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Maria Bartiromo, with Suresh Sani, Undergraduate College Dean Geeta Menon and Professor Batia Wiesenfeld, was this year’s 2013 Sani Lecture keynote.
Business and Policy Leader Events

McKinsey’s Marla Capozzi & Professor Luke Williams Discuss Leadership & Innovation

As part of NYU Stern's Leadership Development Initiative, coordinated by the School's Leadership Development Team, Marla Capozzi, head of McKinsey & Company's Innovation practice, spoke with Luke Williams, executive director of Stern's Berkley Center for Entrepreneurship & Innovation, about how leaders can foster innovation.
Faculty News

Prof. Vicki Morwitz on JCPenney's pricing strategy

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Excerpt from MarketWatch -- "But using round numbers made J.C. Penney seem less like a discount store à la Target, which sells sports jackets at $49.99 instead of $50, experts say. 'A high-end restaurant will charge $32 for a steak because it makes it seem more luxurious than a steak for $31.99,' says Vicki G. Morwitz, a professor of marketing at the Stern School of Business at New York University.'"
Faculty News

Prof. Luis Cabral on austerity measures in Portugal

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Excerpt from The New York Times -- "'Luis Cabral, a Portuguese economist and professor at New York University, said the court still went beyond a legal ruling and delivered what amounted to 'a significant political statement,' which means that 'effectively, government expenditure cannot be reduced.' In terms of Portugal’s budgetary commitments, Mr. Cabral added, 'when you put it all together, it’s clear that things do not add up.'"
Faculty News

Prof. Robert Frank on proposed cuts to Social Security

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Excerpt from CNBC -- "'It's hard to see this as humane,' Frank said. 'Seniors are facing hardships economically with cost-of-living increases, especially in health care.'"
School News

FT reporter Gillian Tett interviews Paul Volcker and Sir John Vickers at Stern

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Excerpt from The Wall Street Journal -- "Speaking Monday at a panel at New York University’s Stern School of Business, Mr. Volcker conceded that fixing and restructuring the country’s complex financial system is 'a very difficult process… that’s not going to happen in a hurry.' That is because 'attitudes haven’t changed,' and politics have ensnared the drafting of some regulations. Three years ago, the Dodd-Frank omnibus reform measure, was signed into law."
Faculty News

Prof. George Smith on Alcoa Inc.'s growth

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Excerpt from Bloomberg -- "Alcoa grew at the beginning of the 20th century to dominate U.S. industry as an integrated monopolist alongside John D. Rockefeller’s Standard Oil and Andrew Carnegie’s U.S. Steel Corporation, according to George David Smith, a professor of business history at New York University’s Stern School of Business who has consulted for Alcoa."
Faculty News

Prof. Larry Zicklin on research in business schools

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Excerpt from the Financial Times -- "Yes, there is a place for research but it has to be kept in its place. It can’t be the criteria for hiring or promotion. Teaching ability should be the primary factor. Students are entitled to the best teachers that schools can secure, but not the best researchers. They don’t need the person who invents theoretical models to teach them those models. They need someone to teach them who is a good transmitter of information."
Student Club Events

2013 NYU African Economic Forum

On April 6, the Stern in Africa club (SIA) will host the 2013 NYU African Economic Forum, in partnership with NYU Africa House and The Council of Young African Leaders and Vital Voices.
Faculty News

Dean Peter Henry explains how developing countries have set an example for the US

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Excerpt from CNBC -- "Discipline does not mean fiscal austerity. Discipline means a sustained commitment to a pragmatic growth strategy that's both vigilant and flexible and values what's good for the country as a whole over any individual or interest group. And so when you look at it that way and you look at what developing countries have done, they have learned from the things that we've preached to them in the 1980s and 1990s and now if we would just take a look at countries like Brazil, Chile, South America to the countries of East Asia, there's a message there for us to basically take what we taught them and apply it at home and begin to start growing again and begin to get out of this period of low expectations and underperformance."
Faculty News

Dean Peter Henry discusses his new book, "Turnaround"

Excerpt from AtGoogleTalks -- "2002 - 2007 was a great period for the world economy. We're in a much less robust period. In 2012, the advanced nations of the world grew only 1.3% per year. Europe actually contracted. Europe's in a recession. Emerging economies still grew at 3.5%. So in the aftermath of the financial crisis from 2008-2009, from which we're still recovering, and very importantly, we know from work by a number of scholars including Carmen Reinhart and Ken Rogoff that countries recovering from financial crises, when financial crises are the cause of the recession, countries grow much more slowly...and that means we need emerging economies to continue to grow at rapid rates in order to pull along the advanced world."
Faculty News

Prof. Adam Alter is interviewed about his new book, "Drunk Tank Pink"

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Excerpt from NPR -- "In his new book Drunk Tank Pink Adam Alter, an assistant professor of psychology and marketing at NYU, explains how subtle cues, such as the sound of someone's name or the color of a room, can influence behaviors and thoughts."
Faculty News

Prof. Jonathan Haidt is interviewed about his book, "The Righteous Mind"

