Faculty News

Prof. Richard Sylla on the recent trading glitch at Nasdaq

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Excerpt from The Wall Street Journal -- "While some traders and economists shrug their shoulders and write off recent problems—such as this week's options trading snafu or the 2010 'flash crash'—as the price of progress, others say the problems are becoming so widespread that exchanges and big firms need to be held to a higher standard. 'It shows that corners are being cut and not enough is being spent on testing these systems,' said financial historian Richard Sylla of New York University's Stern School of Business."
Faculty News

Prof. Richard Sylla on the electronic trading error at Goldman Sachs

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Excerpt from Marketplace -- “'What happened was the computer program mistakenly started to sell options at like one dollar an option, when in fact the market price was higher than that,' says Richard Sylla, an economics professor at New York University. 'Basically, Goldman sold a lot of options cheaply. And if they have to buy them back, they will lose money because they will have to pay the market price for them.'”
Faculty News

Prof. Edward Altman's Z-score research is featured

Excerpt from Motley Fool -- "In the late 1960s...Edward Altman, published a formula that would change finance: the Altman Z-score. Altman researched nearly 70 bankrupt manufacturing companies' financial statements pre-bankruptcy to determine what these companies had in common. This research gave rise to an easy-to-use equation that could predict bankruptcy."
Faculty News

Prof. Viral Acharya on outgoing Reserve Bank of India Governor Duvvuri Subbarao's performance

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Excerpt from The Wall Street Journal -- “'He did very well to refuse the pressure of lowering interest rates at the time when government deficits were mounting last year,' said Viral Acharya, a professor at New York University’s Stern School of Business."
Faculty News

Prof. Michael Posner on human rights lessons in business school

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Excerpt from Economic Times -- "'Different components of human rights like freedom of speech, discrimination, harassment at work, security practices and supply chain issues need to be integrated in different courses at business schools, and it could vary from region to region,' [Posner] says."
Faculty News

Prof. Luke Williams on teaching entrepreneurship

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Excerpt from Business News Daily -- "'Anyone teaching has to believe that given the right tools and opportunities, every student can be a member of the entrepreneurial class,' [Williams] said. 'You can't change personality, but you can change key habits.'"
Faculty News

Prof. Richard Sylla on the challenges the new Federal Reserve Bank president faces

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Excerpt from Fox Business -- “'The Fed has shown itself to be the central banker of the world. The waters are not exactly calm right now so it’s more than likely that there will be some tests for the new Fed chief,' said Richard Sylla, an economist and financial historian at NYU."
Faculty News

Prof. Scott Galloway on e-commerce retailer mistakes in Russia

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Excerpt from Bloomberg TV -- "They're just not localizing for the market. They're trying to shove a square peg in a round hole...The way people tend to find luxury brands is initially through search. And most aren't typing in English. They're typing in Cyrillic. And a lot of brands just haven't optimized their content...they just haven't done the proper tagging. It's basic blocking and tackling."
Faculty News

Prof. Scott Galloway on Facebook as a retail tool

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Excerpt from Fox Business -- "Galloway says the decline in specialty retail stores on Facebook shows that most users don’t come to the social network when they plan to shop. 'They don’t approach Facebook with a commerce mindset,' says Galloway. 'People are there to socialize and look at pictures of friends.'”
Faculty News

Prof. Arun Sundararajan on Carl Icahn's plan for Apple

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Excerpt from Yahoo! Finance -- "The problem with Icahn’s plan is that such financial machinations can be a distraction for a technology company that needs to focus on developing innovative new products, according to Arun Sundararajan, professor of information sciences at New York University. 'This kind of financial engineering isn't in the long-term interest of Apple's shareholders,' he says. 'They're still a tremendously valuable company, but stock price boosts from financial engineering shouldn't distract from the fact that their business model doesn't look as solid and dominant as it did four years ago.'"
Faculty News

Vice Dean Morrison & Prof. Milliken's research on organizational silence is featured

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Excerpt from Financial News -- "Surveying executives across industries, they asked how many had issues and concerns at work that they did not articulate. The answer came back: 85%. By anyone’s measure, that’s a lot of silence. What it means is that we go to enormous time, trouble and expense to hire smart people – and then they shut up."
Faculty News

In an op-ed, Prof. Michael Spence explains his cautious optimism about the global economy

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Excerpt from Project Syndicate -- "Without dismissing the downside risks, I remain cautiously optimistic about the global economy’s prospects. With greater clarity in terms of Chinese and US policy, both economies should gain momentum. That will give developing countries (many of which face difficult domestic policy choices) a tailwind, while making the substantial challenges in Europe and Japan easier to address."
Faculty News

Prof. Bruce Tuckman on regulatory changes in the bond market

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Excerpt from Bloomberg -- “'Recent regulatory changes will cause dealers to reduce risk and to make markets less aggressively,' Bruce Tuckman, senior fellow of financial markets research at the non-profit Center for Financial Stability and a finance professor at New York University’s Stern School of Business, said in an Aug. 14 telephone interview. 'End users will lose some liquidity as dealers adjust to higher risk capital mandates, lower leverage limits, and increased margin requirements.'”
Faculty News

Professor William Silber on the impact of dissent within the Federal Reserve

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Excerpt from The Wall Street Journal -- "When a Fed chairman doesn't command strong majorities, it undermines his voice domestically and globally and creates uncertainty about policy, said William Silber, who documented those episodes in the Volcker biography, 'Volcker: The Triumph of Persistence.' 'Disagreement is healthy,' Mr. Silber said. 'Uncertainty is universally bad. It raises the cost of everything.'"
Faculty News

