The dark side of stock market circuit breakers
By
Circuit breakers are meant to calm the markets. But new research shows that they can backfire and create more volatility if not properly designed.
By
Circuit breakers are meant to calm the markets. But new research shows that they can backfire and create more volatility if not properly designed.
By
Mario Draghi a longtime academic economist and public servant, served as prime minister of Italy until October 2022, and previously served as president of the European Central Bank.
By
A national water strategy would help the U.S. manage outdated infrastructure and adopt desalination technology, argues water entrepreneur Aaron Mandell.
By
Evolution can drive prejudices, MIT Sloan economist Andrew Lo finds. To nurture group wisdom, biases in data sets must be documented and understood.
By
Analytics skills remain outside the wheelhouse of many business leaders, who don’t always have a clear view of what data sources and analyses are necessary to formulate the insights they are seeking.
By
When it comes to sustainable enterprises, leaders must consider meaningful goals, consumer preferences, and the partnership of management and technology.
By
New research shows that investors are most interested in processing data about large, high-growth firms over smaller companies, even those with high-growth prospects.
By
Despite efforts to reduce emissions worldwide, severe climate change is likely inevitable in the not-too-distant future and we must invest now in strategies and technologies to help us adapt.
By
New research shows that people are more likely to trust complicated machine learning models over models that they’re able to understand and troubleshoot.
By
Myron Scholes, Frank E. Buck Professor of Finance, Emeritus, at the Stanford Graduate School of Business, and Nobel Laureate in Economic Sciences was named the recipient of the S. Donald Sussman Award