Faculty News

Professor Masakazu Ishihara's research on video game pricing is referenced

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Excerpt from Seeking Alpha -- "In a study done by Masakazu Ishihara from New York University, it was found that as the price of new games increased, the average profits per game would fall by 10% while if title prices decreased, the average profits per game actually increased by 19%."
Faculty News

Professor Arun Sundararajan comments on MachineryLink Sharing, a rental website for farming equipment

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Excerpt from The Washington Post -- "Arun Sundararajan, a professor at New York University’s Stern School of Business, who will soon release a book about the sharing economy, said the approach has a lot of potential. 'The pure peer-to-peer rental model works well when you have high-value assets that aren't being utilized at capacity,' he explained. One of the reasons services like Airbnb and Uber have taken off is because they’ve let normal people make money from their biggest investments — their cars and homes, he said."
Faculty News

In a co-authored op-ed, Professor Jonathan Haidt offers a proposal for racial justice in higher education

Wall Street Journal logo
Excerpt from The Wall Street Journal -- “The U.S. has a serious problem with its academic pipeline. High-school graduation rates and the quality of academic preparation vary a great deal by race. Universities can’t draw from this broken pipeline and then hope to declare equality on campus, but they can be part of the effort to fix the problem.”
Research Center Events

NYU Teams Win $200K in the Stern School’s 2015-2016 Entrepreneurs Challenge

$200K Entrepreneurs Challenge Awards
At the conclusion of an eight-month competition, NYU’s most promising innovators received a combined $200,000 in start-up cash at the annual $200K Entrepreneurs Challenge, held by NYU Stern’s W. R. Berkley Innovation Lab (iLab). The four winning teams – composed of students, faculty and alumni from across the University – were chosen after pitching their ideas and enduring Q&A by judges from venture capital, technology and design, and social enterprise sectors.
Faculty News

Research Scholar Robert Frank's book, "Success and Luck," is mentioned

Bloomberg View logo
Excerpt from Bloomberg View -- "In his latest book, 'Success and Luck: Good Fortune and the Myth of Meritocracy,' he discusses how underappreciated the role of random chance is in our lives. Successful people tend to credit their skill, hard work and intelligence for their fortunate outcomes. Frank points out that for every big winner, there are scores of people who are as skilled, hard-working and intelligent, but came in just behind. The lack of a lucky break can be the difference between wild success and a near miss or worse."
Faculty News

Research Scholar Robert Frank discusses the role of luck in Donald Trump's career

Bloomberg logo
Excerpt from Bloomberg -- "I think Trump is very proud as he presents himself as a winner. Interestingly, several people have done the calculation that if he had taken the money that his father gave him--his father was, of course, a very wealthy man--and put it in a mutual fund, he would have more money today than he has today. So he was obviously very, very lucky. He's built some businesses. He's destroyed some businesses."
School News

The Ross Roundtable at NYU Stern is highlighted

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Excerpt from CFO -- "In early April, at a roundtable on materiality at the NYU Stern School of Business, the proposal drew fire from the accounting, legal, and investment professions, as well as a more moderate critique from the corporate side. Stanley Siegel, an emeritus professor at NYU Law School, blasted the notion of introducing legal definitions into the U.S. accounting system. 'Materiality has meanings in several different contexts … it doesn’t follow that what’s material for a criminal case is material for accounting,' he contended. 'We’re in a worrisome area when we attempt to apply one standard in another setting.'"
Faculty News

Lord Mervyn King's book, "The End of Alchemy," is featured

Bloomberg View logo
Excerpt from Bloomberg View -- "The way we do banking, King thinks, needs to change. As it turns out, he has a powerful idea for how to change it. 'The End of Alchemy' is about more than this one idea -- which doesn’t actually appear until roughly 250 pages into the book. To the idea itself he devotes 40 seriously interesting pages, and I have here only a few hundred words. But this idea is the heart of his book and worth telling people about."
Faculty News

Professor Aswath Damodaran explains the decreasing relevance of AAA credit ratings; Professor Holger Mueller's research on the financial crisis is cited

