Faculty News

Prof. Scott Galloway weighs in on the monetization of social media platforms

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Excerpt from Bloomberg TV -- "There's only really been one platform that I would argue has the most robust revenue model that's been able to charge their users, and that's LinkedIn. LinkedIn gets 53% of their revenue from the tools that recruiters use, 20% from people like you and me who want to InMail more people, and then 23% from advertising, so they're really the only platform that's been able to charge users."
Faculty News

Prof. Nouriel Roubini comments on Ben Bernanke's view of gold

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Excerpt from Bloomberg -- “'Bernanke was suggesting in his own way that too much importance is given to gold, it’s too hyped,' said Nouriel Roubini, professor of economics and international business at New York University. 'Gold is not a currency.'”
Faculty News

Prof. Jeffrey Carr on Fab.com's rapid growth

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Excerpt from Crain's New York -- "'It isn't possible to sustain the type of growth rate you see early on with startup companies, yet management grows up in an environment where they expect to,' said ­Jeffrey Carr, clinical professor of marketing and entrepreneurship at NYU Stern School of Business, noting that even big companies, such as Apple and Microsoft, can run into problems managing growth."
Faculty News

Prof. Aswath Damodaran discusses Interbrand's ranking of the world's top brand names

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Excerpt from Seeking Alpha -- "If you are an investor or even a corporate manager, you may believe that these brand name rankings matter little, since all they do is parse the value of a company into its component parts. These rankings do, however, raise interesting questions about the power of a brand name and how it manifests itself in earnings power and in value."
Faculty News

Profs. Asker and Ljungqvist's research on private vs. public company investments is featured

Excerpt from The Economist -- "A 2013 study found that publicly quoted companies where executive compensation is linked to the stockmarket invest considerably less than private firms and are less responsive to new investment opportunities. The authors state that 'our results are most consistent with the view that public firms’ investment decisions are affected by managerial short-termism.'”
Faculty News

In an op-ed, Prof. Vasant Dhar says IBM's Watson could be competition for Google

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Excerpt from WIRED -- "Watson is a thinking machine that needs supercomputers at the moment (this isn’t a theoretical requirement). Google is a retrieval machine with a scalable architecture of massive amounts of simple processors and storage. Together, these IT competencies would provide a formidable combination of a machine that can remember, know, and think. Interestingly, IBM has the capability—despite the reality that IT-based competencies are not easy to replicate—to assemble a “good enough” version of such a search engine. And while Google could probably build a Watson, it would take years to do so, and Google isn’t used to playing catch-up (not to mention this kind of approach goes against its DNA for how it thinks about search)."
Faculty News

NYU Stern's V-Lab and Prof. Robert Engle's research on systemic risk are cited

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Excerpt from Financial Times -- "The correlations between the shocks are time varying and modeled using the dynamic conditional correlation model of Engle (2002)."
Business and Policy Leader Events

Kenneth Langone Speaks to Langone MBA Students at Inaugural Speaker Series Event

Kenneth Langone (MBA ’60), founder and CEO of Invemed and co-founder of Home Depot, joined Langone MBA students for the inaugural 2013-2014 Langone Speaker Series event.
Faculty News

Prof. Scott Galloway discusses Twitter's IPO

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Excerpt from Bloomberg TV -- "I think these guys [at Twitter] have carved out a really nice niche for themselves, and again to go from 30 million to half a billion [in revenue] in three years? This is an impressive company. One of the things to mention: 2,000 employees. They've been hiring 50 people a month for the last three years."
Faculty News

Prof. Richard Sylla discusses Bitcoin as a digital currency

Excerpt from PBS -- "I'm like Warren Buffett. I don't buy something if I don't understand it. And for all I know, the person who created Bitcoins would be like King Henry VIII in Britain, who decided suddenly to double the amount of British money units around, and there was a big inflation."
Faculty News

Prof. Michael Spence discusses the importance of increasing domestic consumption in China

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Excerpt from China Daily -- "'The supply side shifts are important and necessary, but for China not sufficient. The demand and income side restructuring is also a key component,' [Spence] says. He agrees that there should not be major credit expansion to fuel consumption but higher domestic consumption is a fundamental part of rebalancing the economy."
Student Club Events

Professor Glenn Okun Invites MBA2s to Join the Amazon.com Innovation Competition

Hosted by the Entrepreneurs Exchange, the Amazon.com Innovation Competition challenges second-year MBA students to create an actionable product or service for Amazon.
Faculty News

Prof. Nicholas Economides discusses the impact of the government shutdown

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Excerpt from Bloomberg TV -- "There are spillover effects [from the government shutdown] on growth, especially in relatively weak areas these days such as Europe, but in the far east as well. So growth is going to slow down worldwide because of the government shutdown. And there is also the impending risk of the debt ceiling not being raised in time."
Faculty News

Author Malcolm Gladwell cites Adam Alter's book, "Drunk Tank Pink"

