Faculty News

Professor Arun Sundararajan predicts that U.S. online apparel sales will exceed in-store sales in 2020 for the first time

Barron's logo
Excerpt from Barron's -- "While the May numbers will be better than April’s as local economies are showing signs of recovery and people are returning to work, 'many behavior changes and channel shifts will be permanent,' says New York University business-school professor Arun Sundararajan. 'The Covid shutdown has accelerated the ascent and eventual dominance of the e-commerce channel,” Sundararajan says, predicting that when it comes to apparel, U.S. online sales will exceed in-store sales in 2020 for the first time."
Faculty News

Joint research from Professor Julia Hur examining the discrepancy between predicted versus actual advisor selection decisions is featured

Wall Street Journal logo
Excerpt from The Wall Street Journal -- "'It tastes awful, but it works,' she says. 'Sometimes you really do need the skill set, and sometimes the nice person is not going to give it to you.' Prof. Shea is a co-author of the March paper and a fellow researcher in the six studies cited, along with Julia Hur, assistant professor of management and organizations at NYU Shanghai, and Rachel Ruttan, an assistant professor of organizational behavior and human resources at the University of Toronto’s Rotman School of Management."
Faculty News

Professor Tulin Erdem notes that consumers are becoming more savvy, leading them to assess products on a much more critical scale than in the past

Wall Street Journal logo
Excerpt from The Wall Street Journal -- "It isn’t necessarily that product quality is getting worse, says Tulin Erdem, chair of the marketing department at New York University’s Stern School of Business. What is happening instead, she suggests, is that consumers are becoming more savvy, and that in turn is leading them to assess products on a much more critical scale than in the past."
Faculty News

Joint research from Professor Nathan Pettit addressing how social status changes over time and impacts work hierarchies is cited

Wall Street Journal logo
Excerpt from The Wall Street Journal -- "Most important, understand that social status isn’t static. As Nathan Pettit, a professor at New York University’s Stern School of Business, and Jennifer Carson Marr, a professor at the University of Maryland, recently showed, social status changes over time—hierarchies at work are constantly shifting. So don’t despair: There’s a chance your boss will be back in the black again."
Faculty News

Research from Professor Lisa Leslie exploring diversity initiative effectiveness is spotlighted

Fast Company logo
Excerpt from Fast Company -- "Despite the billions of dollars U.S. companies spend on diversity programs each year, current strategies will not necessarily achieve their goals, according to an Academy of Management Review article.

'Staying the course with regard to how diversity initiatives are currently implemented is unlikely to result in substantial progress toward diversity goals,'" Lisa M. Leslie of New York University wrote in 'Diversity Initiative Effectiveness: A Typological Theory of Unintended Consequences.'"
Faculty News

Professor Scott Galloway's recent blog post, which outlines five possible scenarios for the future of tech, is published

Business Insider logo
Excerpt from Business Insider -- "We witness border skirmishes between big tech firms on a regular basis. This year, one or more will erupt into a shooting war. Just as most wars are not a function of ideology but economics, the armies of search, handsets, and performative posts will begin landing paratroopers behind enemy lines and initiate heavy equipment assaults. Yes, I watch too much History Channel."
Faculty News

Professor Alex Dontoh offers insight on how organizations can help employees find financial peace of mind

Reuters logo
Excerpt from Reuters -- "There are a number of ways employers can offer such a benefit, including a single lump-sum payment or regular monthly payments for a finite or indefinite period. “With these contributions, employees will see an instant boost to their bottom line,” explains Alex Dontoh, a professor of accounting at New York University’s Stern School of Business. 'According to Federal Reserve statistics, the monthly average student loan payment is $393. A monthly loan payment of $393 is quite a large amount considering that the average before-tax salary of a college graduate in the U.S. is about $50,000,'"
Faculty News

Professor Nouriel Roubini discusses the European Commission's recovery plan to help economically weaker countries hit hardest by the coronavirus crisis

Express Logo 190 x 145
Excerpt from Express -- "U.S. economist Nouriel Roubini, lecturer New York University's Stern School of Business, said the package was smaller than Italy, Spain and Greece had hoped. Mr Roubini has warned 'the danger comes from Italy' if the ECB is unable to help surface the county’s debt through bonds."
Faculty News

Research from Professor Holger Mueller examining the relationship between business closings, related unemployment and falling prices for real estate in different American counties is spotlighted

