Faculty News

Professor Luis Cabral is interviewed about Catalonia's independence from Spain

CNN logo
Excerpt from CNN Quest Means Business -- "'The biggest pressure is the large banks and large corporations that are headquartered in Barcelona, and that are thinking very seriously about moving to Madrid. Because if there is independence or even if there is a situation of uncertainty continues the way it is now, it's not good business to be in Barcelona for them. And that can have a huge negative impact on the Catalonia economy.'"
Faculty News

Professor Vasant Dhar explains why investors need to use caution when investing with platforms that utilize AI

ThinkAdvisor logo
Excerpt from ThinkAdvisor -- "Dhar further urged investment advisors to be skeptical about adopting many AI offerings – and especially look at the scientific background, credibility and motivation of the developers. If social media is used, he warns there could be manipulation risks. 'Really kick the tires and do due diligence,' Dhar advised. 'It’s an exciting area, but an area where people should be really cautious…. It’s important not to get caught up in hype.'"
Faculty News

Professor Anindya Ghose shares how Amazon is maintaining a competitive advantage in India

Quartz logo
Excerpt from Quartz -- "'Voice is the new battlefront and India is a key battle-ground for Amazon. (It can help to) further decimate local Indian competitors like Flipkart and tap into a rapidly expanding market,' Anindya Ghose, director of New York University’s Center for Business Analytics, told Quartz."
Faculty News

Professor Russell Winer shares his predictions for Black Friday and holiday shopping

BestBlackFriday.com logo 192 x 144
Excerpt from BestBlackFriday.com -- "​I don’t see the trend of more shopping online changing. Bricks & mortar retailers continue to run the risk of having their business disrupted by Amazon and other vertical brands like Bonobos, Casper, and Warby Parker. Especially the middle-of-road retailers like JC Penney and Macy’s are going to have to worry about offering the kind of consumer experiences like Amazon etc.​"
Faculty News

Professor Kim Schoenholtz's joint blog post on managing systemic risk in derivatives trading is excerpted

Financial Times logo
Excerpt from the Financial Times -- "One of the features of mainstream economics today is the huge diversity of models that are around. Academic prestige tends to come to those who add to that number. But how do you decide which model to use when investigating a particular problem? The answer is by looking at evidence about applicability."
Faculty News

Professor Joe Magee shares insights on workplace hierarchies

The Chronicle of Higher Education logo
Excerpt from The Chronicle of Higher Education -- "'Human beings are kind of built to be pretty hierarchical creatures,' a likely artifact of evolution and the pecking orders of the animal world, he says. 'Even if you try to suppress it in the workplace, interpersonally and within groups, hierarchies still take shape.'"
Faculty News

Professor Anindya Ghose is interviewed about Uber's competition with Ola in the Indian market

Quartz logo
Excerpt from Quartz -- "'If Uber does perceive a threat to market share from this new round of funding for Ola, their new CEO Dara (Khosrowshahi) will simply put in more funds in India to level the playing field,' Anindya Ghose, director of New York University’s Center for Business Analytics, told Quartz. 'There is no way Uber will yield additional market share to Ola in India and incur the risk of what happened in China.'"
Faculty News

Professor Amy Webb's research on the impact of AI on the journalism industry is featured

Phys.org logo 192 x 144
Excerpt from Phys.org -- "One big problem facing media organizations is that new technologies impacting the future of news such as AI are out of their control, and instead is in the hands of tech firms like Google, Amazon, Tencent, Baidu, IBM, Facebook, Apple and Microsoft, according to Webb. 'News organizations are customers, not significant contributors,' the report said. 'We recommend cross-industry collaboration and experimentation on a grand scale, and we encourage leaders within journalism to organize quickly.'"
Faculty News

Professor Jennifer Carpenter underscores the importance of conducting research focused on China

