Faculty News

Professor Vicki Morwitz shares advice for Black Friday shoppers

WalletHub logo
Excerpt from WalletHub -- "Consumers need to be aware that while these deep discounts are often very good, they are offered to lure customers into the store with the hope that once they are there they will buy more. So, consumers should plan and be disciplined about what they want to buy and where they want to buy it and have done their homework before on who offers the best prices for the items they want to buy. Consumers who go after these deals should have a back up plan made ahead of time of what they will do if they are not one of the lucky ones to get the deal."
Faculty News

Professor Robert Engle shares his views on the UN talks addressing climate change

The Atlantic logo
Excerpt from The Atlantic -- "'It’s not a very well informed debate,' said Robert Engle, a professor of finance at New York University’s Stern School of Business and a Nobel Laureate in economics. 'Ultimately there are going to be enormous costs involved. The costs to business and society I think are likely to be enormous. Even so far as saying that life as we know it can’t survive, that’s the ultimate risk.'"
Faculty News

Professor Priya Raghubir evaluates Hallmark's unique video ad campaign

ABC News logo
Excerpt from ABC News -- "Priya Raghubir, marketing department chair at New York University's Stern School of Business, said the ads made her 'laugh out loud.' 'I was surprised because ... Hallmark’s commercials are annoyingly sweet,' she told ABC News. 'I wouldn’t expect this from Hallmark. The company is making fun of its own stereotype, this picture-perfect world.'"
Faculty News

Professor Vasant Dhar comments on new research connecting television viewership and presidential election outcomes

Newsroom America logo
Excerpt from Newsroom America -- "'This very interesting research demonstrates the prediction of election outcomes at the state and county levels based on an analysis of television viewership across the country,' says Big Data Editor-in-Chief Vasant Dhar, Professor at the Stern School of Business, New York University. 'The results from the predictive model provide useful insights into some of the major drivers that drove 2012 election results. It will be very interesting to see the model applied to the 2016 elections.'"
Faculty News

In a co-authored op-ed, Professor Thomas Philippon offers a financial solution for Europe to secure its borders

Bloomberg View logo
Excerpt from Bloomberg View -- "Ironically, the solution to Europe’s immigration crisis is of the kind that Europe could not reach during the euro crisis: the issuing of security and mobility bonds (SMBs). These bonds offer the kind of financial engineering, macroeconomic policy and political economy Europe needs to mobilize collective resources and fund its immigration policy while preserving open internal borders."
 
Faculty News

NYU Global Research Professor Ian Bremmer discusses how Europe is dealing with the Islamic State in Syria

Bloomberg logo
Excerpt from Bloomberg -- "There's no question that French government first and foremost is having a much harder time dealing with this than they did after the Charlie Hebdo attacks in January. That's probably the biggest takeaway. Three months guaranteed of state of emergency, coming into Christmas season. It's going to hurt the economy. It's going to hurt Hollande."
Faculty News

Professor Nouriel Roubini comments on the future of China's economy

CNBC logo
Excerpt from CNBC -- "We're not going to have a global recession because China is going to be able to avoid a hard landing. Therefore, the stock market is going to go up there. Their currency is going to be stable. And therefore, it's not going to be a contagion to other emerging markets."
Faculty News

In a co-authored op-ed, Professor Natalia Levina discusses her research on IT outsourcing

MIT Sloan Management Review logo
Excerpt from MIT Sloan Management Review -- "Today’s rapid pace of technological change has fundamentally transformed global IT outsourcing. Traditionally viewed as a cost-saving measure, IT outsourcing is increasingly leveraged as a strategic tool for acquiring cutting-edge innovation. Many companies are expanding their portfolios of IT suppliers to include smaller, highly innovative companies. This pursuit of emerging technologies and capabilities, however, has elevated the complexity of managing supplier portfolios. The outsourcing practices that companies have been maturing in the past decade are under a new level of duress. Today, organizations need to reimagine IT outsourcing strategies in increasingly turbulent business environments."
School News

In a speech at Stern, Housing and Urban Development Secretary Julián Castro discusses the Federal Housing Administration's decision to lower mortgage costs

Wall Street Journal logo
Excerpt from The Wall Street Journal -- "In a speech on Monday, HUD Secretary Julián Castro said he believed the FHA’s decision to lower mortgage costs this year contributed to the rapid growth in home prices and sales. 'Today, the housing market is better off because of our actions,' Mr. Castro said."
Business and Policy Leader Events

Secretary Julián Castro, US Department of Housing & Urban Development, Delivered Policy Speech at NYU Stern

Julian Castro
US Department of Housing and Urban Development Secretary Julián Castro delivered an economic and housing policy speech at NYU Stern.  As part of his remarks, Secretary Castro discussed the overall housing market recovery under the Obama Administration and shared highlights of the Federal Housing Administration’s (FHA) 2015 Annual Report to Congress.
Faculty News

Professors Laura Veldkamp and Vaidyanathan Venkateswaran's research on the financial crisis and economic growth is featured

Business Insider logo
Excerpt from Business Insider -- "'This recession has been more persistent than others because it was perceived as an extremely unlikely event,' wrote the economists in a new study. 'Observing the crisis in 2008-09 caused agents to re-estimate macro risk. For example, in 2006, no one raised the possibility of financial panic. Today, the question of whether the financial crisis might repeat itself arises frequently and option prices continue to reflect heightened tail risk (defined as the probability of large adverse shocks).'"
Faculty News

Professor Scott Galloway discusses Bang & Olufsen's $80,000 speaker system

Boston Globe logo
Excerpt from The Boston Globe -- "'A Ferrari costs 10 times as much as a good car, and 7,000 people make that purchase each year. You can get great speakers for a 100th of $80,000,' [Galloway] said. 'I don’t doubt these are better speakers, but are they 100 times better?'"
Faculty News