HBR France Logo 190 x 145
Excerpt from HBR France -- "Research shows that highly indebted companies are particularly vulnerable in the event of a recession. In a 2017 study, Xavier Giroud (then at the Sloan School of Management at MIT) and Holger Mueller (Stern School of Business at NYU) examined the relationship between business closings, related unemployment and falling prices for real estate in different American counties. Overall, the more property prices fell, the more consumer demand fell, leading to higher business closings and unemployment."
Faculty News

Professor Aswath Damodaran shares his reactions to the recent U.S. stock market rally

Bloomberg logo
Excerpt from Bloomberg -- "The case for today’s valuations is that corporate profits will snap back as the economy reopens and that the Fed will continue to keep interest rates low, spurring growth and making stocks look attractive in relation to interest-earning securities such as Treasury bonds. NYU’s Damodaran says the S&P 500 is probably fairly valued at 2,900 to 3,000 based on projected earnings, interest rates, and other factors, but its current level of about 3,200 is 'not so wildly inconsistent where you’d say it makes no sense.'”
Faculty News

New, joint research from Professor Viral Acharya addressing the risk of being a fallen angel and the corporate dash for cash in the midst of COVID-19 is mentioned

Financial Times logo
Excerpt from Financial Times -- "Besides drawing down credit lines Acharya and Steffen (2020) show that firms also raised cash by accessing bond markets, but this started later. New bond issuance was muted until mid-March but accelerated after the Fed announced its corporate bond purchase programs through which it can purchase investment-grade rated corporate bonds (including ‘fallen angels’) and ETFs."
Faculty News

Professor Edward Altman explains why he believes defaults on junk bonds will spike to record-breaking numbers in 2020

Bloomberg logo
Excerpt from Bloomberg -- "Edward Altman said he expects a record number of mega-bankruptcies this year, surpassing the previous high of 49 in 2009 for companies with liabilities greater than $1 billion. Defaults on junk bonds also will spike, the professor emeritus at NYU’S Stern School added. 'It’s not only the impact of Covid-19, which is of course the primary reason, but also the enormous amount of debt that had been building up in the economy prior to it,' said Altman, who developed a widely used method called the Altman-Z-Score for predicting business failures."
Faculty News

In a wide-ranging video interview, Professor Arun Sundararajan explains that Facebook may open “a Pandora’s box” in possibly redefining its responsibilities for moderating online content

CNBC logo
Excerpt from CNBC -- “'Moderation is messy because there are very few absolute standards that govern what’s acceptable,' says Professor Arun Sundararajan from New York University’s Stern School of Business. He adds that Facebook may open 'a Pandora’s box in many ways' in possibly redefining its responsibilities for moderating online content, as its founder Mark Zuckerberg deals with widespread backlash over alleged inaction on U.S. President Donald Trump’s posts."
Faculty News

Insights from Professor Thomas Philippon's book, "The Great Reversal," on how a lack of competition leads to lower wages, less business investment and slower economic growth are cited

The Washington Post logo
Excerpt from The Washington Post -- "That’s being blamed for a variety of economic ills. In his 2019 book 'The Great Reversal: How America Gave Up on Free Markets,' Thomas Philippon, a professor at New York University’s Stern School of Business, argues that a lack of competition leads to lower wages, less business investment and slower economic growth.
Faculty News

Professor Andrea Bonezzi's joint research on consumers’ receptivity to medical AI is spotlighted

U.S. News and World Report logo
Excerpt from US News -- "In a 2019 New York University-Harvard study, business school students said they'd be OK with getting poorer quality health care as long as it was provided by a human instead of AI. People resisted AI, the study authors found, because they felt it would not take their "idiosyncratic characteristics and circumstances" into account."
Faculty News

Professor Tom Meyvis notes that consumers may choose renting certain goods and services over owning them to avoid the steep price tags of big-ticket purchases in the midst of the coronavirus crisis

WIRED logo
Excerpt from WIRED -- "In addition to the public health emergency, Covid-19 has also spurred a severe employment crisis, and Lieberman sees rental companies as poised to flourish, because people are cautious about spending. This is a view shared by New York University marketing professor Tom Meyvis, who studies consumer behavior. Because people tend to be more careful with money during economic downturns, Meyvis suspects people may choose renting certain goods and services over owning them to avoid the steep price tags of big-ticket purchases. 'They may be more reluctant to pay high up-front costs, even if they're able to do so,” he says.'"
Faculty News