China Daily logo
Excerpt from China Daily -- "New York University Stern School of Business has established a China Initiative to help grow China-focused research and discussions, and facilitate China-related discussions between the university's faculty and other academics, students, alumni, and the wider local intellectual community. Jennifer Carpenter, an associate professor of finance at NYU Stern, started the initiative. She said studying China's businesses is incredibly challenging and rewarding because it requires academics to engage with facts and data through a completely different perspective. 'China is often hard to understand because it's a totally different system. You cannot run China data through a US model,' Carpenter said."
Faculty News

Professor Robert Salomon discusses some of the challenges companies face when expanding globally, from his book, "Global Vision"

Valor Economico Logo 192 x 144
Excerpt from Valor Econômico -- "The most common mistakes companies make when trying to globalize are related to management. 'You can not manage the business as you do in your own country,' [Salomon] says. Every adaptation has a high cost and ends up being an additional burden for them. 'We have data that shows, for example, that foreign companies in the United States are more prosecuted for regulatory violations than local ones, perhaps because they are an easier target or because they make more mistakes because they do not understand how it works,' he says."
Faculty News

Professor Johannes Stroebel's joint research on the impact of the CARD Act is referenced

Huffington Post logo
Excerpt from The Huffington Post -- "Mahoney and his collaborators – Sumit Agarwal of the National University of Singapore, Souphala Chomsisengphet of the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, and Johannes Stroebel of New York University’s Stern School of Business – found 'no evidence of an increase in interest charges or a reduction in access to credit.' While credit cards continued to be a highly profitable part of the banking business, the legislation had saved American consumers more than $20 billion a year, they concluded."
Faculty News

Research on the addictive nature of social media from Professor Adam Alter's book, "Irresistible," is featured

Guardian logo
Excerpt from The Guardian -- "In his recent book Irresistible, Adam Alter shows that the 'like' button pioneered by Facebook and adopted by other social media platforms, including Instagram, is modelled on the system of uncertain reward, designed to hook us into returning to the site over and over to check the responses to our latest post."
Faculty News

Professor Arun Sundararajan explains the importance of Uber's strategic entrance into the Japanese market

CNBC logo
Excerpt from CNBC -- "I think Uber is just saying let's get into the Japanese market the way that we can. This is one of the potentially five biggest sharing economy markets in the world. The consumers are very entrenched in existing behaviors now so perhaps transitioning in through something familiar may work well because Japan has been very slow to adopt sharing economy behaviors so far. I just think they see it as a hack to get into the massive Tokyo market and once they socialize the idea a little, I think they will start pushing those regulatory boundaries further."
Faculty News

Professor Thomaï Serdari explains how fashion and fragrance brand Rochas is repositioning its brand with a new web series

Luxury Daily logo
Excerpt from Luxury Daily -- "'Young consumers bond strongly with brands that have a story to share to communicate their unique heritage,' she said. 'It is imperative for any luxury brand that wants to impress younger consumers to tell its story and to tell it well, in a concise and animated form that can keep the attention of today's "distracted" consumer.'"
Faculty News

Professor Pankaj Ghemawat is interviewed about Catalonia's independence from Spain

Bloomberg logo
Excerpt from Bloomberg -- "But the violence that marred the Oct. 1 vote has focused Catalans’ minds on issues other than euros. 'At some point the economic considerations start to be irrelevant and identity becomes paramount,' says Ghemawat. On Oct. 1, he says, 'we took a giant step in that direction.'"
Faculty News

Professor Robert Salomon's comments on global business at the Global Citizens Forum in Brazil are highlighted

Valor Economico Logo 192 x 144
Excerpt from Valor Econômico -- "'Many successful multinational corporations face difficulties,' said Salomon, a member of the Global Citizens Forum, which brought former President Barack Obama to Brazil. The globalization expert presented data showing that multinationals have more difficulties and higher costs to operate in foreign countries than native firms."
Faculty News

