Faculty News

Prof. Nouriel Roubini on the stock market outlook

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Excerpt from CNNMoney -- "Roubini, an economics professor at New York University best known for predicting the U.S. housing crisis, thinks the Federal Reserve and other central banks around the world can and will prop up stocks and bonds for the next two years."
Faculty News

In an op-ed, Prof. Roubini explains why the Federal Reserve's exit from QE3 is problematic

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Excerpt from Project Syndicate -- "The exit from the Fed’s QE and zero-interest-rate policies will be treacherous: Exiting too fast will crash the real economy, while exiting too slowly will first create a huge bubble and then crash the financial system. If the exit cannot be navigated successfully, a dovish Fed is more likely to blow bubbles."
School News

Stern venture Keen Home's crowdfunding campaign is featured

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Excerpt from TechCrunch -- "Disrupt NY 2013′s Startup Battlefield competition is underway, and now New York native Keen Home is taking the stage to present its first-round pitch. Keen Home is a home automation startup, which aims to follow in Nest’s footsteps by building remote vents for your central air conditioning and heating systems that can be controlled from your smartphone to optimally direct air where you actually need it — and away from places you don’t. Keen just launched its crowdfunding campaign on Indiegogo."
School News

Director Morgan Spurlock's appearance at the Disruptive Innovation awards at Stern is highlighted

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Excerpt from The New York Post -- "'We ask the question "Why them?"' the 'Supersize Me' director told us Friday at the Tribeca Film Festival’s Disruptive Innovation Awards at NYU Stern’s Paulson Auditorium."
Business and Policy Leader Events

Dina Powell, President of the Goldman Sachs Foundation, Joins MBAs for a Block Lunch

As part of NYU Stern’s Block Lunch event series, hosted by Dean Peter Henry, Dina Habib Powell, president of the Goldman Sachs Foundation and global head of Corporate Engagement at Goldman Sachs, spoke to more than 100 MBA students.
Business and Policy Leader Events

NYU Stern Hosts the 2013 Tribeca Disruptive Innovation Awards

For the second year in a row, NYU Stern hosted the annual Tribeca Disruptive Innovation Awards, honoring the leading disruptive innovators who have impacted business, technology, arts and entertainment.
Research Center Events

NYU Stern's Volatility Institute Hosts 5th Annual Conference on "Volatility of Credit Risk"

NYU Stern's Fifth Annual Volatility Conference convened academics, practitioners and regulators to discuss the latest research and ideas on this year's theme, "Volatility of Credit Risk." Hosted by Nobel Laureate Professor Robert Engle, this year's conference was sponsored by Stern's Volatility Institute, The Alfred P. Sloan Foundation, BlackRock, Deutsche Bank and SoFiE.
Faculty News

Dean Peter Henry shares economic lessons learned growing up in Jamaica, from his book, "Turnaround"

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Excerpt from Big Think -- "But as I encountered economics for the first time many years later and brought together Miss Mama and, as it were, economic science, it struck me that there was really an opportunity to think about how do you actually help people like Miss Mama help themselves. So my grandmother was able to provide a certain kind of assistance which was feeding her for that day. But, of course, the issue is how do you help people like Miss Mama become more productive so they can feed themselves?"
Faculty News

Dean Peter Henry shares lessons from emerging markets, from his book, "Turnaround"

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Excerpt from WNYC -- "I intentially used the term 'third world' because I wanted to point out that one of the things that we need to do in order to get back on track and start living up to our potential is to have the humility to learn lessons from what are now emerging markets. And it's important to understand that during the 1970s, places like China, Brazil, Chile, South Korea, they were all third world countries. But they used discipline... to turn around their economies and become today's emerging markets."
School News

Psy was honored at the Disruptive Innovation Awards at Stern

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Excerpt from Reuters -- "South Korean rapper and Internet sensation Psy was honored as a transcultural phenomenon by the Tribeca Film Festival on Friday along with a host of other luminaries ranging from choreographer Twyla Tharp to controversial media host Glenn Beck."
Faculty News

Prof. Arun Sundararajan on Bitcoin as digital currency

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Excerpt from Reuters -- "'I think that's part of why people are finding Bitcoin attractive, that it's really the first widespread, completely anonymous, form of digital currency,' says Arun Sundararajan, a professor at New York University."
Faculty News

Prof. Vicki Morwitz tests Routehappy, a new travel booking website

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Excerpt from the Washington Post -- “'I think Routehappy can help change the airline industry,' says Morwitz, an expert on consumer behavior and marketing and a happy Aeroflot customer. 'Ultimately, this can be better for the airlines themselves, as they can differentiate themselves instead of being viewed as interchangeable commodities.'”
Faculty News

