Faculty News

MBA student Michelle Hyjek blogs about the insights gained in Stern's Inclusive Leadership course

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Excerpt from the Forté Foundation blog -- "Being an efficient, high performer is crucial but will only get you so far. Cultivating relationships and building advocates in the workplace is where you truly establish value and position yourself to be indispensable."
Faculty News

Professor Paul Romer's research on innovation and productivity growth is featured

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Excerpt from The Wall Street Journal -- "Mr. Romer’s breakthrough was to identify the unique characteristics of ideas, information and knowledge to growth: Unlike a machine or a worker, an idea, once conceived, can be reproduced and shared endlessly for free. The determinant of growth then is both how many ideas a society creates, and how quickly and efficiently they are distributed. The printing press, telegraph and universal education were all formidable innovations in the production and dissemination of ideas. Today, the computer, Internet, open-source collaboration and urbanization offer staggering potential for generating new ideas."
Faculty News

Professor Michael Spence's comments on the global economy at the World Economic Forum in Davos are featured

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Excerpt from the Financial Times -- "According to Nobel laureate Professor Michael Spence of the Stern School of Business at New York University, “[the economy] is a fragile and deteriorating situation globally, with little in the way of effective counter-measures'."
Faculty News

In an op-ed, NYU Global Research Professor Ian Bremmer explains why Christine Lagarde should be re-elected as managing director of the IMF

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Excerpt from Project Syndicate -- "When Lagarde took the helm in July 2011, she inherited an institution in crisis. The global financial meltdown in 2008 and its economic aftershocks had discredited Western-led multilateral lenders and the free-market 'Washington Consensus.' Lagarde’s leadership has helped to restore the Fund’s reputation."
School News

MBA student Micah Goldfus blogs about his experience in Stern's Inclusive Leadership course

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Excerpt from the Forté Foundation blog -- "My nonprofit friends and colleagues have gently teased me about being a business school student, claiming I have traded empathy and advocacy for cost-benefit analyses. However, I have to say that (as I expected), business school students and professors care very much about the same equality and equity issues as my peers in nonprofit careers. My classmates want to work with people with different backgrounds and opinions, and they want to use business to solve complex societal problems. In addition, numerous professors have discussed how we can use our education to better those who are less fortunate than we are."
Faculty News

Professor Joseph Foudy discusses the recent decrease in oil prices

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Excerpt from CCTV -- "'It’s really just a combination of supply and demand factors. On the demand side, from China, we just see much lower demand for oil than was expected. At the same time, the U.S. and Europe are getting more efficient. And that’s basically run head into increasing supply in the Middle East. We’re now looking at Iran being fully open with all the sanctions being lifted, and it's just the perfect storm for oil prices,' said Professor Joseph Foudy, NY University Stern School of Business."
Faculty News

Professor Thomaï Serdari discusses the impact of discounted prices on luxury brands

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Excerpt for Business of Fashion -- "... Luxury megabrands have not been shy about the opportunity, investing heavily in both their own outlet stores and partnerships with off-price retailers. ... But for brands that rely on marketing their products as exclusive, offering items for up to 50, 60 or even 70 percent less than retail price can seriously undermine the perceived value of their products, says Serdari."
Faculty News

Professor Robert Salomon predicts less M&A activity in the coming year

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Excerpt from Fox Business -- "'With greater volatility around the globe, in China and emerging markets, for example, deal volumes will go down as dealmakers go into "risk off’ mode," Salomon predicted."
Faculty News

Professor Xavier Gabaix's research on financial markets is cited

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Excerpt from the Financial Times -- "No mainstream economic forecaster is predicting a recession this year. But this is little comfort because they have consistently failed to forecast recessions. This might be because they are inherently unpredictable. New York University’s Xavier Gabaix has shown that they can arise from failures of important big companies..."
Faculty News

Professor Aswath Damodaran's forecasts for financial markets are highlighted

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Excerpt from The Globe and Mail -- "'... Consider Aswath Damodaran, a professor of finance at New York University and widely followed expert on market valuation. He has generally been bullish on stocks, and continues to be somewhat positive, but cautioned last week that U.S. companies are now returning more cash to investors in the form of dividends and buybacks than the businesses collectively earn – a clearly unsustainable trend. 'I am more wary about equities going into 2016 than I was entering 2015,' he wrote."
 
Faculty News

Professor Richard Sylla discusses the temporary shutdown of China's stock market

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Excerpt from CNNMoney -- "America almost had its own market meltdown like what China is experiencing. During the panic of 1907, the head of the New York Stock Exchange wanted to shut the market down. The only reason he didn't was because John Pierpont Morgan (aka J.P. Morgan) was right across the street and told him that it would be a terrible idea and cause more panic, says Sylla."
Faculty News

Professor Paul Wachtel shares his predictions for China's economic future

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Excerpt from CBS -- "'It's most likely that the Chinese will continue to be drawn to U.S. real estate, both commercial and residential,' Wachtel said. 'You're going to see many billions of dollars flowing into the U.S. as we remain the one safe haven compared to the slower growth in Europe and the considerable weakness in the emerging markets.'"
Faculty News

Professor Arun Sundararajan comments on new research findings about Uber and New York City traffic

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Excerpt from The Wall Street Journal -- "'If anything, [the research] findings seem to be as favorable as Uber or Lyft might have wanted them to be,' said Arun Sundararajan, a New York University business school professor who was solicited for advice in the city’s study."
 
