Faculty News

Prof. David Yermack on rumors that Timothy Geithner could join Citigroup's C-suite

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Excerpt from Fox Business -- "Geithner’s 'lack of any experience whatsoever in the private sector is just a huge handicap,' said Yermack. 'Despite his political connections, he seems pretty unqualified to run a big bank.' Yermack also said Geithner’s relationships with other government officials could raise questions about how Citi would be regulated going forward, preoccupying the board and Geithner himself."
Faculty News

Prof. Arun Sundararajan on government regulation of the online "sharing economy"

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Excerpt from WIRED -- "...today’s internet is not just for sharing information and commerce and things: It’s now the internet for sharing and accessing real-world services. We may call it the “sharing” economy (its philosophical roots are in peer-to-peer), but the services in it aren’t free or reciprocal – these are real markets in which you pay for what you get. However, this doesn’t mean we need to regulate it with the structures and rules of the real world. It’s a mistake to assume that just because technology provides “new leverage for old behaviors” that we need old ways of regulating new things."
Faculty News

Prof. Richard Sylla recalls 1987's Black Monday

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Excerpt from Fox Business -- "'It was chaos. People who were in the markets were shell-shocked,' said Richard Sylla, an economics professor and financial historian at NYU. 'If you were lucky enough to get through on the phone to your broker, you didn’t really know what happened. Your order was behinds hundreds and thousands of other transactions.'"
Faculty News

Prof. William Silber's book, "Volcker: The Triumph of Persistence," is reviewed

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Excerpt from The New York Times -- "The global financial crisis destroyed reputations as effectively as it destroyed wealth. Alan Greenspan, Robert E. Rubin, Sanford I. Weill, Richard S. Fuld Jr., James E. Cayne — the list of the humbled is almost endless, while the number of heroes is minuscule. One man, however, bucked the trend and almost alone emerged from the crisis even more revered and admired than he had been already. And now, with the arrival of 'Volcker: The Triumph of Persistence,' Paul A. Volcker has finally been awarded a meticulous historical account of exactly how he reached his exalted position."
Faculty News

Prof. Bryan Bollinger's research on solar panels is featured

Excerpt from R&D Magazine -- "They calculated that 10 extra installations in a zip code increase the probability of an adoption by 7.8%. If there is a 10% increase in the total number of people with solar panels in a zip code—the 'installed base'—there will be a 54% increase in the adoption of solar panels. 'These results provide clear evidence of a statistically and economically significant effect,' says Bryan Bollinger, the other co-author and assistant professor of marketing at New York University Stern School of Business."
Business and Policy Leader Events

Prof. Richard Sylla Rings NYSE Closing Bell with others from Museum of American Finance

Prof. Richard Sylla Rings NYSE Closing Bell with others from Museum of American Finance
Student Club Events

Stern Investment Management and Research Conference

"This year’s Stern Investment Management and Research (SIMR) Conference is themed, “A Rising Tide Lifts All Boats. Where to Invest in an Increasingly Correlated World.” Confirmed speakers include Edward Kerschner, CFA; David M. Siegel, co-founder of Two Sigma Investments; Kian Ghazi, founder, managing partner and portfolio manager of Hawkshaw Capital Management; and Shelley Greenhaus, principal at Whippoorwill Associates."
Faculty News

An op-ed by Associate Dean Raji Jagadeesan on the need for a foreign investment framework

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Excerpt from Quartz -- "A significant portion of China’s estimated $1 to 2 trillion of foreign investment will likely enter the US and other developed nations in the next decade. Now is the moment to think seriously about creating a multilateral framework for foreign direct investment."
Faculty News

An op-ed by Prof. Roy Smith on the resignations of Citigroup's CEO and COO

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Excerpt from Financial News -- "Evidently O’Neill, a former Marine and respected career banker who successfully turned around a distressed Bank of Hawaii, had become impatient after serving on the Citigroup board for three years and was ready to force some real changes. His election as chairman of the board, replacing Richard Parsons, last April finally signified the end of the Sandy Weill era at Citigroup."
Press Releases

Prof. Ed Altman Testifies for the American Bankruptcy Institute’s Hearings on Bankruptcy Reform

Edward Altman, the Max L. Heine Professor of Finance at NYU Stern and an esteemed bankruptcy scholar for nearly five decades testified at the Loan Syndications & Trading Association conference in New York City for the American Bankruptcy Institute’s Hearings on Reform of the Bankruptcy Code.
Faculty News

Profs Bernard Donefer and Roy Smith on accountability in high-frequency trading

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Excerpt from Reuters -- "Roy Smith, a professor at New York University Leonard N. Stern School of Business, said the existing securities and commodities laws provide legal standards for prosecuting executives who provide false and misleading information. The challenge is showing the executive’s intent, he said."
Faculty News

