Faculty News

Professor Nicholas Economides on Microsoft's purchase and writeoff of Nokia's phone business

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Excerpt from The New York Times -- "Microsoft’s 'grand scheme was to have a single platform that ran on PCs, laptops, tablets and phones, and to be able to sell applications that run Windows,' said Nicholas Economides, an economics professor at the Stern School of Business at New York University who specializes in network economics and electronic commerce. 'That failed.'"
Faculty News

In a co-authored op-ed, Professor Pankaj Ghemawat argues that Greece and Russia are not ideal economic partners

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Excerpt from The Globalist -- "Presumably, the reason for Greece to move closer to Russia would be to get access to loans. Despite being the smallest of the BRICs, the Russian state does have wealth due to its abundant natural resources (primarily oil and gas). However, while Mr. Putin might ordinarily love the idea of offering financing galore to fix Greece’s problems, Russia has troubles of its own. Its economy is generally expected to shrink at least 3% in 2015, on the back of falling oil prices and economic sanctions."
Faculty News

Professor Richard Sylla on past government attempts to stabilize the US stock market

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Excerpt from CNNMoney -- "The circuit breakers are in place on some assets in the U.S. and appear to be in place in China now as well. It gives a short cool off period for traders. But it's 'of limited effectiveness,' argues Sylla, 'because what's going to happen overnight that would change people's attitudes?'"
Faculty News

Professor Edward Altman on Donald Trump's history of bankruptcies

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Excerpt from Politico -- "'There’s nothing in the code that says you can’t stay in business, but the code also says that a company should not be permitted to emerge from bankruptcy if there is a substantial likelihood they will need to file again or will need restructuring,' says Altman. That makes Trump 'the great Houdini,' he says. 'No matter how poorly the companies perform he always manages to resurface and do it again.'"
Faculty News

Professor Nouriel Roubini discusses global monetary policy

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Excerpt from Bloomberg -- "Well, in the case of the Fed, we're beginning to see the rate normalization starting sometime this fall, but if you look around the world between the DOJ, ECB and other central banks, we're still in totally unconventional monetary policy: zero-policy rates, negative policy rates, quantitative easing, credit easing, forward guidance, and you name it."
Faculty News

Professor Stephen Brown discusses hedge funds as an investment at the Centre for International Finance and Regulation seminar in Sydney, Australia

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Excerpt from Investment Magazine -- "According to Brown, a perfect storm which started in the GFC led to a misunderstanding of the value proposition of hedge funds. Returns in recent years in hedge fund strategies have been poor compared to the market, but he emphasised they are meant to be uncorrelated, and a diversified hedge fund strategy still made sense for intuitional investors. 'People worry about fees, people worry about expenses, but after all that, after they are all accounted for, they remain a value proposition. This was true before the crisis and they remain a value proposition after,' Brown said."
Faculty News

Professor Scott Galloway discusses Twitter's declining growth

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Excerpt from Bloomberg -- "[In] the next quarter, if Twitter shows negative user growth, which we haven't seen across any social media platform that's still around, you could have a chill that could set off an incredible decrease in valuations, not only across social media, but across the market. I think Twitter is about to play a more important role in the markets than people think."
Faculty News

Professor Nouriel Roubini shares investment advice

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Excerpt from Fox Business -- "The first principal of investment is diversifying your portfolio. You cannot put all your eggs into one basket. … there are a huge amount of investment opportunities around the world. For example, this year Japan and Europe have done much better than the United States…"
Faculty News

In an op-ed, Professor Michael Spence discusses the impact of financial regulation in China

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Excerpt from Project Syndicate -- "As China’s markets expand – the capitalization of the Shanghai and Shenzhen markets is on the order of $11 trillion – they are increasingly outstripping policymakers’ capacity to manage prices and valuations. The only practical way forward is for the Chinese authorities to focus on regulatory and institutional development, while following through on their commitment to allow markets to play the decisive role in allocating resources."
Faculty News

Professor Anindya Ghose explains the value of data analytics skills in the job market

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Excerpt from BusinessBecause -- "'Companies now need marketing managers who are comfortable with data analytics,' said Anindya Ghose, professor of marketing at NYU Stern School of Business."
Faculty News

Professors Stephen Brown discusses investing in hedge funds

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Excerpt from Australian Banking & Finance -- "'Although the hedge funds' big selling feature was that was that their strategies were uncorrelated with the market, the truth is their risk profile is half that of the S&P500 so hedge fund managers have underperformed.'  So systemic risk is not a issue with hedge funds, Brown concluded."
Faculty News

Professors Viral Acharya and Marti Subrahmanyam's participation in the Indian Financial Markets Conference in Mumbai is featured

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Excerpt from India Education Diary -- "'While we, at NYU Stern, understand the markets and institutions in developed economies to an extent, we need to do much more work to understand more fully the markets and institutions in emerging markets, such as India. The NSE-NYU Stern partnership provides a network of academics interested in studying the Indian financial markets,' said Professor Viral Acharya of NYU Stern."
Press Releases

