Fisher Research and Insights Forefront

Donor-advised funds: US regulators are scrambling to catch up with the boom in these charitable giving accounts
March 18, 2024
The Conversation

Donor-advised funds: US regulators are scrambling to catch up with the boom in these charitable giving accounts

After years of concerns about how quickly the money reserved for charity gets distributed and whether donor-advised funds need to operate more transparently, proposed new federal regulations are now pending. Though the regulations would not create new requirements for how rapidly these funds distribute money, they do provide some new guidelines for what uses for DAFs are allowed by law, writes Brian Mittendorf, the H.P. Wolfe Chair in Accounting.
Elon Musk walking.
March 18, 2024
The Washington Post

Is Elon Musk’s philanthropy just a form of self-help?

If true that recent reports that Elon Musk appears very likely to be abusing rules governing nonprofits, Brian Mittendorf, the H.P. Wolfe Chair in Accounting, says Musk’s actions are likely testing the spirit of the law rather than its letter.
Headshot of Greg Allenby
March 8, 2024
Fisher College of Business

Allenby recognized as a 2024 Paul D. Converse Award recipient

Greg Allenby, the Helen C. Kurtz Chair in Marketing at Fisher, was named a recipient of a 2024 Paul D. Converse Award, which honors scholars who have made exceptional contributions to the field of marketing through research and practice. The award was established by the American Marketing Association.
Ohio State unveils Student Entrepreneurs’ Center
March 7, 2024
The Ohio State University

Ohio State unveils Student Entrepreneurs’ Center

Ohio State's new Student Entrepreneurs’ Center, an area that will provide young business developers with a space in which innovation can flourish, opened in the Gateway District. The center, which will house the Tim & Kathleen Keenan Center for Entrepreneurship, features modular spaces, conference rooms, adaptable lighting, state-of-the-art audio-visual technology, smart boards and much more.
I wanna get better: What tomorrow’s top CRE professionals are learning today
March 5, 2024
CBRE

I wanna get better: What tomorrow’s top CRE professionals are learning today

Donald Sheets, executive director of The Ohio State University Center for Real Estate, joins CBRE's podcast to talk about the importance of interdisciplinary education for tomorrow's real estate leaders, the role that experiential learning plays in real estate education, and how increased collaboration between higher education and industry can make these happen.
NRA and LaPierre found liable in New York AG’s donor funds case
February 23, 2024
Bloomberg

NRA and LaPierre found liable in New York AG’s donor funds case

The allegations of corruption on display in open court for weeks on end could shake the perception that the NRA is a strong organization, says Brian Mittendorf, the H.P. Wolfe Chair in Accounting at Fisher.
Innovating supply chain higher education with generative AI
February 21, 2024
Supply Chain Management Review

Innovating supply chain higher education with generative AI

Using artificial intelligence in the classroom is not without concerns. But Vince Castillo, assistant professor of logistics at Fisher, writes that the technology can also offer supply chain students access to and experience using an increasingly critical tool in the industry.
Is the office doomed?
February 15, 2024
Columbus Business First

Is the office doomed?

Rising construction costs, work-from-home policies, high vacancy rates and banks’ reluctance to lend have left the market in a state of flux. The issues facing the Columbus-area market aren't too different than the challenges faced nationally, says Donald Sheets, executive director of the Ohio State University Center for Real Estate.
Stock image of two women going through a box for donation.
February 14, 2024
The Ohio State University Alumni Magazine

Seven strategies to declutter

Researchers are finding that a disordered, chaotic living space can lead to negative feelings. Weeding out can do you good. Rebecca Reczek, the Berry Chair of New Technologies in Marketing, offers up a research-based technique to help you part with items while keeping the memory of it.
Bitcoin ETFs are off to a bad start. Will things improve?
February 1, 2024
The Economist

Bitcoin ETFs are off to a bad start. Will things improve?

Research by Itzhak Ben-David, the Neil Klatskin Chair in Finance and Real Estate, and his colleagues show how thematic ETFs could be harbingers for the launch of Bitcoin ETFs.
If you broke your New Year’s resolutions, here’s how you can get back on track
January 30, 2024
Forbes

If you broke your New Year’s resolutions, here’s how you can get back on track

Despite research from Fisher that says only 9% of people who make New Year's resolutions keep them, if you have yet to establish your goals for 2024 or have already fallen off the wagon, it's never too late to get on the right track.
Retailers return to bringing in inventory ‘just in time’
January 24, 2024
The Wall Street Journal

Retailers return to bringing in inventory ‘just in time’

Inventory levels that surged during the pandemic are down and companies are reluctant to build new stockpiles. Terry Esper, a logistics professor at Fisher says companies are now better able to predict shopper demand and feel they can hold leaner inventories amid moderating spending growth and fewer supply-chain disruptions.
Do bitcoin ETFs have a place in retirement portfolios?
January 13, 2024
MarketWatch

Do bitcoin ETFs have a place in retirement portfolios?