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Excerpt from CBS News -- "When I was a graduate student at the University of Pennsylvania in the late 1980s, I set for myself the task of trying to figure out what morality really is. Where does it come from? Why is it so variable around the world, yet at the same time, you see the same basic elements (such as reciprocity, care, loyalty, and authority) repeated over and over again? I studied how morality varied between India, the USA, and Brazil. But after John Kerry's loss to George W. Bush in the presidential election of 2004, the Charlottesville Democratic Association asked me to give a talk on how liberals and conservatives differ. I found that the ideas I had developed to compare different countries worked quite well to compare different sides of the political spectrum. After that talk, I decided to change my research to focus on the left-right divide, which was (and still is) tearing America apart. "The Righteous Mind" is my effort to explain that divide, while at the same time answering the question I set out to answer in grad school: what is morality, and where does it come from?"
Student Club Events

NYU Stern EEX Entrepreneurship Summit

Stern’s Entrepreneurs Exchange (EEX) is taking a new approach to how conferences work by arranging a series of "mini-treks" throughout the city, allowing attendees to leverage Stern’s location by visiting firms such as Warby Parker, ZocDoc, Foursquare, Betaworks, OpenSky, RebelMouse, Bitly, Fab.com, SinglePlatform, Sailthru and Iconic Hand Rolls.
Student Club Events

Passport Day 2013

Passport Day, organized by the Student Government International Committee, was held on Thursday, April 4 in Gould Plaza.
Faculty News

In an op-ed, Prof. Adam Alter explores the connection between names and personal characteristics

Excerpt from Science Friday -- "When Carl Jung, one of the most famous psychiatrists of the 20th century, once wondered why he was so fixated on the concept of rebirth, the answer arrived in a flash of insight: his name meant “young,” and from birth he had been preoccupied by the concepts of youth, aging, and rebirth."
Faculty News

Prof. Nouriel Roubini on economic growth in the US

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Excerpt from CNBC -- "In terms of comparing the US with Europe, with Japan, with the United Kingdom, US economic growth is better. Deleveragings occur faster, there is a housing recovery, there is the shell gas and oil revolution..."
Faculty News

Prof. Anindya Ghose on the new "Facebook Home" offering for Android phones

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Excerpt from the Los Angeles Times -- "Anindya Ghose, co-director of the Center for Business Analytics at New York University, said Facebook is reaching deeper into users' personal lives but that this is basically what social networks have done since they first bounded onto the scene. 'It's just the way things are,' he said."
School News

The systemic risk analysis from NYU Stern's Volatility Institute is featured

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Excerpt from the Washington Post -- "Systemic risk analysis of US financial institutions from the Volatility Institute of New York University's Stern School of Business: They have developed indexes that use public financial data to measure risk in the system, down to the level of individual firms."
Faculty News

Prof. David Yermack's research on price-fixing is cited

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Excerpt from Bloomberg -- "Companies that fix prices and hide it may be easier to spot than you think, according to researchers Tanja Artiga Gonzalez, Markus Schmid and David Yermack. Their analysis of 216 U.S. companies that between 1986 and 2010 attempted to obscure strong cash flows from “regulators, analysts, customers, and at times, even their own boards of directors” found consistent patterns, the three wrote in a March working paper published by the National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER)."
Faculty News

Prof. Nouriel Roubini's twitter feed will appear on Bloomberg's data service

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Excerpt from The New York Times -- "Rather, Bloomberg will show tweets from companies, chief executives and other news-makers, in addition to certain economists and financial bloggers. Mr. Rooney cited the economist Nouriel Roubini and Paul Kedrosky, the investor and blogger, as examples."
School News

Prof. Jamyn Edis’s and MBA student Jack Downey’s businesses are 2013 TechStars

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Excerpt from Business Insider -- "Today Chung announced the newest Techstars NYC class. According to Chung, nearly 1,700 startups applied to the program but only eleven were chosen – that's a 0.6% acceptance rate. Applications poured in from 460 cities, six continents and 66 countries. That's the highest number of applicants TechStars NYC has ever received."
Faculty News

Prof. Nouriel Roubini on the financial impact of Italy's political stalemate

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Excerpt from Bloomberg -- "Investors should be 'worrying much more about the political stalemate in Italy,' Nouriel Roubini, a professor at New York University, said at a conference in Uludag, Turkey, on March 30. 'Austerity fatigue may clash with the bailout fatigue.'”
Faculty News

Dean Peter Henry's interview in "The New York Times Magazine" is highlighted

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Excerpt from the Huffington Post -- "Emerging markets are driving global growth, and 3.5 billion people are moving to cities. That's $20 trillion of infrastructure to lay down. It's either a big problem or an opportunity."
Faculty News

Prof. Scott Galloway on the popularity of Moleskine notebooks

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Excerpt from Marketplace -- "As a technology professional, he may seem like an unlikely notebook enthusiast. But some of Moleskine’s most enthusiastic fans are digital natives. It’s something Scott Galloway, a marketing professor at New York University’s Stern School of Business, has noticed. Galloway has founded companies and meets often with tech execs. He says the older ones brandish iPads, perhaps hoping to look hip. 'The younger digital executives oftentimes show up with a notebook similar to the ones that this company is selling,' Galloway says."

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