Faculty News

Prof. Durairaj Maheswaran is interviewed about Chinese companies in global markets

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Excerpt from CKGSB Knowledge -- "Durairaj Maheswaran, the Paganelli Bull Professor of Marketing at New York University’s Stern School of Business, sees the globalization of companies in terms of a 'Five C' model of competitive advantage. In simple terms, this model examines how a company’s core benefit, competition, culture, corporate structure and country of origin impact its globalization strategy."
Faculty News

Prof. Arun Sundararajan on regulation of the sharing economy

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Excerpt from San Jose Mercury News -- "'It's a groundbreaking new economic paradigm,' said Arun Sundararajan, a professor at New York University's Stern School of Business who studies digital economies. 'This isn't just a recession-era phenomenon. It's a technology-driven change.'"
Faculty News

Prof. Scott Galloway on the CBS-Time Warner Cable dispute

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Excerpt from Bloomberg TV -- "CBS has more customers now. We're basically price takers with Time Warner Cable or whatever you have in New York. You have to take whatever they offer you and every year your bill's gone up more than inflation, and you ask yourself, has there really been any innovation? There's been so much innovation on our phone, very little innovation around the TV. I think what you're going to see here with TV is that less is more, and then people are going to have the opportunity for the first time to pick the 10 to 15 to 20 channels they actually watch and just pay for those channels, similar to what happened with music and iTunes."
Faculty News

Research on Vine from Prof. Scott Galloway's L2 Think Tank was featured

Excerpt from All Things Digital -- "A study conducted by NYU think tank Luxury Lab (or L2) stated that 35 percent of “prestige brands” were active on Vine, while the same report said about 26 percent of those prestige brands were experimenting with Instagram video."
Faculty News

Prof. Scott Galloway on social media's impact on online retail

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Excerpt from Bloomberg TV -- "The study we did at NYU shows that less than 3% of the traffic that brands and retailers who were generally large advertisers in any medium...less than 3% of the traffic they're getting is actually coming from social media versus 33% for search. So, placed in context, social media isn't having as large an impact as originally thought on the business world."
Faculty News

Prof. Marti Subrahmanyam on investment in India

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Excerpt from CCTV -- "I wouldn't say [investors] are being driven out of India. They're pausing a little bit at the present moment and that's because of a number of political factors, for the most part, and some economic factors. There's a huge consumption demand because we have a rapidly growing middle class which wants the same sorts of things that middle-class people everywhere in the world want and so there is an attractive market opportunity."
Faculty News

In an op-ed, Research Scholar Robert Frank examines the economics of Obamacare

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Excerpt from The New York Times -- "We must ask those who would repeal Obamacare how they propose to solve the adverse-selection problem. That problem is not an abstraction invented by economists to justify trampling individual liberties. As experience in most countries around the world has confirmed, it is a profound source of market failure that renders unregulated insurance markets a catastrophically ineffective way of providing access to health care."
Faculty News

Prof. Aswath Damodaran is interviewed about tax havens

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Excerpt from BBC Capital -- "Tax-haven status can be a real boon for countries without natural resources, a large industrial base or significant tourist income. If a company has a large office in a tax haven, there can be a big benefit for the local community, from jobs to better infrastructure that’s built to support the needs of multinationals, said Damodaran."
Faculty News

Prof. Marcin Kacperczyk on small-cap mutual funds

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Excerpt from Reuters -- "Too much style drift can be a worrisome sign, says Marcin Kacperczyk, an assistant professor at New York University's Stern School of Business who studies mutual funds. Though some managers end up with big company stocks because of short-term liquidity issues, 'it's a big red flag that makes you wonder what else the manager is doing.'"
Faculty News

Prof. Nicholas Economides on unemployment in the Eurozone

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Excerpt from CCTV -- "At this point, given this very very high unemployment, the European Union has to set some money aside to help Greece, Spain and Portugal create jobs, especially Greece. And I think one way to do it is to allow Greece not to pay interest for a few years on the loans that it owes to the EU area countries."
Faculty News

Prof. Viral Acharya on centralized banking regulation in India

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Excerpt from LiveMint -- "What a unified regulator allows you to do is take a very holistic view on the system, not just a banking view or insurance view or a markets view. A unified regulator typically does consist of representatives from these different regulatory agencies and they all come together and can take a holistic view. The downside is that if this unified regulator becomes in some sense the authoritative regulatory figure, then you might see very little regulatory innovation, which is often necessary because as the institutions change, as the markets change, the regulators have to evolve their policies and usually this works much better with a decentralized regulator than with a single central regulator."
Faculty News

Profs Ljungqvist and Asker's research on company reinvestments is featured

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Excerpt from The Washington Post -- "Today, corporate profits account for 12 percent of GDP, while net investment has shrunk to 4 percent. When Asker, Ljungqvist and Farre-Mensa looked into this anomaly, they unearthed a startling fact: While publicly traded firms devote 3.7 percent of their total assets to investment, comparable privately owned firms devote 6.8 percent. Using a new database that provides more information on more privately held firms than had previously been available, the economists discovered a problem at the heart of this nation's shareholder version of capitalism."
Faculty News

