Faculty News

New, joint research from Professor Baruch Lev exploring the link between ESG considerations and stock performance during crises is highlighted

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Excerpt from Institutional Investor -- "Researchers from Canada’s University of Waterloo, Tilburg University in the Netherlands, and New York University’s Stern School of Business challenged the 'widespread claims by fund managers, ESG data purveyors, and the financial press' that companies with high ESG scores were better situated in the pandemic. In particular, the authors — Elizabeth Demers, Jurian Hendrikse, Philip Joos, and Bauch Lev — cited reports from BlackRock, Morningstar, and MSCI, which all found that ESG funds outperformed during the crash."
Faculty News

Professor Tom Meyvis' comments on why consumers are drawn to shopping at Target are highlighted

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Excerpt from Mashed -- "According to Tom Meyvis, a professor of marketing at New York University's Stern School of Business, the first trick employed by Target to suck you in lies in how they display the massive variety of items for sale (via Refinery29). For example, by placing hot sauce next to Pepto Bismol, customers shopping for one are more likely to leave with both. This process is called cross-selling, and it's surprisingly effective; so the next time you're at Target and not looking to over-stuff your pantry, keep an eye out for these clever but innocuous-looking pairings to ensure you're only purchasing what you really need. Of course, this is just one of the tricks in Target's bag."
Faculty News

Professor Anika Sharma's comments on retailer Lord & Taylor's business strategy are referenced

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Excerpt from Retail Dive -- "'Who is saying, 'Help me plan your wardrobe or your trousseau'?' Anika Sharma, professor at New York University's Stern School of Business, said in an interview last year. 'This is why brands like Stitch Fix are doing well. I would expect something like that from a place like Lord & Taylor, but the store is not doing well because they've taken those people out. They're a depository of other brands, but they don't stand for something.'"
Faculty News

Jihoon Rim Joins NYU Stern Management and Organizations Department as a Visiting Professor of Management Practice

Jihoon Rim
Jihoon Rim, former CEO of Kakao, joined NYU Stern’s Management and Organizations Department as a Visiting Professor of Management Practice. During the 2019-2020 academic year, he served as an Executive-in-Residence for the School’s Fubon Center for Business, Technology and Innovation, while holding an appointment as an adjunct professor in the Technology, Operations, and Statistics Department teaching a course entitled, “Managing a High-Tech Company: The CEO Perspective.” Professor Rim will continue teaching the course along with other tech and entrepreneurship courses.
Faculty News

Highlights from Professor Scott Galloway's recent podcast interview with Uber CEO Dara Khosrowshahi are featured

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Excerpt from The Verge -- "Galloway, who in addition to podcasting also serves as a professor of marketing at the New York University Stern School of Business, asked whether Uber is 'ground zero for income inequality,' noting the gap between Uber’s regular employees who earn six-figure salaries and above, and the millions of drivers, some of whom live below the poverty line."
Faculty News

Professor Aswath Damodaran explains why investors are turning to Big Tech stocks amid the coronavirus crisis

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Excerpt from The New York Times -- “'It’s become the new flight to safety,' Aswath Damodaran, a New York University finance professor who studies the stock market, said of investors flocking to Big Tech. Companies that are rich, flexible and digital are benefiting in the pandemic — and that describes the tech Goliaths, he said, adding, 'This crisis has strengthened what was already a strong hand.'”
Faculty News

Joint research from Professor Bryan Bollinger addressing peer effects in the diffusion of solar panels is spotlighted

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Excerpt from The New York Times -- "According to a 2012 study by the economists Bryan Bollinger and Kenneth Gillingham, a carbon tax that induced a family to install solar panels could be expected to stimulate a neighbor’s copycat installation within four months, on average. Let another four months pass, and each of these two will have spawned additional installations of their own, for a total of four."
Faculty News

Professor Alixandra Barasch is quoted in a story examining how fashion brands can take advantage of the key back-to-school shopping season amid the coronavirus crisis

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Excerpt from Business of Fashion -- “'The more digital the school year is going to be, the more difficult it is going to be for retail,' said Steven Marotta, managing director of research and equity at C.L. King & Associates. … 'We do think that there is a significant business still to be had, even if it's not as promising as previous years.” Whether they are staying home or not, kids are going to be active. … Alixandra Barasch, a marketing professor at NYU’s Stern School of Business who studies consumer trends, said she sees an opportunity for brands to sell statement pieces and accessories to kids this season."
Faculty News

