Faculty News

In an op-ed, NYU Global Research Prof. Ian Bremmer explains the significance of the Trans-Pacific Partnership to President Obama's legacy

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Excerpt from TIME -- "In the next few days, the Senate will begin debate on one of the most important questions it will answer this decade—whether to grant the President 'trade promotion authority' (TPA), also known as “fast track.” This move would give President Obama and his successors the authority to place trade agreements before Congress for a simple up-or-down vote, denying lawmakers the chance to filibuster or add amendments to the deal which change its rules."
Faculty News

Prof. Thomaï Serdari on how luxury brands cater to wealthy clientele

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Excerpt from Quartz -- "Many world-class brands, such as Hermès and Christolfe, are constantly introducing ever-more exclusive clubs to ensure that their customers feel a consistent, heightened sense of 'specialness.' 'The irony but also allure about [these] clubs is that no one knows the exact list of clients (other than the corporate staff), but also no one can ask to be allowed into the club,' writes Thomaï Serdari, a professor of marketing at New York University’s Stern School of Business in an email to Quartz. Serdari is the editor of Luxury: History, Culture, Consumption.. 'In other words, one may be a member without knowing it.'"
Faculty News

Profs. Steven Blader and Claudine Gartenberg's research on data-driven management is featured

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Excerpt from The Wall Street Journal -- "Managers are giving employees more information about their performance, and some are sharing information about how different workers stack up. But sometimes, a bit of data can be a dangerous thing. That is the finding of a new working paper from researchers at Columbia University and New York University, who studied a friendly competition among truckers at a large North American logistics firm and found that, in certain work environments, revealing performance data can backfire."
Business and Policy Leader Events

Filmed Entertainment: Financing, Producing, Marketing and Distributing Independent Content

FIlmed Entertainment
The Center for Communication is partnering with the NYU Stern School of Business, NYU Tisch School of the Arts and the NYU Cinema Research Institute to host a panel discussion on cutting-edge concept in the filmed entertainment business as well as strategies for success in this ever-changing industry on Tuesday, April 14.
Business and Policy Leader Events

NYU Hosts Panel on Mindfulness in the Workplace

Mindfulness in Business | Panel Discussion
Students, administrators and faculty from across NYU convened in Paulson Auditorium at NYU’s Stern School of Business this April for a panel discussion entitled, “Beyond Deep Breaths: Transforming the Workplace Through Mindfulness.”
Faculty News

In an op-ed, Prof. Pankaj Ghemawat examines CEMEX's global growth

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Excerpt from Strategy + Business -- "The company’s prowess is closely tied to the capabilities that it has built over time: industry-leading operational effectiveness, sophisticated sharing of knowledge throughout the enterprise, long-term customer and community relationship development, construction-oriented innovation, and the development of sustainability initiatives."
Faculty News

Prof. Jonathan Haidt's research on political differences is featured

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Excerpt from Bloomberg View -- "Haidt’s basic finding is simple. Throughout history, human beings have operated under five sets of moral commitments: avoidance of harm, fairness, loyalty, authority and sanctity. Conservatives recognize all five, but liberals recognize only the first two."
Faculty News

Prof. Dolly Chugh on Reddit CEO Ellen Pao's ban on salary negotiations

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Excerpt from MSNBC -- "Well, it's bold and gutsy, and I love that. And what we're dealing with here, often, is unintentional bias. Those things aren't going to go away by us just hoping they do. We need bold and gutsy experiments, and I think that's what this is. This is an experiment. What I want to see her do is track the data and what I want to see the next CEO do that's bold and gutsy is something even crazier. I want to see them mandate that everybody negotiate. That would be a really interesting direction. Instead of mandating that nobody negotiate, what would happen if we said everybody needs to make the case?"
Faculty News

Prof. Adam Brandenburger's book, "Co-opetition," is mentioned

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Excerpt from The Manila Times -- "There are so many dimensions we can learn from 'coopetition,' a buzzword coined by Adam Brandenburger and Barry Nalebuff to harness the positive energy from the symmetry between competition and cooperation."
Faculty News

Prof. Michael Posner on Hillary Clinton's foreign-policy legacy

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Excerpt from The Wall Street Journal -- "We really inherited a world where the United States’ standing was seriously diminished. To me, the thing that she did most effectively was to lead the administration’s efforts to restore U.S. leadership. And that continues to be an important part of her legacy."
Faculty News

Prof. Arun Sundararajan on Google and Amazon's expansion into the home-services market

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Excerpt from The New York Times -- "'A lot of commerce begins with Google and has for the last decade,' said Arun Sundararajan, a professor at the New York University Stern School of Business. 'They have converted this into an incredibly profitable advertising business. But I’ve seen them make steps to get closer to the actual retail process.'"
Faculty News

In an op-ed, NYU Global Research Prof. Ian Bremmer explains the factors contributing to terrorism in Kenya