Faculty News

Professor Jeffrey Simonoff's research on Oscar nominations is referenced

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Excerpt from The Boston Globe -- "Another study published in 1999 by the Stern School of Business at New York University found that movies that debut on 10 or fewer screens can expect an Oscar-nomination bump that would boost sales by about 250 percent, while movies that open on more than 10 screens can expect a 30 percent boost."
Faculty News

In an in-depth interview, Professor Vasant Dhar discusses robots as investment decision makers

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Excerpt from O'Reilly Data Show -- "One of the things I did was to break up the investment landscape into three different types of holding periods. On the one hand, you have high-frequency trading, and on the other extreme, you have very long-term investing. In high-frequency trading, your holding periods are sort of minutes to a day. In very long-term investing, your holding periods are months to years, that Warren Buffett style of investing. Then there’s sort of a space in the middle, which is the part I find most interesting, where there’s a lot of action, which is sort of days to weeks holding period. … The strategy one uses for these different horizons tends to be very different. In the high-frequency trading space, for example, humans don’t really stand a chance against computers, there’s just so much information."
Faculty News

In an op-ed, NYU Global Research Professor Ian Bremmer outlines the factors influencing China's financial markets

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Excerpt from TIME -- "A surprise currency devaluation and continued downward drift in the value of the yuan against the dollar have investors concerned that some of China’s trade partners will have to devalue their own currencies to avoid losing a competitive commercial advantage. That could trigger a currency war that would ravage global trade."
Faculty News

In an op-ed, Professor Nouriel Roubini argues that unconventional monetary policy led to abnormal patterns of economic growth worldwide

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Excerpt from TIME -- "The world economy has had a rough start in 2016, and it will continue to be characterized by a new abnormal: in the behavior of growth, of economic policies, of inflation and of key asset prices and financial markets."
Faculty News

Professor Richard Sylla is interviewed about the history of the lottery

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Excerpt from Bloomberg -- "Lotteries have long been a form of public financing and the museum has tickets from the Revolutionary and early Federal era in its collections, said Richard Sylla, the [Museum of American Finance's] chairman. He said his dorm at Harvard was built in the early 1800s partly with lottery money."
Faculty News

Professor Irving Schenkler predicts that Chipotle's stock price will rebound

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Excerpt from MarketWatch -- "'They are very lucky to have built up a reservoir of trust over time,' agrees Schenkler, at NYU. 'They have reputational capital, which gives them a well of goodwill. So once media coverage erodes, things will get back to where they were.'"
Faculty News

Professor Gavin Kilduff's research on using sympathy in negotiations is featured

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Excerpt from Business News Daily -- "Taking a cutthroat approach isn't always the best way to get what you want when negotiating, new research finds. Bringing emotion into negotiations often elicits compassion from the other party, making that person more likely to develop sympathy and, in turn, more willing to compromise and find creative solutions, finds a study set to be published in the journal Organizational Behavior and Human Decision Processes."
Faculty News

Professor Dolly Chugh illustrates the concept of "bounded awareness"

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Excerpt from SarderTV -- "The easiest way to think of bounded awareness, it's that moment we experience when we're looking for the butter in the fridge and we claim there is no butter in the fridge. And we insist that we looked and there really was no butter in the fridge. And then our family member comes and says, 'There's the butter in the fridge!' And we say, 'How did I miss that? How did I not see it right in front of me.'"
Faculty News

In an in-depth interview, Professor Michael Spence reflects on the weakness of the global economy

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Excerpt from Diario Financiero -- "The collapse of the stock market in China and increased global volatility triggered by the devaluation of the yuan, he said, 'will not lead to a collapse' in the second-largest economy in the world, but it may be pointing to problems the Asian giant will have 'for longer than had been thought.'"
Press Releases

SEC Administrative Proceedings Increase as Constitutional Challenges Continue

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A report issued jointly by the NYU Pollack Center for Law & Business and Cornerstone Research reveals that the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) filed 76 percent of its enforcement actions against public company defendants as administrative proceedings in fiscal year (FY) 2015.
Faculty News

Professor Melissa Schilling discusses innovation in consumer technologies

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Excerpt from Machine Design -- "'... Sony invested in improving their technology of Super Audio CD at a time when they believed customers cared about every increasing fidelity,' says Schilling. 'Unfortunately, we were already nearly at the limits of human hearing in terms of audio fidelity, so the payoff to increasing fidelity wasn’t very big. While Super Audio CD and HD Audio were competing to be the highest fidelity audio formats, the MP3 format offered customers something they valued more—portability—and wiped Super Audio and HD Audio off the map.'"
Faculty News

Professor Richard Sylla discusses the evolution of America's banking landscape

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Excerpt from The News Journal -- "'For about 150 years, the United States did not have interstate banking and what those did was help advance the agenda of that movement so that, lo and behold, we got the Riegle-Neal Interstate Banking Act of 1994,' [Sylla] said."

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