Professor Thomas Philippon explains how the COVID-19 pandemic has provided Big Tech companies unprecedented reach into our lives, shaping how we work, communicate, shop and relax

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Excerpt from The New York Times -- "'Covid was the perfect positive storm for these guys,' said Thomas Philippon, a professor of finance at New York University. The companies’ deeper encroachment into American lives can be seen in web traffic numbers for Alphabet, Facebook and Amazon, which own the four most visited sites in the country. The traffic on these sites was immense before the pandemic, but daily visits increased sharply in March, when stay-at-home orders began, with Facebook up 15 percent and YouTube 10 percent, according to SimilarWeb, an online data provider."
Faculty News

Professor David Yermack's research on the economic impact of Michelle Obama's fashion choices is cited

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Excerpt from Vogue Australia -- "As one of the most fashionable figures in politics, Obama was also credited with having a rather large economic impact within the fashion industry. In fact, a 2010 study conducted by Professor David Yermack from New York University’s Stern School of Business found that, when the former First Lady stepped out in a particular style, the value of the label she was wearing jumped up approximately US$14 million."
Faculty News

In a story exploring the impact of the California Consumer Protection Act, Professor Vasant Dhar explains why there is an inverse monotonic relationship between privacy and value

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Excerpt from MarketWatch -- “'There’s an inverse monotonic relationship between privacy and value,' Vasant Dhar, a professor in the NYU Stern School of Business, where he is director of the Center for Data Science, told MarketWatch in an email message. 'The more someone knows about you (less privacy), the more value to them. CCPA introduces friction (you now have to DEAL with being ACCOUNTABLE etc compared to the Wild West days, so that’s a cost), and it makes it harder to link data which is where a lot of value lies.'"
Faculty News

In a video segment, Professor Amy Webb reviews scenes from movies that are set in the future

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Excerpt from Vanity Fair -- "Futurist Amy Webb fact checks futuristic scenes from movies including 'Blade Runner 2049,' 'Gattaca,' 'The Matrix,' 'Ex Machina,' 'WALL-E,' ‘2001: A Space Odyssey,’ ‘Total Recall’ and analyzes their probability, craft, and execution."
Faculty News

Research from Professor Adam Alter examining how children use technology is cited

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Excerpt from The Toronto Star -- "Most teenagers are checking their phones 150 times per day—that is, once every six minutes. Add it all up and they’re spending more than seven hours a day looking at their smartphones—and that’s outside of school or homework! As New York University marketing professor Adam Alter points out, this means that over the course of their lives our kids are going to spend at least seven years immersed in their phones."
Faculty News

Professor Nicholas Economides weighs in on Epic Games' recent allegations that Apple and Google breached anti-trust laws by charging app developers a 30% fee on sales and imposing other restrictions that benefit their own businesses

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Excerpt from Reuters -- "But in the end, alternatives exist, said Nicholas Economides, a New York University economics professor who studies online marketplaces.'Having other options definitely makes it a bit harder to say something is anticompetitive,' Economides said, speaking generally about app stores."
Faculty News

Professor Joost van Dreunen offers his perspective on the future of virtual-reality startup company Sensorium Corp

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Excerpt from BNN Bloomberg -- “'Sensorium looks like one the best funded VR-related experiments out there,' said Joost van Dreunen, an adjunct assistant professor at New York University’s Stern School of Business, adding it’s a risky bet given how early-days the industry is. 'We have to ask the question: If Covid-19 benefitted every other aspect of gaming in recent months, where is the evidence that consumer adoption of VR has accelerated?'”
Faculty News

Lord Mervyn King's recent comments calling on policymakers to acknowledge the world's advanced economies have been stuck in a "low-growth trap" for at least a decade are mentioned

Excerpt from Australian Broadcasting Corporation (ABC) News -- "There are plenty of aggressively confident people out there, but it doesn't mean they always know what they're talking about. Last year, a former governor of the Bank of England, Mervyn King, even criticised the current generation of policymakers for failing to acknowledge how much the world had changed since the global financial crisis. He also wanted to know why they were so resistant to new ways of thinking."
Faculty News

Key takeaways on technology addiction from Professor Adam Alter's book, "Irresistible," are highlighted

