients and effective managers. She added that many Stern School students hone their skills through the Stern Consulting Corps, Board Fellows Program, Leadership Development Program and club leadership roles."
 
Faculty News

In a co-authored op-ed, Stern's Center for Business and Human Rights Research Director Dorothée Baumann-Pauly examines how German companies are helping refugees transition into the workforce

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Excerpt from Scroll.in -- "The integration of refugees can also be seen as a positive case for business and human rights – an opportunity for businesses to step up and speak out for refugees who have been deprived of their basic rights in the context of conflict. Irrespective of the potential economic benefits of the influx of refugees, some companies are therefore approaching the topic through a human rights lens by establishing cross-departmental forces to set up integration programmes."