National Stock Exchange of India and NYU Stern starts Indian Financial Markets Conference 2015

Henry Kaufman Management Center
The National Stock Exchange (NSE), India’s leading stock exchange, and New York University Stern School of Business (NYU Stern), one of the world’s premier research and teaching institutions, began their third annual ‘Indian Financial Markets Conference 2015’ today in Mumbai, India.
Faculty News

In an op-ed, Professor Nouriel Roubini discusses the benefits of smart beta investing

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Excerpt from Project Syndicate -- "Given that this strategy can be applied to stocks, bonds, currencies, and many other asset classes, smart beta could be the future of asset management. Whether one is investing in normal or abnormal times, applying a scientific, low-cost approach to get a basket with a higher-than-average share of good apples does seem like a sensible approach."
Faculty News

Professor Yakov Amihud on activist investors

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Excerpt from ValueWalk -- "'It is hard to say, based on the results, whether the activist investor is doing anything beneficial for the company or whether the activist investor is just a good stock picker,' says Yakov Amihud, a finance professor at New York University's Stern School of Business."
Faculty News

Professor Robert Whitelaw discusses the global impact of China's financial markets

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Excerpt from Marketplace -- "'China is attempting to move from an investment-driven to a consumer-driven economy,' says Robert Whitelaw, professor of finance at NYU's Stern School of Business. 'And it’s not easy to do, because it has been investment-driven for so long.'"
Faculty News

Professor Nouriel Roubini is profiled

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Excerpt from Financial Times -- "Commentary on topical issues is grounded in realpolitik as much as economic analysis. He believes that Greece leaving the euro would be 'catastrophic' for the global economy because of the risk that Russia would extend its influence in the Balkans. 'It will not happen, because the consequences would be too terrible,' says the 57-year-old about Greece reaching an uneasy deal with its creditors to prevent it crashing out of the eurozone."
Faculty News

In an op-ed, Professor Arun Sundararajan discusses the implications of the growing "gig economy" for workers

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Excerpt from The Guardian -- "In many countries, key slices of the social safety net are tied to full-time employment with a company or the government. Although the broader socioeconomic effects of the gig economy are as yet unclear, it is clear we must rethink the provision of our safety net, decoupling it from salaried jobs and making it more readily available to independent workers."
Press Releases

Professor Kim Schoenholtz Named to Financial Research Advisory Committee of US Treasury’s Office of Financial Research

Kim Schoenholtz
Professor Kim Schoenholtz was named as a member of the Financial Research Advisory Committee (FRAC) of the US Treasury’s Office of Financial Research (OFR). The OFR, established as a result of the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act of 2010, created the committee to provide advice, recommendations, analysis, and information on topics including research methodologies, data management, and data standards.
Faculty News

Professor Arun Sundararajan argues that workplace benefits should be decoupled from employment

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Excerpt from PBS NewsHour -- "We’re sort of in a phase where– the model of providing a few hours at a time, or providing to multiple platforms may, in fact, be the most economically efficient one. ... To me, the humane thing isn’t to make everybody a full-time employee, but to extend the safety net to cover people who have alternative forms of work."
Faculty News

In a co-authored op-ed, Professor Joseph Magee discusses his research on the relationship between power and loneliness

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Excerpt from The New York Times -- "Our results revealed a sizable and statistically significant negative relationship between the two: The more powerful people perceived themselves to be in their everyday lives, the less frequently they reported feeling lonely."
Faculty News

Professor Joseph Foudy explains the benefits of Apple's expansion in China

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Excerpt from Yahoo! Finance -- "'Whether China grows GDP at 5% or 7% and hits a rough patch or dodges a recession, there are several hundred million people on the cusp of entering the middle class,' he says. Apple products sell well even in tougher economic times, Foudy adds. 'Spending on phones, it's just not like cars, consumer durables [or] things like vacations, which tend to rise and fall with the business cycle,' he says. 'Combine this with a Chinese preference for products that can serve as public signals of success and Apple is well positioned there for future growth.'"
Faculty News

Professor Vicki Morwitz's research on "pay what you want" pricing is featured

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Excerpt from HBS Working Knowledge -- "When faced with a decision on how to allocate resources between themselves and others, some people are 'pro-social,' meaning they are likely to value more equal distributions of resources, while others are 'pro-self,' meaning they try and maximize value for themselves. ... Santana explores these questions in a new working paper, Because We're Partners: How Social Values and Relationship Norms Influence Consumer Payments in Pay-What-You-Want Contexts, written with Vicki G. Morwitz, the Harvey Golub Professor of Business Leadership and Professor of Marketing at New York University's Stern School of Business."
Faculty News

Professor Jeffrey Carr on Newark Venture Partners' mission to turn Newark into a tech start-up hub

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Excerpt from Mashable -- "'It's one thing to put infrastructure together, it's another thing to get enough ventures around you where it suddenly starts to look like the place to go as opposed to someone having to be the pioneer to go,' says Jeffrey Carr, a business professor at New York University who focuses on entrepreneurship issues. 'There just is a huge hurdle for this kind of thing to work.'"