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Excerpt from Interesting Engineering -- "It is time to talk about our addiction to technology. We might not have a Walking Dead-style zombie apocalypse to deal with, but we do have plenty of technology zombies walking around. NYU professor Adam Alter thinks this is really happening. In his book Irresistible, Dr. Alter discusses the addictive perils of modern technology, and gives some eye-opening statistics, like how an average millennial picks up their phone 150 times a day."
Faculty News

Joint research from Professor Baruch Lev investigating why firms split their stock or distribute stock dividends and why the market reacts favorably to these distributions is cited

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Excerpt from Barron's -- "Critics point out that there’s no guarantee that a stock’s value will continue to rise after the split. They also take issue with the expanded-ownership argument. Average trading volume—measured by dollar amounts traded—don’t change much post-split, according to a widely cited academic paper by Josef Lakonishok and Baruch Lev."
Business and Policy Leader Events

Discussion on "Quest for Restoring Financial Stability in India" featuring Professor Viral Acharya

Raghu Sundaram and Viral Acharya
On Friday, August 14, The Salomon Center for the Study of Financial Institutions will host a discussion on Quest for Restoring Financial Stability in India, featuring Professor Viral Acharya and moderated by Dean Raghu Sundaram.
Faculty News

In an in-depth Q&A interview, Professor Edward Altman discusses his approach to evaluating small businesses and offers thoughts on where India stands with respect to the global SME financing opportunity in a post-COVID-19 world

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Excerpt from Moneycontrol -- "I am extremely surprised that something that we built 50 years ago is popular even today. I think the secret to its longevity is three factors: first, it is a simple analytical tool involving five commonly found financial measures which helped distinguish between healthy and unhealthy companies. Second, it continues to be quite accurate, ranging between 80 to 90 percent accuracy for large companies. And third, it is free. Anyone can use it, test it, and if they do not like it, throw it out."
Faculty News

Center for Business and Human Rights Deputy Director Paul Barrett explains why false photos are critical currency in the world of disinformation

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Excerpt from Greenpointers -- "Greenpointers asked Dawn Jo Branch where she found the image of Greenpoint garbage, but she hasn’t responded. More than 8,000 people have shared her post of trash in 'Seattle.' Unfortunately, this type of photographic trickery is common, explains Paul Barrett, deputy director of the NYU Stern Center for Business and Human Rights and researcher who investigates the spread of misinformation across social media."
Faculty News

Research addressing how to treat stock based compensation in cash flow valuations from Professor Aswath Damodaran is referenced

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Excerpt from Seeking Alpha -- "For further reading on the topic of treating stock based compensation in cash flow valuations I highly suggest this post by a fellow Seeking Alpha contributor as well as this post by NYU Professor Aswath Damodaran."
Faculty News

New, joint research from Professor Bryan Bollinger exploring the household adoption of solar power is highlighted

Excerpt from Nature -- "Personal economic advantage is more likely to persuade people to switch to solar power than campaigns focusing on public interest.Kenneth Gillingham at Yale University in New Haven, Connecticut, and his colleagues assessed the outcome of a grassroots campaign to convince people to outfit their homes with solar panels. The study used data collected in 29 Connecticut municipalities with more than 680,000 residents in total, and included information on rooftop solar-panel installations."
Faculty News

Insights on shadow banking from Professor Nouriel Roubini's book, "Crisis Economics," are spotlighted

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Excerpt from Business Today -- "Shadow banking isn't exactly a neoliberal (radical right) concept, it existed earlier, but as Prof. Nouriel Roubini of New York University and Prof. Stephen Mihm of the University of Georgia pointed out in their 2010 book "Crisis Economics" it entered mainstream financing in a big way and turned the rules of the game in the neoliberal era."
Faculty News

Professor Scott Galloway's comments addressing the current state of the innovation economy in the United States are featured

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Excerpt from NY Mag -- "On the latest episode of the Pivot Schooled Live series, Kara Swisher and Scott Galloway discussed how much the supremacy of a company’s product still matters in 2020, and to what extent innovation has been co-opted by huge companies that can hire inexpensive labor and create the illusion of forward progress. Swisher contended that companies need to prove themselves to consumers to really succeed, but Galloway argued that a “cheap capital economy” that thrives on the exploitation of workers has taken over the American entrepreneurial model that had been ascendant since the 1970s."

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