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Excerpt from The New York Times -- "The best science book I read was Adam Alter’s 'Drunk Tank Pink,' which is a really provocative look at how much our behavior is contextually determined."
Research Center Events

Stern's Urbanization Project Hosts a Conversation with Bill Bratton, CEO of Bratton Group LLC

As a part of the Conversations on Urbanization series held by NYU Stern’s Urbanization Project, Paul Romer, Director of the Urbanization Project, Director of the Marron Institute and Professor of Economics, spoke with Bill Bratton, who formerly served as chief of police of the Los Angeles Police Department, New York police commissioner and Boston police commissioner, in a public presentation on October 2.
Faculty News

Prof. Jonathan Haidt shares the presentations from Darwin's Business Conference

Excerpt from This View of Life -- "NYU Stern’s Business & Society Program and the Evolution Institute co-hosted a one-day symposium 'Darwin's Business: New Evolutionary Thinking About Cooperation, Groups, Firms, Societies' featuring an international roster of experts on evolution, economics, and human nature. Participants and audience members assessed the possible applications of evolutionary thinking for business and business ethics."
Faculty News

Prof. Lawrence White discusses the impact of the government shutdown

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Excerpt from Xinhua -- "If the U.S. government couldn't pay the obligations or at least not on time, the holders would not be sure if they want to continue to hold U.S. treasury bills, which could be really disruptive, said White."
Faculty News

Prof. Lawrence White discusses the impact of Japan's election on financial markets

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Excerpt from BBC Capital -- "'With an election, there's a lot of anticipation ahead of time,' said Lawrence White, professor of economics at New York University's Stern School of Business. 'Markets try to anticipate elections by looking at the polls and trying to anticipate the consequences of the future.'"
Faculty News

In an op-ed, Prof. Baruch Lev explains the impact the time of day has on earnings calls

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Excerpt from Harvard Business Review -- "We analyzed the earnings calls of 2,113 publicly held U.S. firms based in the Eastern and Central time zones from January 2001 to June 2007—a total of 26,585 calls. We used linguistic algorithms to measure positivity, negativity, and uncertainty during the Q&A. Tone grew more negative and less resolute as the morning progressed and improved slightly at midday, presumably because participants recharged at lunch. Negativity increased during the afternoon but fell off after the market’s closing bell—probably because the close reduced participants’ stress. Overall, calls originating late in the afternoon were more negative, irritable, and combative than calls made early in the morning, even after controlling for factors such as industry norms, financial distress, growth opportunities, and the news that companies were reporting."
School News

Executive MBA student Ellie Nieves is profiled

Excerpt from Hispanic Executive -- "Today, I am assistant vice president and senior counsel for The Guardian Life Insurance Company of America, a life insurance and financial services provider. As AVP and senior counsel, I develop and implement lobbying strategy for several issues, including life insurance, investments, dental, and federal health-care reform. I also provide regular briefings to senior executives on relevant legislative and political developments. I spend a lot of time on the road traveling to state capitols to meet with legislators and insurance regulators. With the support of Guardian, I recently enrolled in New York University’s executive MBA program where I plan to specialize in leadership. In my spare time, I host a women’s leadership podcast and I speak at women’s leadership events."
Faculty News

Prof. Johannes Stroebel's research on the impact of the 2009 Credit CARD Act was featured

Excerpt from CreditCards.com -- "The Credit CARD Act of 2009 succeeded in cutting fees for cardholders to the tune of about $20 billion per year -- without boosting interest rates or drying up the availability of credit, according to a new study based on 150 million accounts. 'We find that regulations to limit fees were highly effective,' said the authors of the working paper posted online Sept. 26 by the National Bureau of Economic Research."
Faculty News

Prof. Scott Galloway discusses innovation and large companies

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Excerpt from Bloomberg TV -- "Big companies typically don't want to disrupt themselves. I would argue both Steve Jobs and Ballmer were innovators. Constant product innovation that they were able to get a higher price. But the problem is when you raise your prices faster than inflation...you make yourself vulnerable to startups who will come in and give you a bad version of Word, in the Cloud, for free. Free is a really attractive price. Those disruptors go after the customers that Microsoft doesn't want and slowly start nipping at their heels and nipping at their shins and before they know it they're taking the whole torso into the great white shark of a disruptor. So both companies [Apple and Microsoft] are vulnerable to disruption."
Faculty News

Prof. Samuel Craig discusses brand partnerships with celebrities

Excerpt from Adweek -- "The increased visibility of social also amplifies the potential risk of such deals. For one, it raises the bar for what passes as a convincing celeb-marketer marriage, said Chris Raih, managing director of Los Angeles agency Zambezi, which this summer launched a Popchips ad starring Katy Perry (an investor and creative partner in the company). Or a brand may find itself entangled in a fiasco on the scale of the Mountain Dew-Tyler, the Creator dustup, the Rick Ross lyrics controversy or the Paula Deen meltdown. Still, 'it doesn’t happen that often,' said C. Samuel Craig, professor of marketing at NYU’s Stern school, plus brands can usually distance themselves quickly."

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