Prof. William Silber is interviewed on his book, "Volcker: The Triumph of Persistence"

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Excerpt from CBS News -- "I felt a responsibility to my students to explain who Paul Volcker was and why every central banker since is in his debt."
Faculty News

An op-ed by Research Scholar Robert Frank on the perils of income inequality

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Excerpt from The New York Times -- "In short, the economist’s cost-benefit approach — itself long an important arrow in the moral philosopher’s quiver — has much to say about the effects of rising inequality. We need not reach agreement on all philosophical principles of fairness to recognize that it has imposed considerable harm across the income scale without generating significant offsetting benefits."
School News

The Berkley Center’s Lean Startup Machine workshop, part of the Entrepreneurs Challenge, is featured

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Excerpt from Forbes -- "While most NYU students probably set out to enjoy the lovely October sunshine this past weekend, a select few with particular drive gathered at the Stern School of Business to partake in the Lean Startup Machine, the most intensive workshop arranged by the Berkley Center so far this fall."
Business and Policy Leader Events

Trust Possible

NYU Stern alumni and students filled Paulson Auditorium on October 15 to hear Professor William Silber discuss his newly published biography of Paul Volcker, “Volcker: The Triumph of Persistence.”
Business and Policy Leader Events

A Discussion of VOLCKER: The Triumph of Persistence

On October 15, 2012, NYU Stern's Development and Alumni Relations Office and the Center for Global Economy and Business will host a discussion of Professor William Silber's book, "VOLCKER: The Triumph of Persistence.
Faculty News

An op-ed by Prof. Michael Spence on the resilience of emerging markets

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Excerpt from Project Syndicate -- "The major emerging economies were the world’s main growth engines following the eruption of the financial crisis in 2008, and, to some extent, they still are. But their resilience has always been a function of their ability to generate enough incremental aggregate demand to support their growth, without having to make up for a large loss of demand in developed countries. A combination of negligible (or even negative) growth in Europe and a significant growth slowdown in the United States has now created that loss, undermining emerging economies’ exports."
Faculty News

An op-ed by David Backus and Kim Schoenholtz on the euro crisis

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Excerpt from The Huffington Post -- "First, flaws in the design and implementation of the EMU have made the crisis worse. Second, the decentralized decision-making process of the EU, with political power concentrated in countries rather than Europe, makes effective crisis management nearly impossible."
School News

Dean Peter Henry authors FT "Dean's Column" with op-ed on Nobel Laureate Sir Arthur Lewis

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Excerpt from Financial Times -- "Lewis never taught in a business school, but his dedication to a life of scholarship and public engagement reminds us what is possible when we bind the pursuit of knowledge to the search for pragmatic solutions."
School News

Student & former air force pilot Wendy Swart in trend story on female veterans in EMBA programs

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Excerpt from Financial Times -- "Mindful she would not be considered for a management job at Delta without a business degree, she decided to study for an executive MBA. 'I was aware of the ‘GI Bill’ [the Post-9/11 Veterans Educational Assistance Act of 2008] and wanted to explore other opportunities,' says Swart, who is set to graduate from New York University’s Stern School of Business in January."
Faculty News

An op-ed by Prof. Nouriel Roubini on QE3

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Excerpt from Project Syndicate -- "The United States Federal Reserve’s decision to undertake a third round of quantitative easing, or QE3, has raised three important questions. Will QE3 jump-start America’s anemic economic growth? Will it lead to a persistent increase in risky assets, especially in US and other global equity markets? Finally, will its effects on GDP growth and equity markets be similar or different?"
Faculty News

An op-ed by Gian Luca Clementi on Italy's economy

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Excerpt from The Huffington Post -- Translated from Italian using Google Translate: "In the period 1990-2009, gross domestic product per capita Italian (real, that is, correcting for inflation) grew at an average of 0.6 percent per year. In other words, in less than twenty years, GDP per capita grew by only 11% (Bank of Italy)."
Student Club Events

27th Annual AHBBS Conference

The 27th Annual AHBBS Conference, hosted by the NYU Stern Association of Hispanic & Black Business Students (AHBBS) is themed, “Leadership Through Innovation: Creating a Career of Opportunity and Choice.”
Research Center Events

NYU Stern Salomon Center Holds Event on The Role of Private Equity in the US Economy

A conference jointly sponsored by the Federal Reserve Bank of New York and the NYU Stern Salomon Center.  This conference aims to promote a better understanding of the role of private equity in the US economy, including real economic effects of private equity transactions and economic welfare implications.
Research Center Events

NYU Stern Hosts Panel Discussion on Europe’s Economic and Financial Future

On Thursday, October 11, 2012, NYU Stern co-hosted, with the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the Republic of Poland, a panel discussion on Europe’s Economic and Financial Future with Commissioner Janusz Lewandowski, Member of the European Commission, Financial Programming and Budget.

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