Prof. Aswath Damodaran's views on Facebook's stock price are highlighted

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Excerpt from Business Insider -- "'Should you sell short? I personally would not, since it is entirely possible that the momentum game that was so firmly against Facebook last year might work in the other direction now,' he added. 'There may be investors who will be drawn in to the stock if it crests the $38 IPO price, though there is really no economic or value significance around the number.'"
Faculty News

In an op-ed, Prof. Rosa Abrantes-Metz explains why banks may be driving up the price of metals

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Excerpt from Bloomberg -- "A number of large users of aluminum in the U.S., including the Coca-Cola Co. and MillerCoors LLC, allege that big banks -- some of which own aluminum warehouses and play a big role in the market -- have intentionally created bottlenecks, with the end effect of driving up prices and boosting their profits. In recent Senate testimony, MillerCoors estimated that the practice cost buyers of aluminum about $3 billion last year alone."
Faculty News

Prof. Aswath Damodaran evaluates Facebook's stock price

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Excerpt from CNBC -- "I have done five valuations of facebook in the last year and the lowest number I have got is $24 and the highest number I have got is $28. So the value of the company hasn't actually wavered that much over the last year and three months. I don't share the euphoria that people have about mobile monetization because I think they needed to do that. If they hadn't done it, it would have been disastrous. So at $38, I think the stock is richly priced."
Faculty News

Prof. Kim Schoenholtz explains the recent GDP revisions by the BEA

Excerpt from Bloomberg Businessweek -- "'People ask if this is exaggerating GDP, and the answer is precisely no,' says Kim Schoenholtz, director of the Center for Global Economy and Business at New York University’s Stern School of Business. 'What you’re seeing is just a better reading on the state of the economy. Our measurement science is improving.'”
Faculty News

Prof. Aswath Damodaran's views on risk in emerging markets are featured

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Excerpt from Financial Times -- "A fascinating series of posts over at Aswath Damodaran’s Musings on Markets. Damodaran has been looking at risk and equity valuations in emerging and developed markets. He began with a round up of risk in emerging markets, where he found investors believe emerging markets are getting riskier. He concluded by using three different multiples to look at how investors price risk and return – and found he had much to learn."
Faculty News

Prof. Anindya Ghose and Stern's MS in Business Analytics program are featured

Excerpt from Bloomberg Businessweek -- “'Demand for analytics training courses is rising quickly,' says Anindya Ghose, co-director of the Center for Business Analytics at New York University’s Stern School of Business. 'There is a huge focus on the quality and quantity of data and how it can be harnessed to take businesses to the next level.'”
Faculty News

Prof. Nouriel Roubini's views on gold are highlighted

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Excerpt from Barron's -- "In spite of the QEs, inflation is going to remain low because growth is weak, and therefore all this extra money is going into the reserves of the banks, as velocity is collapsing. If anything, inflation is now falling both in emerging and advanced economies. So buying gold as a hedge against inflation, in spite of all these QEs, is not a good investment."
Faculty News

Prof. Hal Hershfield's research on making financial decisions is featured

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Excerpt from Scientific American -- "Previous work on connectedness, most notably work by both Bartels and Hal Ersner-Hershfield and their colleagues, has demonstrated that increases in connectedness are associated with making better financial decisions for oneself–the kind of financial decisions that pay off in the long run. People with strong connections to their future self are willing to save more, spend less, and forgo immediate cash rewards in exchange for future cash rewards of greater value."
Faculty News

Prof. Scott Galloway explains Facebook's effectiveness as an advertising tool

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Excerpt from Bloomberg TV -- "The only cloud around Facebook right now is that our research shows that they aren't generating a lot of traffic that converts to actual sales. So it's that top-of-the-funnel advertising-like impressions that have been under a lot of pressure of late over the last couple years. CPMs are dropping, so it will be interesting to see if they can maintain that kind of velocity to justify what is a healthy valuation if you were just to take out the first day IPO price."
Faculty News

Dean Peter Henry's book, Turnaround, is reviewed

Excerpt from The Gleaner -- "This account is given in Henry's just-released book Turn-Around: Third World Lessons for First World Growth, already being hailed as a significant publication. Peter Blair Henry is a significant person. He served on President Obama's transition team in 2008 and is a member of the prestigious Council on Foreign Relations. He is the first black dean of New York University's Stern School of Business, one of the leading business schools in the United States."
Faculty News

Prof. Anindya Ghose on e-commerce site Wanelo

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Excerpt from Fox Business -- "More than 60% of consumers are accessing the ecommerce world from their phones and tablets, according to Anindya Ghose, co-director of the Center for Business Analytics and professor at NYU Stern School of Business. ... 'Bargain shoppers will likely seek deals on third party sites, and a site like Wanelo reduces our search costs by letting people choose products for us,' Ghose says. 'Plus, its online community format satisfies the basic human need to socialize.'"
Faculty News

Prof. Arun Sundararajan on "House of Cards" and the future of web-only TV

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Excerpt from Yahoo! Finance -- “'It’s the first show based on the collective wisdom of what people actually liked,' says New York University business school Professor Arun Sundararajan, who studies how digital technology affects society. Data-driven shows could be more compelling, though Sundararajan fears that, over time, the techniques might also lead to homogenization. 'People are always looking for something different,' he says."
Faculty News

Prof. Priya Raghubir on the prevalence of retail pricing tricks

Excerpt from the TODAY Show -- "'I think it's very widespread,' she told us. 'You feel smart, you feel happy, and you feel you've got a great deal.'"

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