Faculty News

Prof. Nouriel Roubini on the probability of a US recession

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Excerpt from CNN -- "We're at a stall speed and probably there's more than 50% probability of a recession in the next 12 months."  Additional coverage appeared in The Guardian, National Journal, FirstPost.com, International Business Times, Montreal Gazette, Business Insider, Business Day, CPI Financial, ExpressIndia.com, two Bloomberg pieces, WealthWire.com and Bloomberg Businessweek.
School News

TRIUM Global Executive MBA Program, the alliance of NYU Stern, LSE and HEC Paris, is highlighted

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Excerpt from US News & World Report -- "Symonds highlights notable programs such as Trium, the Global Executive M.B.A. program run jointly by New York University Stern School of Business, London School of Economics and Political Science, and HEC School of Management, Paris. The alliance celebrated its 10th anniversary in July by adding a second cohort in 2012." Additional coverage appeared on StacyBlackman.com.
Faculty News

Prof. Vijay Vaitheeswaran on the cars of the future

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Excerpt from The Huffington Post -- "According to Vijay Vaitheeswaran, a co-author of 'Zoom: The Global Race to Fuel the Car of the Future,' a two-way grid is part of the solution. He said in 2007 interview in BusinessWeek, 'We will see a smart, sophisticated, software-rich car of the future very soon.'"
Faculty News

Prof. Vasant Dhar on computerized trading

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Excerpt from Marketplace Radio -- "Vasant Dhar of NYU's Stern School of Business says investors shouldn't be worried by computerized trading. In fact, yesterday's sell off may have been exaggerated by people - and muted by computers."
Faculty News

Prof. David Backus on Brazil's political system

Excerpt from Treasury & Risk -- "As with any developing country, risks remain. David Backus, a professor at New York University’s Stern School of Business, says that unlike neighboring countries, however, Brazil’s political system has remained stable."
Faculty News

Prof. Viral Acharya on Bank of America's systemic risk

Excerpt from WFAE.org -- "NYU Stern finance professor Viral Acharya says Bank of America is now the weakest of the big banks and the most 'systemically risky.'"
Faculty News

Prof. Lawrence White on the weak outlook for the US economy

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Excerpt from Xinhua News -- "You never certain about these things. But there are some smart people whose opinions I respect on this that are saying the likelihood is substantial. So at this point, the odds are about fifty fifty that we could go into another recession because of all these weakness in economy. We can't use monetary policy. We can't use fiscal policy. Maybe exports can help but that takes a while."
Faculty News

An exclusive interview with Prof. Nouriel Roubini on the global economic outlook

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Excerpt from Foreign Policy -- "At this point there is serious risk of a double-dip recession in the U.S. and most other advanced economies."
Faculty News

Prof. Nouriel Roubini on the US employment data

Excerpt from Bloomberg -- "President Barack Obama, former House Speaker Newt Gingrich and Roubini Global Economics LLC co-founder Nouriel Roubini speak about data showing U.S. payrolls rose by 117,000 workers in July. Former Federal Reserve Governor Randall Kroszner, Barclays Capital's Dean Maki, Cumberland Advisors' Robert Eisenbeis, White House economist Dean Maki and Tokyo-Mitsubishi UFJ's Chris Rupkey also comment."  Additional coverage appeared on Bloomberg and The Telegraph.
Faculty News

Prof. Anthony Karydakis on US employment growth

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Excerpt from Reuters -- "There is an extremely elevated degree of anxiety that has dominated recently, both the corporate and the consumer sectors. This tends to aggravate what started initially as a moderate slowdown in economic activity in the spring."  Additional coverage appeared on MSNBC.
Faculty News

NYU Stern's Systemic Risk Rankings are highlighted

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Excerpt from Seeking Alpha -- "What does it take to be number one? Two is not a winner. Three no one remembers. Bank of America is number one on the Bank Loser Board. The Loser Board is created by NYU Stern."
Faculty News

Prof. Nouriel Roubini on the negative outlook for the US economy

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Excerpt from CNBC -- "Worries about default spooking investors, sending european shares plummeting to an 11-month low and as tensions grow abroad, recession jitters escalate here at home. The bears are out. Is your money safe?"  Additional coverage appeared on Capital.gr and Bloomberg.
Faculty News