TIME logo
Excerpt from TIME -- "The fight against al-Shabab in East Africa is a regional effort. With 3,664 people deployed, Kenya provides fewer personnel to the UN-backed African Union Mission in Somalia than Uganda, Ethiopia or Burundi do. Yet it is Kenya that has borne the brunt of al-Shabab’s attacks outside Somalia. Since 2012, the group has killed over 600 people in Kenya."
Faculty News

Prof. Stijn Van Nieuwerburgh will serve as an adviser to Norway's wealth fund

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Excerpt from Bloomberg -- "The expert group on infrastructure is comprised of Stijn Van Nieuwerburgh, a professor of finance at New York University’s Leonard N. Stern School of Business, Richard Stanton, a professor of finance and real estate at the Haas School of Business, University of California, Berkeley and Leo de Bever, a former Bank of Canada official and pension fund executive."
Student Club Events

EEX Engage 2015

EEX Engage 2015
On Friday, April 10, Stern's Entrepreneurs Exchange club (EEX) will host "EEX Engage."
Faculty News

Profs Roy Smith and Brad Hintz's op-ed on the banking regulatory landscape is highlighted

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Excerpt from Reuters -- "Of the world’s 12 largest banks, only Wells Fargo and Goldman Sachs generated returns above their cost of capital last year, according to an analysis in Financial News by Roy Smith and Brad Hintz, professors at NYU Stern School of Business."
Faculty News

Prof. Scott Galloway's DLD Conference presentation on the future of Amazon, Apple, Facebook and Google is featured

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Excerpt from Forbes -- "[Galloway] and his team at NYU Stern have developed an algorithm that looks at more than 800 data points across four dimensions—site, digital marketing, social and mobile—and across 11 geographies. They applied this algorithm against 1,300 brands, thus providing the basis for predicting winners and losers."
 
Research Center Events

A Conversation with Sir Mark Moody-Stuart

Mark Moody-Stuart
NYU Stern's Center for Business and Human Rights will host a lecture and Q&A session with Sir Mark Moody-Stuart on the key themes of his book, Responsible Leadership, on April 9.
Faculty News

Prof. Paul Wachtel on the US impact of the euro's decline

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Excerpt from TV Finland -- "The American economy is very large. Exports and imports have increased as a fraction of the economy, but compared to a typical European country, compared to many emerging markets countries, the American economy is more closed. I don't think that this large depreciation is sufficiently significant for the big American economy to cause a recession."
Faculty News

Prof. Wenqiang Xiao's research on funding for malaria drugs is featured

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Excerpt from The Guardian Nigeria -- "By analyzing the product characteristics (short versus long life), customer population (degree of heterogeneity or diverse makeup), and the size of the donor’s budget, Taylor and Xiao found that for long shelf life products, such as ACTs (with a 24 to 36-month life from the factory to expiration), donors should only offer a purchase subsidy. In contrast, if a product has a short shelf life, a sufficiently large donor budget and a diverse customer population, it is optimal to offer a sales subsidy in addition to a purchase subsidy."
Faculty News

Prof. Roubini's comments on the art market are highlighted

Financial Times logo
Excerpt from Financial Times -- "'You can buy something for half a million, not show a passport and ship it. Plenty of people are using it for laundering,' Mr Roubini, a passionate art collector, told a panel hosted by the FT at Davos in January."
Faculty News

Prof. Scott Galloway explains why brick-and-mortar stores complement success in e-commerce

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Excerpt from Racked -- "Pure-play e-commerce can scale faster than brick-and-mortar, but then there’s a certain friction. The moment you are on Amazon’s radar, they will begin to look into your category. One of the most impactful ways to market a brand to somebody is to offer them a great in-store experience."
Faculty News

Paul Krugman highlights Prof. Kim Schoenholtz's blog post on macroeconomics

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Excerpt from The New York Times -- "Cecchetti & Schoenholtz argue that 'zero matters' in macroeconomics; specifically, both the zero almost-lower bound on interest rates and downward wage rigidity make the case that deflation or for that matter very low inflation is a bad thing."
Faculty News

Prof. David Yermack's research on creeping acquisitions of stock is highlighted

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Excerpt from The Australian -- "The study, by the University of Western Australia’s Raymond da Silva Rosa and Michael Kingsbury and New York University’s David Yermack, found that creep provisions were seldom used to take one shareholder’s interest beyond the 50 per cent mark that delivers majority control. Instead, most creeping acquisitions lifted the shareholder’s stake to between 20 per cent and 30 per cent."
School News

The Center for Business and Human Rights's new research on construction labor in South Asia is highlighted

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Excerpt from MetroMBA -- "The center‘s research will focus on relationships among recruitment companies based in South Asia and construction firms doing business in the Arabian Gulf. The goal of the project is to better understand the incentives and pressures that exist at different points in the chain that are contributing to violations of migrant workers’ rights. The Center expects to publish a report with findings and recommendations in early 2016."
School News

Undergraduate students Anika Advani and Julian Marchese are named two of the "Undergrads Ready to Revolutionize the Finance Industry"

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Excerpt from BadCredit.org -- "Hard-working, bold and full of ideas, these students are ready to tackle the finance industry and shape the U.S. economy in ways we’ve never seen before."