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Excerpt from Bloomberg -- "The mass desertion of the AAA reflects a larger truth about corporate finance: Company managers are strongly influenced by what their peers are doing, says Aswath Damodaran, a finance professor at NYU’s Stern School of Business. 'If everyone else is borrowing, you tend to borrow, too,' he says. ... Companies that loaded up on debt in the early to mid-2000s were more likely than others to fire workers once the 2007-09 recession hit, according to a National Bureau of Economic Research working paper issued last year. Weak balance sheets were 'instrumental in the propagation of shocks' during the crisis, Xavier Giroud of MIT’s Sloan School of Management and Holger Mueller of the Stern School of Business wrote in the report."
School News

A roundtable hosted by Stern's Center for Business and Human Rights is highlighted

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Excerpt from Ethisphere -- "'Having an external view of CSR helps, tremendously when designing strategies to address human rights,' said Ron Popper, head of Corporate Responsibility at the electrical engineering giant ABB, during a roundtable event at NYU Stern’s Center for Business and Human Rights. 'You need to consider expectations such as what do all the different stakeholders expect— the government expects companies to pay their taxes while investors want to see a robust risk management framework and civil society wants to make sure the company is not doing any harm.'"
Faculty News

Professor Lawrence Lenihan comments on the proliferation of online resale startup businesses

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Excerpt from Fashionista -- "'These are difficult, complicated and costly logistics businesses,' says Lawrence Lenihan, cofounder and co-CEO of fashion-focused venture operating firm Resonance Companies. 'Their customers love them for convenience and selection, but I'm not sure that there is a profitable sustainable business at the end of the journey. They seem to be trying to emphasize the high end of the market with watches and jewelry because the margins are the highest and the logistics cost per contribution margin are the lowest. But then they are [facing] a whole host of competition, including the brands themselves who have the credibility of physical presence along with new products.'"
Faculty News

Professor Arun Sundararajan's new book, "The Sharing Economy," is reviewed

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Excerpt from Strategy + Business -- "This smartphone-enabled, venture capital–fueled phenomenon cries out for a biography, a taxonomy, and an impact analysis. In The Sharing Economy, Sundararajan supplies all of those things. While much of the book will be familiar to someone who follows events in this world — he spends a good bit of time explaining how platforms such as Airbnb and Lyft actually work — it’s a useful and fundamentally optimistic attempt to explain where the sharing economy came from, and where it’s going."
Faculty News

Professor Tülin Erdem discusses price discounting in luxury retail

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Excerpt from Racked -- "'Luxury brands cannot "cheapen" their brands by frequent discounts and price promotions,' says NYU professor of business and marketing Tülin Erdem. 'It is inconsistent with their brand identity since if they do so their brand equity will be diluted. Most luxury brands have a sense of exclusivity and reflect a unique style, [and] too many people using these [discounts] will damage exclusivity and uniqueness.'"
Faculty News

Professor Aswath Damodaran discusses return on invested capital (ROIC) as a financial metric

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Excerpt from The Wall Street Journal -- "New York University finance professor Aswath Damodaran said ROIC is a lazy shortcut for executives, because companies should have visibility into the cash flowing from projects on a more granular basis. 'I could write a paper on perverse ways you could destroy your company by raising your ROIC,' he said."
Faculty News

In an op-ed, Professor Nouriel Roubini discusses a slowdown in global economic growth

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Excerpt from Project Syndicate -- "There are no politically easy solutions to the global economy’s current quandary. Unsustainably high debt should be reduced in a rapid and orderly fashion, to avoid a long and protracted (often a decade or longer) deleveraging process. But orderly debt-reduction mechanisms are not available for sovereign countries and are politically difficult to implement within countries for households, firms, and financial institutions."
Faculty News

Professor Stijn Van Nieuwerburgh discusses investment risks and the Sovereign Wealth Fund

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Excerpt from IPE Real Estate -- "Stijn Van Nieuwerburgh, part of the three-member expert group, thinks the government is rightly cautious about including unlisted infrastructure investment in the SWF [sovereign wealth fund]. 'Most of the investment needs for infrastructure are in the developing world, and that’s also where most of the risks are,' he says."
School News