Prof. Baruch Lev on the public firing of CEOs

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Excerpt from CNBC -- "'My guess is that there is no mercy for someone who earns $10 to $20 million,' said Baruch Lev, a professor at New York University Stern School of Business. 'The risk, people think, is commensurate with the compensation and perks.'"
Faculty News

Prof. JP Eggers on Apple activist investor Carl Icahn

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Excerpt from Bloomberg TV -- "The reality is Icahn has enough power within the organization at this point through ownership that the firm would not be able to ignore him completely. And [Apple CEO Tim] Cook will certainly have to at least have some serious conversations. What will come out of that? We'll have to see. It really depends, I think, how much Cook has a clear plan in his mind for the cash that he's sitting on and doesn't want to give it away versus he's kind of uncertain, in which case he's going to be more willing to give that cash back to Icahn at this point."
Faculty News

Prof. Scott Galloway explains how Cisco is a larger metaphor for the US economy

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Excerpt from Bloomberg TV -- "I think what's going on a Cisco is a larger metaphor for what's happened in the economy over the last 5 years, and that is, if you look at shareholder growth, or earnings growth, it's largely been a function of cost-cutting, not revenue growth or innovation."
Faculty News

Prof. Robert Seamans's research about Craigslist and local newspapers is highlighted

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Excerpt from The Week -- "If all the factors responsible for the massive decline of the newspaper industry, Craigslist, the internet's free classifieds page, has long attracted a big share of the blame. So it's no surprise that a new study by Robert Seamans of New York University's Stern School of Business and Feng Zhu of the Harvard Business School seems, on its face at least, to back up the blame-Craigslist argument. What is surprising is the actual numbers. Analyzing how 1,000 newspapers reacted to the rise of Craigslist from 2000 to 2007, the professors estimated that classified ad buyers saved $5 billion by posting free listings on Craigslist instead of buying ads in newspapers. The obvious corollary here is that newspapers lost the $5 billion that consumers saved, and saw their classified ads business — one of three longstanding revenue pillars, along with circulation revenue and more traditional ads — all but decimated."
Faculty News

Prof. Robert Seamans's research on Craigslist's impact on newspapers is highlighted

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Excerpt from Forbes -- “A new study by two business school professors examined the issue and concluded that, indeed, Craigslist took a giant bite out of newspapers’ revenues — some $5 billion between the years 2000 and 2007. And that’s not even looking at the Times, the Wall Street Journal or USA Today, which the authors left out in order to have a more homogeneous sample. 'Our study definitely suggests that Craigslist has had a huge effect on newspapers,' says Robert Seamans, an assistant professor of management and organizations at the NYU Stern School of Business. Coauthored with Feng Zhu of Harvard Business School, the paper will be published by the journal Management Science."
Faculty News

Prof. Scott Galloway on the board of directors at JCPenney

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Excerpt from Bloomberg TV -- "Boards are meant to be assets, not liabilities and recently [the JCPenney board] has become a liability. They need to just get out of the way of the CEO, be supportive of the process, and let those good people try and get back to work on what is a very, very challenging position for JCPenney. They're kind of stuck in the middle. This is a difficult time for JCPenney."
Faculty News

Prof. Scott Galloway on the emergence of video and photo sharing platforms

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Excerpt from Bloomberg TV -- "They say a picture is worth a thousand words and a video is worth a million words. So as we've gotten more broadband, more technology and more ability to deliver great content and also get great content from our users, these visual platforms and video platforms have really taken root. And what's exciting about them is advertisers love them. A video is a fantastic emotional, very visceral medium, so they attract dollars, and these platforms are going to where the dollars are."
Faculty News

Prof. Joseph Foudy on the economic impact of the High Line

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Excerpt from MarketWatch -- “'[The High Line has] had a deep impact, but it was facilitating a transformation that was already happening,' says Joseph Foudy, an economics professor at New York University’s Stern School of Business. 'Cities around the world are going to have to be very careful about what neighborhoods can actually be transformed.'”
Faculty News

Prof. Arun Sundararajan on the emergence of the sharing economy

Excerpt from Minnesota Public Radio -- "Some of these new sharing economy companies are sort of like the rental business on steroids. You used to rent a car for a day, now you can rent it for an hour. There are bike share programs where sort of a fleet of bikes is provided by the city, like in Minneapolis or CitiBike in New York City now, which has gained tremendous popularity over the last few months. But the more interesting models are actually the ones like airbnb and RelayRides where the sharing is person-to-person, so it's not a company that is providing a suite of apartments or a fleet of cars, it's individuals saying, well, if I own something that other people can use, here is a marketplace on which I can actually commercially lend it to them. So we're not creating a whole new set of assets that are then shared by people."
Faculty News

Prof. Nicholas Economides shares his recommendation for reducing unemployment in Greece

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Excerpt from Bloomberg TV -- "What Greece needs is a certain amount of money that it will be free to invest and that needs to be found somewhere. And in my opinion, the best way to get this money is to get a grace period from the European Union of 3-5 years and not pay interest on the inter-government loans for those years and these loans are $5-6 billion in interest per year so if Greece takes this money and invests it in infrastructure projects, then you will see suddenly the unemployment rate go from 26 or 27% down at least ten points so you won't fix the whole unemployment problem of Greece, but you'll fix, very significantly, parts of it."
Faculty News

Prof. Arun Sundararajan on how a new startup, PAVE, funds higher education

Excerpt from the Village Voice -- "New York University economist Arun Sundararajan calls PAVE's investment-based model one 'whose time has come.' He predicts that soaring debt will not only drive students to seek alternatives to college—most notably Massive Open Online Courses—but to consider alternate forms of financing their education."

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