The SEC’s approval of bitcoin ETFs arguably is the occasion to sell, not buy. This is especially important for retirement investors to consider because the existence of a bitcoin ETF should not change the cryptocurrency’s underlying value, according to Itzhak Ben-David, the Neil Klatskin Chair in Finance and Real Estate at Fisher.
Wayne LaPierre leaves a financial mess behind at the NRA − on top of the legal one that landed him in court
January 12, 2024
The Conversation

Wayne LaPierre leaves a financial mess behind at the NRA − on top of the legal one that landed him in court

New York authorities have accused the NRA, Wayne LaPierre and three of his current or former colleagues of squandering millions of dollars the gun group had obtained from its members.
Boston is too expensive, everyone agrees. So what’s keeping you here?
January 8, 2024
The Boston Globe

Boston is too expensive, everyone agrees. So what’s keeping you here?

Forthcoming research by Itzhak Ben-David, the Neil Klatskin Chair in Finance and Real Estate, and two coauthors found that during the housing boom of 1996 to 2006, prices were higher in some places partly because people expected them to be.
Cryptocurrency no longer just a concept
January 5, 2024
The Columbus Dispatch

Cryptocurrency no longer just a concept

Noah Jellison, executive director of the Risk Institute, writes about the lasting impact that understanding cryptocurrency will have on the future of business and business leaders.
Storm-battered pier
December 29, 2023
Policygenius

Will home insurance prices keep rising in 2024?

Different factors, including inflation, could play a role in whether insurance rates continue to rise in 2024, says Itzhak Ben-David, the Neil Klatskin Chair in Finance and Real Estate at Fisher.
Ohio State wants to help college students get into the real estate industry
December 20, 2023
Columbus Business First

Ohio State wants to help college students get into the real estate industry

Donald Sheets, the executive director of The Ohio State University Center for Real Estate, talks about the organization's multidisciplinary reboot.
This is exactly when a ‘tough boss’ becomes a toxic leader
December 20, 2023
Fast Company

This is exactly when a ‘tough boss’ becomes a toxic leader

Leaders who consider themselves merely tough bosses must realize that not everyone sees them the same way. Understanding toxic leadership is the first step toward eradicating it, and groundbreaking research by Bennett Tepper, the Abramowitz Memorial Professor and senior associate dean for faculty and research at Fisher, outlines toxic behaviors.
Stock image for leadership
December 12, 2023
U.S. News & World Report

Leadership faces the ‘good kind’ of identity crisis

From strongman to collaborative, experts say what we expect of leaders has changed significantly over time. Timothy Judge, executive director of the Fisher Leadership Initiative and chair of the Department of Management and Human Resources, says the public nature of many leadership positions is driving the recent push for integrity among leaders.
SantaCon raises money for charity. They've spent a lot on crypto and Burning Man.
December 8, 2023
Gothamist

SantaCon raises money for charity. They've spent a lot on crypto and Burning Man

An analysis shows that SantaCon raised $1.4 million through SantaCon programming from late 2014 through 2022, and that less than a fifth of that money has gone to registered nonprofits. “The money going to their targeted charities is minuscule as a percentage of their budget," says Brian Mittendorf, the H.P. Wolfe chair in accounting at Fisher.
The $10 billion charity no one has heard of
December 7, 2023
The Chronicle of Philanthropy

The $10 billion charity no one has heard of

The SDG Impact Fund grew from $238 million to $10 billion in one year. Cryptocurrency and NFTs appear to have played a part; the U.N. Sustainable Development Goals do not. Brian Mittendorf, the H.P. Wolfe Chair in Accounting, and Helen Flannery, a fellow at the progressive Institute for Policy Studies, say publicly filed tax documents raise more questions than answers about whether the fund is being used to for the tax benefit of the wealthy.
Momentum investing has struggled for 20 years. Here’s why.
December 3, 2023
The Wall Street Journal

Momentum investing has struggled for 20 years. Here’s why.

A mutual-funds rating company changed its methodology two decades ago, and that, according to research from Itzhak Ben-David, the Neil Klatskin Chair in Finance and Real Estate, and his co-authors, has made a significant difference in the performance of momentum strategies.
The human advantage: How AI can create opportunities in the world of work
November 22, 2023
HR Leader

The human advantage: How AI can create opportunities in the world of work

Research from Isil Erel, the David A. Rismiller Chair in Finance at Fisher, and Michael Weisbach, the Ralph Kurtz Chair in Finance, adds to insights related to the use of Artificial Intelligence in hiring and human resources management.
This is what the NRA looks like in decline
November 15, 2023
The Trace

This is what the NRA looks like in decline

The group is slowly abandoning its original mission to teach Americans how to handle guns. Spending on these programs has dropped 77 percent in less than a decade. The trend, says Brian Mittendorf, the H.P. Wolfe Chair in Accounting at Fisher, can impact membership, which in turn leads to questions about the long-term future of the organization.