Prof. Nouriel Roubini on the Federal Reserve's interest rates

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Excerpt from Bloomberg -- "New York University economist Nouriel Roubini, known as Dr. Doom, said April 24 that the Federal Reserve will end its zero-rates policy in two years."
Faculty News

Prof. Adam Alter's book, "Drunk Tank Pink," is highlighted

Excerpt from The Sun -- "Author Adam Alter looked at recent studies for his book Drunk Tank Pink and found that men are more likely to find a woman attractive – and ask her on a date – if she is decked out in red."
Faculty News

Prof. Jonathan Haidt is named to the World Thinkers of 2013 list

Excerpt from Prospect Magazine -- "After more than 10,000 votes from over 100 countries, the results of Prospect’s world thinkers 2013 poll are in."
Research Center Events

Himelberg Speaker Series: "Tech and the City: The Making of New York's Startup Community"

Alessandro Piol and Maria Teresa Cometto, co-authors of Tech and the City: The Making of New York's Startup Community, spoke with NYU students and alumni about their new book, which examines the conditions that are contributing to the rise of NYC as a hub of technology and entrepreneurial activity.
Faculty News

Prof. Scott Galloway on Apple Inc's value

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Excerpt from Bloomberg TV -- "Being in a market is like being in a relationship with someone who's bipolar. You could be doing nothing wrong or nothing right and we are definitely on the latter half of that. Anything is seen as an indicator of Apple's demise, but look at the company. You basically have the best brand in the world now trading at multiples that are cheaper than Dell. So as negative as you might be about Apple's prospects, are they worse than Dell's right now? You can buy this company at about four and a half times EBITDA, best brand in the world..."
Faculty News

Dean Peter Henry explains how first world countries can learn from emerging markets

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Excerpt from Marketplace -- "'This is a turnaround, today it's the first world that is thinking short-term," Henry says. "The key question is, do we have the humility to look beyond at our shores and to look at emerging economies, take those lessons back home, and start living up to our potential?'"
School News

Stern's MS in Business Analytics program is highlighted, Paula Goldfarb is quoted

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Excerpt from US News & World Report -- "Specialized degree candidates 'really want to focus and deepen their knowledge in a specific subject area,' says Paula Steisel Goldfarb, executive director of MBA and executive MBA admissions and financial aid at Stern. 'Whereas for an MBA program, students are looking at broad-based skills. They want to get all their functional knowledge within multiple areas within business.'"
Business and Policy Leader Events

Abenomics: Could This Time Be Different?

Kim Schoenholtz
Professor Kim Schoenholtz moderated a panel discussion at Japan Society on April 23, entitled, "Abenomics: Could This Time Be Different," featuring Paul Sheard, Chief Global Economist and Head of Global Economics and Research, Standard& Poor's, and Nathan Sheets, Global Head of International Economics, Citi.
School News

NYU Stern's Entrepreneurs Challenge finalists are announced

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Excerpt from Forbes -- "Cynthia Franklin, the senior associate director at the NYU Berkley Center for Entrepreneurship & Innovation at Stern, announced the finalist for the Entrepreneur’s Challenge to a room full of anxious entrepreneurs in the Kaufman Management Center last Friday."
Faculty News

Dean Peter Henry dicusses the impact of the Eurozone on the global economy

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Excerpt from Bloomberg TV -- "We live in an interconnected world and the Eurozone is the largest economic block in the world. So with a, frankly a misplaced focus on austerity, people have made the mistake of thinking that discipline means fiscal austerity. It doesn't. Discipline means doing what you need to do to advance the economy and the focus on growth, I think the renewed focus on growth and moving in that direction is welcome."
Faculty News

Prof. Luke Williams on disruptive innovation

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Excerpt from CNBC -- "'I always say if you want to study disruptive thinking … it's best to study the work of professional comedians,' said Luke Williams, professor of innovation at New York University's Leonard N. Stern School of Business. 'They're master disruptors. Their whole job is to determine what an audience is thinking and break those expectations. And that break in expectation is where humor comes from. As soon as you hear the punch line, it's obvious in hindsight. … But a comedian doesn't stop with one joke. They have to do them again and again. [Businesses] can't just disrupt the market once and sit back and go, "Everyone's going to use our business model for the next decade."'"
Faculty News

Dean Henry outlines the economic lessons we can learn from the developing world

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Excerpt from Newsweek -- "In decades past, First World countries have lectured the rest of the world about how to stabilize and grow their economies. Today, in a startling turnaround, the developed world buckles under high debt and slow growth, while countries such as South Korea, India, Chile, Mexico, and even tiny Barbados provide vital lessons for recovery."

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