"Callback," a film co-produced, co-written and starring MBA student Martin Bacigalupo, wins three awards at the Málaga Film Festival

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Excerpt from Euro Weekly News -- "Chilean actor and co-writer Martin Bacigalupo said when collecting his prize, 'This independent film has given me the opportunity to work with freedom to express through my character the things I wanted to say.'"
Faculty News

In an op-ed, Research Scholar Robert Frank explains why people often underestimate the role luck plays in their success

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Excerpt from The Atlantic -- "That we tend to overestimate our own responsibility for our successes is not to say that we shouldn’t take pride in them. Pride is a powerful motivator; moreover, a tendency to overlook luck’s importance may be perversely adaptive, as it encourages us to persevere in the face of obstacles. And yet failing to consider the role of chance has a dark side, too, making fortunate people less likely to pass on their good fortune."
Faculty News

Professor Alexander Ljungqvist's research on private and public company investments is cited

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Excerpt from Forbes -- "Brilliant research by economists from the Stern School of Business and Harvard Business School, Alexander Ljungqvist, Joan Farre-Mensa, and John Asker, entitled 'Corporate Investment and Stock Market Listing: A Puzzle?' compares the investment patterns of companies in the public sector and private sector. It turns out that the lag in investment is a phenomenon of the public firms, not the privately owned firms."
Faculty News

Professor Jason Greenberg's research on the influence of networks during an MBA job search is featured

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Excerpt from The Atlantic -- "In a paper that will soon be published in the journal Sociological Science, Greenberg and Fernandez write that the students were significantly more likely to accept jobs found through networking—done either through alums of their program or their own social connections—even if those jobs came with lower pay than offers arriving through more formal channels, like on-campus recruiting. The choice, the researchers suggest, may be driven by students’ interest in their own career development, and a belief that taking a job with more networking opportunities would give them a professional edge, even if it came at the cost of compensation."
School News

Ryan Fant (MBA '14) and Nayeem Hussain (MBA '14) appeared on Shark Tank for an update on their venture, Keen Home, founded at Stern

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Excerpt from ABC -- "...Also, an update on Ryan Fant and Nayeem Hussain from New York and Keen Home, their line of home enhancement products that Robert Herjavec invested in during season six."
Faculty News

Professor Arun Sundararajan discusses the evolution of the ridesharing market

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Excerpt from RT -- "The ride-sharing market has seen a lot of street firing, competitive tactics, even in the United States. A couple of years ago, we had Uber and Lyft booking--or allegedly booking--rides in each other's services to try and flood the network with a lot of demand. And so, I think you're seeing something similar play out in India now, where Uber is in a sort of heated competitive battle with the domestic giant Ola."
 
Research Center Events

The Eighth Annual Volatility Institute Conference

Eighth Annual NYU Stern Volatility Institute Conference logo
The Eighth Annual NYU Stern Volatility Institute Conference will bring together academics, practitioners and regulators to discuss the latest research and ideas on "Commodities and Emerging Market Risks."
Faculty News

Professor Vicki Morwitz comments on the increased attention surrounding retailers' deceptive pricing tactics

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Excerpt from Consumer Reports -- "For such illegal sales to stop, the regulations that govern sale prices will have to be improved—a slow process since pricing is regulated at the state level. Meanwhile, though, all the bad publicity and penalties could cause merchants to tone down their marketing tactics, says Vicki G. Morwitz, a marketing professor at New York University’s Stern School of Business."
Faculty News

Professor Jonathan Haidt discusses his research on how liberals and conservatives view each other

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Excerpt from Bloomberg -- "In a 2012 article, a trio of social psychologists found that liberals had a less accurate perception of the moral views of conservatives than conservatives had of liberals. One of the authors, Jonathan Haidt, suggests over email that liberals and conservatives increasingly view each other through the stereotypes that have traditionally divided city and country folk. The urban stereotype of the rural is that they’re mired in idiocy."

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