Nobel Laureate Prof. Michael Spence on the impact of globalization on income and unemployment

Excerpt from Benzinga.com -- "Before you fire off a hot email defending the wonderfulness of "free" trade (there is no "free" trade, there are only trade policies with implicit incentives), please read Globalization and Unemployment The impact of globalization on income and employment by Nobel laureate Michael Spence."  Additional coverage appeared on Of Two Minds.
Faculty News

A paper by Nobel Laureate Prof. Michael Spence on the benefits of college is referenced

Excerpt from The Jerusalem Post -- "A related, more subtle possibility, analyzed in detail in a famous paper by economist Michael Spence decades ago, is that college is a way of proving to employers how smart and capable you are."
Faculty News

Member of the NYU Executive Board and Prof. Richard Bernstein on emerging markets

Excerpt from MoneyShow.com -- "Bernstein pointed out that “the S&P has been outperforming BRICs for the last three and a half years,” although the broader emerging-markets index is slightly ahead of the S&P for that period."  Additional coverage appeared on Seeking Alpha.
Faculty News

Member of the Executive Board and Prof. Richard Bernstein on US stimulus spending

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Excerpt from CNBC -- "I think investors got caught up in Washington's political rhetoric. They just decided the rules of economics don't apply anymore. You may not have liked how the government was spending money, but it was still spending and that's still stimulus," said Richard Bernstein.  Additional coverage appeared in The Wall Street Journal.
Faculty News

Prof. Paul Romer is highlighted for his work on the economics of technical change

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Excerpt from The Globe and Mail -- "The Stanford economist Paul Romer -- whose seminal work on the economics of technical change inspired what came to be known as endogenous growth theory -- says that when he came to economics from physics, he was puzzled by what economists called 'production'."
Faculty News

Nobel Laureate Prof. Michael Spence on China's economic growth

Excerpt from TheAge.com -- "[Michael Spence's] key insight about China is striking - that the sudden burst of growth that has revolutionised global economics and politics was the result of a conscious decision made by just a handful of people."  Additional coverage appeared on NineMSN.com.
Faculty News

Nobel Laureate Prof. Michael Spence on China's approach to emissions standards

Excerpt from The Sydney Morning Herald -- ''China is starting to internalise these things,'' Professor Spence said. "They are coming to realise that they will soon be big enough economically to put pressure on the entire globe's environment."
Faculty News

Prof. Lawrence White on the risk of another US recession

Excerpt from Bloomberg -- "Martin Feldstein, an economics professor at Harvard University, Bill Gross, portfolio manager at Pacific Investment Management Co., Lawrence White, economics professor at New York University's Stern School of Business, Hugh Johnson, chairman of Hugh Johnson Advisors LLC, and Barton Biggs, managing partner and co-founder of Traxis Partners LP, talk about the risk of another U.S. recession."
Faculty News

Nobel Laureate Prof. Michael Spence on China's economic outlook

Excerpt from Sydney Morning Herald -- "'How long have they got? How much longer can China's extraordinary explosion of economic growth continue,' I ask Michael Spence down a phone line to Italy, where he lives six months of the year. 'I think the answer is something like two decades, in the later part of that they will start to slow down,' he says."
Faculty News

Prof. Paul Romer on obstacles facing US economic growth

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Excerpt from The Wall Street Journal -- "Paul Romer, a New York University economist who has spent his career thinking about economic growth, calls this time the "Great Distress," a period of pain that he predicts will last five or even 10 years."  Additional coverage appeared in The Atlantic.
Faculty News

Prof. Nouriel Roubini on the likelihood of a third round of quantitative easing

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Excerpt from Forbes -- "Today, on the heels of currency market intervention by Japan and Switzerland, Roubini predicted that a third round of quantitative easing here in the United States, tweeting, “QE3 started in Japan & Switzerland via fx action &/or monetary easing. Fed will eventually get to QE3 but it will be too little too late.”
Faculty News

Prof. Batia Wiesenfeld on the downsizing of banks and brokerages

Excerpt from FINS Finance -- "Batia Wiesenfeld, a management professor at New York University's Stern School of Business, said banks and brokerages tend to let months pass between when they announce layoffs and when they cut workers, a tedious period that cultivates brain-drain."  Additional coverage appeared on Glassdoor.com.