Faculty News

Prof. Nouriel Roubini on Italy’s need for a new government

Excerpt from Bloomberg -- "Italy needs a new government of technocrats to weather the financial-market storm because Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi’s Cabinet has lost the confidence of investors, economist Nouriel Roubini told la Repubblica."  Additional coverage appeared on La Repubblica and San Francisco Chronicle.
Faculty News

Data from New York University Provide New Insights into Real Estate

Excerpt from Investment Weekly News -- "We examine the role that analysts play in a firm's choice of underwriter using a sample of major United States investment banks."
Faculty News

Guaranteed to Fail, by four NYU Stern professors, is highlighted as a “Top Business Book”

Excerpt from Bloomberg -- "'Guaranteed to Fail' by Viral V. Acharya, Matthew Richardson, Stijn Van Nieuwerburgh and Lawrence J. White (Princeton). Four professors at New York University’s Stern School of Business explain how Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac got so big and why we must fix them."
Faculty News

Prof. Susan Stehlik on top advisers leaving Greenhill & Co. Inc.

Excerpt from Bloomberg -- “The problem is exacerbated when Wall Street reacts and the stock moves too much,” said Susan Stehlik, a professor at New York University’s Stern School of Business. “That stock ticker can be as dramatic as an EKG or cholesterol test for some people.”  Additional coverage appeared in the San Francisco Chronicle.
Faculty News

Prof. Richard Sylla on Dow Jones’s history

Forbes logo
Excerpt from Forbes.com -- "A few months back the folks at Dow Jones Indexes hosted a get-together to celebrate the Dow’s 115th anniversary, and one of the speakers was Professor Richard Sylla from NYU. Sylla discussed the Dow’s history, and featured a slide revealing just what came of the 12 original components selected by Charles Dow back in 1896."  Additional coverage appeared on Yahoo! News.
Faculty News

Prof. Roy Smith on M&F Worldwide Corp.

Excerpt from Bloomberg -- “If the M&F board decides to put up the ‘for sale’ sign, then it has to be guided by Revlon,” Roy Smith, a finance professor at New York University’s Stern School of Business, said in an e-mail message.
Faculty News

Prof. April Klein on reverse stock splits

Nightly Business Report logo
Excerpt from Nightly Business Report -- "Companies tend to do the reverse stock split because their prices are low. Why are their prices low? Because they`ve been having poor earnings. So, unless they can change things around dramatically, it`s not going to go back up."
Faculty News

Prof. Frances Milliken’s research on how people in power communicate differently is referenced

Huffington Post logo
Excerpt from The Huffington Post -- "Frances Milliken did a marvelous study comparing how those in power think and communicate differently from the rest of us. They're more optimistic, prepared to take bigger risks and think in more abstract terms. And the more cut off they become, the more certain they are that they are right."
Faculty News

Prof. Lawrence White on the importance of raising the US debt ceiling

Excerpt from the New York Daily News -- "The stock market will tank, which will damage everyone's portfolio and/or pension fund," White said. That's what happened when Congress initially failed to pass the TARP legislation in Oct. of 2008, White noted.  Additional coverage appeared on Zeit Online and PolitiFact.com.
Faculty News

Prof. Matthew Richardson discusses Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac

On The Daily Show, Prof. Matthew Richardson discusses Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac from Guaranteed to Fail, co-authored with Profs Viral Acharya, Stijn Van Nieuwerburgh and Lawrence White.
Faculty News

Prof. Priya Raghubir on Toyota’s new RAV4 ad campaign

The New York Times Logo
Excerpt from The New York Times -- "Priya Raghubir, a marketing professor at the Stern School of Business at New York University, praised Burrell’s choice of a bulldog as a 'mascot' for the RAV4. 'It’s extremely memorable, like the Budweiser Clydesdale horses in their Super Bowl ads,' she said."
Faculty News

Scientists at New York University Report Research in Automation Science

Excerpt from Journal of Robotics & Machine Learning -- "We consider the problem of cooperatively minimizing the sum of convex functions, where the functions represent local objective functions of the agents."
Press Releases

NYU Stern and Centre for Economic Policy Research Publish E-Book of Conference Proceedings

NYU Stern and Centre for Economic Policy Research Publish E-Book of Conference Proceedings, "Dodd-Frank: One Year On"
School News

Dean Peter Henry on NYU's development as a global university

Financial Times logo
Excerpt from the Financial Times -- "The move away from the stand-alone business school is also apparent at NYU Stern. Dean Peter Blair Henry says he joined the school in January 2010 because of the university president’s vision to develop a global university with the business school playing a part alongside the other departments."
Faculty News

Prof. Roy Smith on the power of Dodd-Frank

Excerpt from Bloomberg -- "In Smith’s view, the power of Dodd-Frank can already be seen in moves like Citigroup Inc. (C)’s decision to sell off lines of business such as its consumer-lending unit. New regulations governing different lines of business, in addition to the substantial increase in the amount of liquid capital banks must hold, are making it too expensive for financial institutions to stay at their current size, Smith said."
School News

NYU Stern Foundations, a summer program on business essentials, is highlighted

U.S. News and World Report logo
Excerpt from US News & World Report -- "Though she's a history major at the University of Pennsylvania, rising junior Jesse Reich, who completed New York University's Stern Foundations: Business Essentials for Non-Business Students program this month, claims that the business professors understood how to frame the difficult concepts in ways that she could understand."
School News

Nihal Parthasarathi (BS ’08) on winning the NYU Stern New Venture Competition

Business Insider logo
Excerpt from Business Insider -- "When 25-year-old North Carolina native Katie Kapler met Nihal Parthasarathi, she knew they'd start a company together. During NYU undergrad, they gave it a shot. But like many founders, their first attempt resulted in utter failure. Now they've re-entered the startup scene with CourseHorse, a company that launched in April."  Additional coverage appeared on NYConvergence.com.
Faculty News

Credit Suisse's Asset Management Division Launches Systematic Trading Group

Excerpt from Investment Weekly News -- "With the launch of the Group, Credit Suisse's Asset Management division is forming a Systematic Trading Advisory Board. The Board will initially consist of Robert Engle, Nobel Prize in Economics 2003."
School News

A discussion of the Annapurna Sanctuary at NYU Stern is referenced

Excerpt from The Himalayan Times -- "Enamoured by my passionate celebration of the Annapurna at New York University (NYU), Rachel along with Alison had requested me to host their visit to Nepal. In the plush NYU Stern School classrooms I had described Annapurna as place of ‘cosmic silence’ and ‘soul of the Gods’."
School News

Socialtext Launches Socialtasks at Enterprise 2.0 Conference

Excerpt from Computer Weekly News -- "More than 6,500 businesses worldwide have accelerated their business performance with Socialtext, including Egon Zehnder, Getty Images, Symantec, Meredith Corporation, NYU Stern, OSIsoft, and Epitaph Records."
Faculty News

Researchers at New York University Publish New Data on Political Science

Excerpt from Politics & Government Week -- "Plumper and Troeger (2007) propose a three-step procedure for the estimation of a fixed effects (FE) model that, it is claimed, 'provides the most reliable estimates under a wide variety of specifications common to real world data.'"
Faculty News

New Public Economic Theory Study Findings Have Been Published by Scientists at New York University

Excerpt from Politics & Government Week -- "We study the policy choices of an incumbent politician when voters imperfectly observe aggregate spending and the incumbent's ability."