Faculty News

Professor Thomaï Serdari discusses the challenges Alessandro Bogliolo faces as the new CEO of Tiffany & Co.

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Excerpt from Global Finance -- "With new designs representing less than 10% of jewelry sales last year, accelerating the pace of product innovation will be key. 'Conventional strategies will not work,' says Serdari. 'Bogliolo must be as daring as when he was Diesel’s CEO and as proud as the Bulgari family has been. Not a small challenge, even for someone as capable as Bogliolo.'"
Faculty News

Professor Arun Sundararajan's congressional testimony before the US House Committee on Education and the Workforce is featured

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Excerpt from Inc. -- "Government policy, Sundararajan said, should favor business models that treat workers less as footloose labor and more as microbusinesses. 'We should really encourage those platforms that are inducing the creation of tiny businesses, where people are making pricing decisions, they are making inventory decisions, they are merchandising, they are building a brand through the online reputation system,' Sundararajan said."
Faculty News

Professor Baruch Lev's book, "The End of Accounting," is highlighted

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Excerpt from Nikkei Asian Review -- "In their book 'The End of Accounting,' professors Baruch Lev of New York University and Feng Gu of the State University of New York at Buffalo argue that stock prices are now about 50% determined by financial information such as profit and assets, compared with 80-90% until the 1980s."
Faculty News

Professor Richard Sylla explains how money and banking have evolved, from his book, "A History of Interest Rates"

Excerpt from Financial Sense -- "'We need to face these issues,' Sylla said. 'We do have to face up to some of these debt problems, and we've been lucky with these low interest rates... Maybe the outlook isn't so bad if we normalize interest rates and the economy keeps growing. I think that we would get back to more normal times instead of the interesting times we had for the last 40 years or so.'"
Faculty News

Professor Thomas Philippon and PhD student Germán Gutiérrez's joint research on competition and investment in US firms is featured

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Excerpt from Bloomberg View -- "The authors look at historical episodes where competition increased -- an unusual wave of new companies in the 1990s, and increased Chinese competition in the 2000s. In each situation, industries where competition increased more also tended to invest more. Again, this is consistent with the story that market power is holding back the U.S. economy. Gutierrez and Philippon have another paper where they test eight different economic theories to explain falling business investment, and find that market power -- along with corporate short-termism -- is the most likely explanation."
Faculty News

Professor Robert Seamans argues against a tax on robots

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Excerpt from CBC -- "Taxing robots is a particularly a bad idea in an era of low productivity growth, according to Robert Seamans, an associate professor of management at New York University. 'The existing empirical evidence suggests that robots boost productivity growth, so a tax on robots would limit that productivity,' he says."
Faculty News

Professor David Yermack is interviewed about bitcoin mines and security

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Excerpt from Missoula Independent -- "David Yermack, a professor of finance at New York University and bitcoin expert, says mining companies have no special reason for secrecy beyond 'standard security concerns.' Mine locations are usually dictated by access to cheap electricity (in Project Spokane's case, power is supplied by the Séliš Ksanka Ql'ispé Dam, according to Northwestern Energy documents posted online). 'Knowing the location of a bitcoin mine would not be particularly valuable information, except perhaps to potential competitors who might move to the area and try to exploit the same cheap sources of electricity,' Yermack says."
Faculty News

Professor Alexander Ljungqvist's research on public companies and investments is highlighted

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Excerpt from IR Magazine -- "The number of listed companies in the US hit a peak of 7,428 in 1996. In 2015 that figure had fallen to 3,754, according to data from Alexander Ljungqvist, director of the Salomon Center for the Study of Financial Institutions at NYU Stern."
Faculty News

Professor Aswath Damodaran shares his prediction for the iPhone 8's impact on Apple's valuation

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Excerpt from CNBC -- "'It continues to be a bet on the iPhone, with a great deal riding on how well the iPhone 8 does,' Aswath Damodaran, a professor of corporate finance and valuation at New York University's Stern School of Business, told CNBC in an email. 'If it does well, I think [Apple] will make the trillion dollar market cap,' he said. 'If the iPhone 8 does badly, all bets are off.'"
Faculty News

Professor Arun Sundararajan explains the strategy behind why Uber’s new CEO Dara Khosrowshahi mentioned a potential IPO his first day on the job

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Excerpt from Cheddar -- "'I think by saying that, 'I want to go public in 18-36 months'...what Dara is doing is re-insuring investors... The choice of Dara is very clearly a signal that investors are serious about taking Uber rapidly to profitability.'"
Faculty News

Professor Lawrence White is interviewed about the state of the automobile industry

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Excerpt from WalletHub -- "'The buyer should take his/her time and not be rushed. Shop around -- this includes shopping for financing, which means visiting local banks, credit unions, etc. Ask lots of questions.'"
Faculty News

Professor Gian Luca Clementi is interviewed about recent GDP results and comments on how federal policy uncertainty impacts the United States' economy

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Excerpt from Business Insider -- "Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin has said it will take up to two years for the economy to sustain this pace. But some economists have said the target is too high. That's partly because new technologies are not producing the same kind of productivity growth that they did before the Great Recession, said Gian Luca Clementi, an associate professor of economics at New York University’s Stern School of Business. 'If anything, President Trump has brought about a lot of policy uncertainty, and that is just bad news for the economy,' he told Business Insider."
Faculty News