Professor Priya Raghubir's joint research on spending and currency is featured

Mint Press News logo 192 x 144
Excerpt from Mint Press News -- "[Raghubir and coauthor Joydeep Srivastava's] 2009 paper titled 'Denomination Effect' found that people are less likely to spend larger units of currency than their equivalent amount in smaller units; while their 2002 paper titled 'Effect of Face Value on Product Valuation in Foreign Currencies' found that tourists underspent when the face value of foreign currency was a multiple of the equivalent amount in their home currency, and vice versa. This rule, of course, is applicable not just to tourists: psychologically, one is less likely to spend, say, 1000 drachmas than the equivalent amount of less than 3 euros."
Faculty News

Professor David Yermack shares his views on bitcoin as an investment

Xinhua logo
Excerpt from Xinhua -- "Yermack said Bitcoin trading is 'pure speculation' and anyone who invests in this is 'buying an asset that is so new that no one really understands and is not really getting any of the regulatory protection that you would get in the stock markets or the commodities markets.'"
Faculty News

In an in-depth Q&A, Professor Michael North shares insights about the intergenerational workforce

Society for Human Resource Management logo 192 x 144
Excerpt from Society for Human Resource Management -- "The biggest benefit [of an age-diverse workforce] is the potential that members of all generations have to learn from one another. Older workers bring 'soft skills' to the table that are severely undervalued in the workplace. These talents include loyalty to the company, emotional stability, wisdom and problem-solving. Younger workers have much to gain from this skill set, and a great deal to learn from those who have an 'organizational memory,' or understanding of why the company does things a certain way."
Faculty News

Professor Michael North dispels common myths about the multigenerational workplace

Society for Human Resource Management logo 192 x 144
Excerpt from Society for Human Resource Management -- "Myth 1: Younger workers perform better than older ones. It's true that, on average, fluid intelligence—that is, the ability for people to process information quickly—declines with age, North said. But another important aspect of brain power known as crystallized intelligence, which is based on wisdom, experience, and the ability to recognize patterns, remains stable and sometimes increases across the lifespan. Many other key elements integral to strong performance improve with age, including conscientiousness, emotional wellbeing, agreeableness, loyalty and language complexity. 'Research is finally starting to demonstrate that a lot of things get better,' North said."
Faculty News

Professor Arun Sundararajan is interviewed to discuss the implications of Uber's governance changes

Bloomberg logo
Excerpt from Bloomberg -- "If they can go through with all of the changes to the board then absolutely it is going to emerge a stronger company than it went in this morning. I often feel like you could structure a whole MBA degree around Uber, every dimension from tech to market entry and corporate governance."
Faculty News

Professor Scott Galloway discusses Amazon's growth, from his book, "The Four"

TheStreet logo
Excerpt from TheStreet.com -- "'The stock will be anti-gravity,' Galloway said in an interview with TheStreet. 'If you look at where Amazon is budding heads against the other three (Apple, Facebook and Google), it's winning everywhere it touches them.'"
Faculty News

Professor Nicholas Economides explains how internet providers' definition of the open internet differs from true network neutrality

Center for Public Integrity logo 192 x 144
Excerpt from the Center for Public Integrity -- "Internet service providers 'may have a PR position in which they say they love the open internet, but what they mean by open internet, does not include network neutrality,' Economides said. 'It's stuff that lobbyists put around because it sounds good to the average congressman or even the average voter, but it has nothing to do with the public interest.'"
Faculty News

Professor Pankaj Ghemawat shares insights on globalization

El Pais logo
Excerpt from El Pais -- "'Following the victory of Trump and Brexit, there has been a perception that globalization as we know it has died,' Ghemawat says. 'But it has only changed, because trade has remained stable, just like capital flows, but flows of people and, above all, the flow of information have increased.'"
Faculty News

Professor Scott Galloway weighs in on Facebook and Google's efforts to combat fake news, from his book, "The Four"

Financial Times logo
Excerpt from the Financial Times -- "'There’s a way — the fact is, they don’t have the will,' said Scott Galloway, a professor of marketing at New York University and author of The Four, a new book about Amazon, Apple, Facebook and Google."

Archive