Professor Aswath Damodaran explains why he would not invest in Amazon

CNBC logo
Excerpt from CNBC -- "I'll tell you the two ways you can justify investing in Amazon and then I'll tell you why I would not invest in either. The first is to think of it as a trade. You buy at $625, you sell at $650, you're going to make money. And if the momentum in the stock carries it forward, you're going to make money. Forget about value; play it as a pricing game. The other is, there is a story out there that you can actually use to get to $625. It's a plausible story. It's a story where Amazon dominates three different businesses: the retail business, the entertainment business and the cloud-computing business. And you could get to $625. And if that's the reason you're investing in Amazon, then all the more power to you. From my perspective, though, the odds of that story unfolding are low, so as an investor, I'm not that interested in Amazon. I love it as a company, but as an investment, it's not for me."
Faculty News

Professor Roy Smith explains why Europe's banks are cutting jobs in Latin America

Bloomberg logo
Excerpt from Bloomberg -- “'All large European banks are under great pressure from regulatory changes and low stock prices to change their business models,' Roy Smith, a finance professor at New York University’s Stern School of Business, said in an e-mail. 'These changes have to be quite significant to make enough difference.'”
Faculty News

Professor Joseph Foudy evaluates China's five-year national development plan

Xinhua logo
Excerpt from Xinhua -- "'I think in the short term the GDP could get worse, [and] the process of rebalancing could actually be painful, but a short-term pain to make the country healthier and more vibrant in the future,' said Foudy."
Faculty News

Professor Michael Spence's co-authored op-ed on the Federal Reserve's monetary policy is highlighted

The Economist logo
Excerpt from The Economist -- "On October 26th, an op-ed in the Wall Street Journal by Michael Spence and Kevin Warsh, both of Stanford University, argued that the Federal Reserve’s $3 trillion bond-buying programme, which was designed to push down long-term rates and boost corporate borrowing, has actually caused business investment to fall. The authors write that the Fed’s unconventional policies to expand the money supply, known as quantitative easing (QE), have made short-term financial assets like stocks and bonds more appealing as their capital value increases, thereby diverting capital from more productive longer-term investments in the 'real economy'. The result has been low investment growth, weak productivity, and stagnant wages."
School News

MBA student Vishal Thummalapally interviews his Stern classmates Leah Shisha & Isha Vij, co-founders of Caper

Techday News logo
Excerpt from TechDay -- "We realized that what’s already out there isn’t what we would want, or what our friends want. Bachelorette parties should be truly unique and special, and reflective of the person getting married. That’s when we realized there’d be a true opportunity here."
Faculty News

Professor Russell Winer discusses the backlash against Starbucks' red cups

The New York Times Logo
Excerpt from The New York Times -- "'I think it’s just become wildly overblown because everything gets wildly overblown today,' Professor Winer said. 'The total amount of attention that Starbucks gets and the reaction to it is something that could, in fact, work in their favor.'"
Business and Policy Leader Events

Billions to Bust and Back: How I Made, Lost and Rebuilt a Fortune

Thor Björgólfsson
NYU Stern's Office of Alumni and Development Relations will host Author Thor Björgólfsson (BS '91) in a conversation with Matthew Bishop, US Business Editor of The Economist. 
Faculty News

Professor Richard Sylla explains why the US should not tie its currency to gold

Marketplace Logo
Excerpt from Marketplace -- "'Gold isn't produced fast enough to keep up with the growth of the economy,' said Richard Sylla, professor of economics at New York University."
Faculty News

Professor Aswath Damodaran discusses Silicon Valley valuations and Fidelity's investment in Snapchat

Bloomberg logo
Excerpt from Bloomberg -- "I don't think an outfit like Fidelity has any business being in this space, to be quite honest. I don't think they know how to play the pricing game and I think when you get these public company investors in private spaces, you're really asking for trouble."
School News

Veterans Week at Stern is highlighted

Clear Admit logo
Excerpt from Clear Admit -- "This week at NYU Stern, the Military Veterans Club is hosting its inaugural NYU Stern Veterans Week, which will include a 'variety of events for the Stern community such as an MBA veterans Q&A panel where Sternies can ask us about our military experiences, a bootcamp workout session, and a guest speaker event featuring a retired two-star general officer.'"
Faculty News

Professor Alvin Lieberman explains Netflix's creation of its own movies

WIRED logo
Excerpt from WIRED -- "'The moment that they began making their own films they had to recognize that they were without many opportunities to pursue international business,' says Alvin Lieberman, executive director of the Entertainment, Media, and Technology Initiative at NYU’s Stern School of Business. After all, most major film studios now make more money from international markets than the United States, and have adjusted the development process to accommodate that change."
Faculty News

NYU Global Research Professor Ian Bremmer identifies the largest geopolitical threats to the economy worldwide

Bloomberg logo
Excerpt from Bloomberg -- "The first thing I came up with for right now has got to be the refugee crisis in Europe. I mean, we've got some 5 million nearly refugees coming just from Syria. Only 6% made it to Europe thus far. A lot more are coming. The ability of the Europeans to integrate these people is virtually nil. The cultural backlash. The populism that comes in the European capitals as a consequence."
School News

In an op-ed, David Segall, Policy Associate at Stern's Center for Business and Human Rights, discusses the rights violations of urban development workers in the Gulf region

Fair Observer logo
Excerpt from Fair Observer -- "In many ways, the current situation is a classic case of collective action failure. No one stakeholder wants to take initiative unless others also commit to taking the plunge. In the case of the Gulf, the cultural, sports and academic institutions that sponsor some of these projects—often based in developed countries—claim that they have no authority over GCC (Gulf Cooperation Council) policies."

Archive