Professor Amy Webb explains how people can overcome the "paradox of the present” by becoming more comfortable with uncertainty

Financial Times logo
Excerpt from Financial Times -- "Are things at work, in fact, eventually going to go back to something like they were before coronavirus? Humans overestimate the long-term impact of the things we are living through; what futurist and NYU Stern Business School professor Amy Webb calls 'the paradox of the present'. She suggests we learn to overcome it by becoming more comfortable with uncertainty."
Faculty News

Professor Nicholas Economides' recent comments on the recovery of the hospitality industry and small businesses are mentioned

El Espectador Logo 190 x 145
Excerpt from El Espectador -- "Speaking to Efe, Professor Nicholas Economides, from the Stern Business School of the University of New York (NYU), foresees a slow recovery of the hospitality industry and small businesses, such as hairdressers, aesthetic centers or barber shops, since they require close contact with the client and its opening will be later, according to the calendar of phases to return to economic activity planned by the state."
Faculty News

Insights from Professor Steven Altman's recent op-ed on how the COVID-19 pandemic is impacting globalization are highlighted

Excerpt from RetailWire -- "In a column for Harvard Business Review, Steven Altman, senior research scholar at the NYU Stern School of Business, wrote that he believes globalization and shifts away from globalization will offer opportunities and challenges for businesses. He wrote, 'A volatile world of partially connected national economies expands possibilities for global strategy even as it complicates the management of multinational firms.'”
Faculty News

Joint research from Professor Baruch Lev examining the recent failure of value investing is highlighted

Bloomberg logo
Excerpt from Bloomberg -- "This concern lines up with post-crisis economic trends that are now being exacerbated by the pandemic. In a paper with University of Calgary’s Anup Srivastava, New York University professor Baruch Lev argues that as consumer demand and bank lending slumped after the 2008 recession, value shares have been unable to rebuild and innovate."
Faculty News

Center for Business and Human Rights Deputy Director Paul Barrett offers his thoughts on online misinformation and the recent protests

The Hill logo
Excerpt from The Hill -- “'There's certainly some anecdotal evidence that there are some left wing extremists ... and right wing extremists who were participating in a protest around the edges and causing some of the problems. But of course that's not to say that these protests are not real and spontaneous,' said Paul Barrett, deputy director of the New York University Stern Center for Business and Human Rights."
Faculty News

Professor Edward Altman's estimation that roughly 8% of all firms whose debt is rated speculative grade will default in the next 12 months is cited

Excerpt from Money Morning -- "Edward Altman, an emeritus professor of finance for the New York University Stern School of Business, estimates about 8% of all firms whose debt is rated speculative grade will default in the next 12 months. Over the next two years, 20% will go belly-up. Altman also expects at least 165 large firms with more than $100 million in liabilities will go bankrupt by the end of 2020."
Faculty News

In a wide-ranging interview, Lord Mervyn King illustrates why the COVID-19 pandemic is a classic example of radical uncertainty

MoneyWeek Logo 190 x 145
Excerpt from MoneyWeek -- "This week, Merryn talks to ex-governor of the Bank of England Merryn King about the pandemic and how to prepare for a future that is unknowable; the government's response and why science may not always have the answers; and how to deal with vast rise in public debt. Plus, a little bit of bonus Brexit."
Faculty News

Professor Dolly Chugh discusses how implicit biases are a normal part of one's thought process and come from messaging that has been internalized over the course of their lives

Yahoo logo
Excerpt from Yahoo News -- "Instead, implicit biases are a normal part of one's thought process and come from messaging they've internalized over the course of their lives. This messaging comes from media, education, pop culture, and real-life interactions. 'Think of that as a fog we've been breathing our whole life, we never even realized it, what we were taking in,' says Dolly Chugh, an associate professor at NYU's Stern School of Business."
Faculty News

Research from Professor Aswath Damodaran on equity risk premiums is cited

MarketWatch logo
Excerpt from MarketWatch -- "Analysts have also pointed to low interest rates as a reason for higher valuations of late. The equity risk premium, or the expected return stocks will provide over government bonds sits at above 6% versus an average of 3.2%, according to data from Aswath Damodaran, professor of corporate finance and valuation at the Stern School of Business at New York University."

Archive