Dean Peter Henry emphasizes the importance of a pro-immigration agenda in closing the United States' skills gap and driving economic growth

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Excerpt from CNBC -- "There was a bipartisan report in 2012 on economic recovery and jobs and competitiveness in the United States which told us that, by 2020, we were going to be 1.5 million skilled, college educated, workers short in the United States... So that suggests that you've got to do two things. One, you've got to grow those workers. You've got to find a way to create more educational ability within the country. But while you're trying to catch up on that front, you've also got to encourage immigration of skilled workers. And so, if you really want an agenda that's going to drive shared prosperity, a pro-immigration agenda is a pro-growth agenda."
Faculty News

Professor Thomas Philippon and PhD student Germán Gutiérrez's joint research on corporate investment is featured

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Excerpt from Bloomberg -- "Late last year, a study by a New York University professor, Thomas Philippon, and a graduate student, German Gutierrez, examined the reasons R&D spending has been weaker than expected since at least 2002 but plunged after the Great Recession.They found only three factors that at least mathematically appeared to correlate with the drop in R&D. One was an increase in index investors."
Faculty News

In an op-ed, Professor Amy Webb compares Skynet, the artificial intelligence network from the Terminator films, to President Trump

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Excerpt from the Los Angeles Times -- "Although Skynet was programmed to make decisions, it couldn’t learn how to interpret new kinds of data, especially if the information broke any of its established rules. So it is with our president, who operates with a retrograde understanding of modern warfare."
Faculty News

Professor Michael Spence comments on the impact of political tensions in Korea on its economy

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Excerpt from CNBC -- "'Both economies and markets have essentially assumed that this is a lot of noise,' [Spence] said. 'The worrying scenario is that there's rising risk that's not properly perceived.'"
Faculty News

Professor Arun Sundararajan discusses how artificial intelligence will impact the US economy in the future

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Excerpt from RT -- "'We're certainly going to see a great deal of advancement in convenience and in comfort because of artificial intelligence and robotics. Today's AIs are solving the problem of perception--being able to see what's around you and make sense of it, and of national language processing--being able to communicate like humans. And so across a wide range of both businesses and in the household, we're going to see a lot of convenience. But in many ways, every generation that has this kind of revolutionary for their time technology enjoys the same kinds of benefits.'"
Faculty News

Professor Arun Sundararajan discusses what to expect from Uber’s new CEO Dara Khosrowshahi

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Excerpt from Fast Company -- "[Improving the company's value is] likely what he’ll do for Uber, says Arun Sundararajan, professor at NYU Stern Business School and author of The Sharing Economy. 'My guess is that the board has brought him in as someone who can rapidly take them to short-term profitability,' he says."
Faculty News

Dean Peter Henry comments on the ​​state of the economy's recovery from the ​Federal Reserve's ​ Jackson Hole Economic Policy Symposium

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Excerpt from the Financial Times -- "Peter Henry, dean of NYU Stern School of Business, said: 'It is true that we have broader recovery than we have had in a very long time but keep in mind the recovery is still quite weak and tepid relative to what we have seen in the past. We are hearing central bankers essentially say to world leaders and lawmakers, "We have done our job and we need you to step up."'"
Faculty News

Professor Scott Galloway discusses the decline in traditional advertising by consumer brands

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Excerpt from the Financial Times -- "'There is one thing in common among the largest advertisers in the world: they’re all losing [market]share,' says Scott Galloway, professor of marketing at New York University’s Stern School of Business."
Faculty News

Professor Robert Seamans comments on Uber's leaked financial documents

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Excerpt from VICE -- "'In principle, a consumer who’s upset with Uber because of the investigation of sexual harassment or other issues could switch to Lyft or another competitor,' Seamans said. 'In practice, though, it looks like the switching costs for consumers is high enough that few actually do make the switch.'"
Faculty News

Professor JP Eggers discusses how Amazon will utilize brick-and-mortar space after its acquisition of Whole Foods

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Excerpt from Xinhua -- "'I think there's a recognition that the physical space that Whole Foods owned when Amazon makes the purchase is incredibly important both in terms of proximity to high-end consumers that are who Amazon is looking to attract, but also with the idea if they're looking to do more fresh delivery options that the warehousing space in most of those stores,' he said."
Faculty News

Professor Tensie Whelan underscores the impact businesses can have on society through their activism and engagement efforts

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Excerpt from Wharton Business Radio -- "I think business can play an incredibly important role. If you think about it, $22 trillion of the U.S. GDP is in business. $3 trillion is in government and NGO. So right there, in terms of the power business has, it's huge. And I think, as we've seen with the recent resignations from the President's council over his various remarks and actions, they can stand up. But they've stood up on others things: transgender issues, climate change issues. We have a coalition called 'We Mean Business' that has said, we're going to go ahead and have 60% of greenhouse gas emissions, no matter what the government does. We're going to really commit to what the Paris Accord laid out on our own."
Faculty News

Professor Arun Sundararajan explains why Walmart's partnership for voice-activated shopping with Google is a win-win for both

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Excerpt from Bloomberg -- "I think it's a really big threat because you're combining the AI and device power of Google with the largest stakes and retail expertise from Walmart. I think it's a win-win for both Walmart and Google."

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