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    • HBS Book

    The Routledge Handbook of Infrastructure Finance

    By: Joshua Yindenaba Abor, John Macomber, Thankom Arun and Victor Murinde

    This handbook provides a comprehensive overview of infrastructure financing from a global perspective. It offers an extensive examination of infrastructure financing worldwide. It encompasses a wide range of subjects concerning infrastructure finance, including different project types, financing options, and the functions performed by public and private sector entities in financing and overseeing infrastructure initiatives. Given that infrastructure investment is crucial to socio-economic growth and development, it has become a critical policy priority for governments, investors, and other stakeholders around the world. It is intended for a wide range of readers interested in infrastructure finance, including academics, researchers, students, policymakers, and practitioners.

    • HBS Book

    The Routledge Handbook of Infrastructure Finance

    By: Joshua Yindenaba Abor, John Macomber, Thankom Arun and Victor Murinde

    This handbook provides a comprehensive overview of infrastructure financing from a global perspective. It offers an extensive examination of infrastructure financing worldwide. It encompasses a wide range of subjects concerning infrastructure finance, including different project types, financing options, and the functions performed by public and...

    • Journal of Finance 80, no. 5 (October 2025): 2591–2638.

    Arbitrage Capital of Global Banks

    By: Alyssa G. Anerson, Wenxin Du and Bernd Schlusche

    We show that the role of unsecured, short-term wholesale funding for global banks has changed significantly in the post-financial-crisis regulatory environment. Global banks mainly use such funding to finance liquid, near risk-free arbitrage positions—in particular, the interest on excess reserves arbitrage and the covered interest rate parity arbitrage. In this environment, we examine the response of global banks to a large negative wholesale funding shock as a result of the U.S. money market mutual fund reform implemented in 2016. In contrast to past episodes of wholesale funding dry-ups, we find that the primary response of global banks to the reform was a cutback in arbitrage positions that relied on unsecured funding, rather than a reduction in loan provision.

    • Journal of Finance 80, no. 5 (October 2025): 2591–2638.

    Arbitrage Capital of Global Banks

    By: Alyssa G. Anerson, Wenxin Du and Bernd Schlusche

    We show that the role of unsecured, short-term wholesale funding for global banks has changed significantly in the post-financial-crisis regulatory environment. Global banks mainly use such funding to finance liquid, near risk-free arbitrage positions—in particular, the interest on excess reserves arbitrage and the covered interest rate parity...

    • Organization Science 36, no. 5 (September-October 2025): 1643–1675.

    Confronting the Limits of Symbolic Actions: How Entrepreneurs Narrow the Presentation-Performance Gap

    By: Rebecca Karp and Siobhan O'Mahony

    Entrepreneurs often skillfully leverage symbolic actions to manage impressions and gain acceptance for their innovations. Impression management can generate interest, but also heighten expectations beyond an innovation’s capabilities, creating a gap between entrepreneurs’ symbolic presentations and an innovation’s performance. To convince critical audiences, entrepreneurs need to not just manage impressions, but also show how their innovations will integrate and work in situ. Yet, little research explains what happens when symbolic actions meet their limits. How do entrepreneurs respond when critical audiences challenge their symbolic actions? We examined how 28 digital health startups were challenged by a critical audience, buyers, revealing a gap between entrepreneurs’ symbolic presentations and the performance of their innovations.

    • Organization Science 36, no. 5 (September-October 2025): 1643–1675.

    Confronting the Limits of Symbolic Actions: How Entrepreneurs Narrow the Presentation-Performance Gap

    By: Rebecca Karp and Siobhan O'Mahony

    Entrepreneurs often skillfully leverage symbolic actions to manage impressions and gain acceptance for their innovations. Impression management can generate interest, but also heighten expectations beyond an innovation’s capabilities, creating a gap between entrepreneurs’ symbolic presentations and an innovation’s performance. To convince critical...

    • Featured Case

    Samsonite (A): Accounting Baggage?

    By: Aiyesha Dey, Jonas Heese and Tom Quinn

    In May 2018, Samsonite appeared to be doing well—it was the world’s largest luggage maker, it had just acquired a well-regarded luxury brand, and its stock traded at record highs. However, short seller Blue Orca Capital saw warning signs, including flawed accounting, hidden conflicts, and shaky governance. This case explores Samsonite’s history, business and operations, and accounting policies. The story continues in Samsonite: The Short Seller’s Case (B) (126-006), which explores Blue Orca’s investigation, and Samsonite: The Rebuttal (C) (126-007), which explores Samsonite’s response.

    • Featured Case

    Samsonite (A): Accounting Baggage?

    By: Aiyesha Dey, Jonas Heese and Tom Quinn

    In May 2018, Samsonite appeared to be doing well—it was the world’s largest luggage maker, it had just acquired a well-regarded luxury brand, and its stock traded at record highs. However, short seller Blue Orca Capital saw warning signs, including flawed accounting, hidden conflicts, and shaky governance. This case explores Samsonite’s history,...

    • Featured Case

    OCP Group: Transforming for a Sustainable Future

    By: Michael Tushman and Kerry Herman

    In 2025, Mostafa Terrab, Chairman of Morocco mining and fertilizer giant OCP, is assessing his senior leadership team’s progress on collaboration and synergies across his recently decentralized organization and his ambitious decarbonization goals. Terrab committed OCP to 100% carbon neutrality across scopes 1 and 2 by 2030, and scope 3 by 2040. One piece of this puzzle is cracking the code for producing green ammonia, a key input in OCP’s phosphate-based fertilizers. Terrab felt that synergies across OCP were at risk as was his green ammonia effort. Terrab is concerned the managing directors continue to focus on their own SBU’s goals rather than working together across their units to unleash their (and OCP’s) full potential. Further, Terrab’s aspiration for decarbonization across OCP is expensive. His green ammonia effort, a way to potentially revolutionize agriculture, is being resisted because of cost issues and technology questions.

    • Featured Case

    OCP Group: Transforming for a Sustainable Future

    By: Michael Tushman and Kerry Herman

    In 2025, Mostafa Terrab, Chairman of Morocco mining and fertilizer giant OCP, is assessing his senior leadership team’s progress on collaboration and synergies across his recently decentralized organization and his ambitious decarbonization goals. Terrab committed OCP to 100% carbon neutrality across scopes 1 and 2 by 2030, and scope 3 by 2040....

    • HBS Working Paper

    Multinational Enterprises and Corruption Past and Present

    By: Geoffrey Jones

    This working paper argues that the use of bribery and corruption has historically been a well-established multinational strategy. It examines multiple cases of grand corruption by blue chip corporations in different time periods and geographies, although there is no means of confirming whether these prominent case studies were tips of an iceberg or outliers. The level of engagement in petty corruption cannot be established. The industrial distribution of multinational corruption has been especially skewed towards armaments and commodities. Its use was particularly prevalent in Africa, where it was frequently condoned by the home governments of the multinationals involved. Grand corruption was especially prominent when business involved large contracts with governments. Bribery was fueled by the pervasiveness of corruption in the host economies in which the multinationals operated, but the multinationals were active agents in facilitating further corruption. Although bribery and corruption are often associated in the public mind with rogue individuals, it has historically been more often the product of miscreant corporate cultures.

    • HBS Working Paper

    Multinational Enterprises and Corruption Past and Present

    By: Geoffrey Jones

    This working paper argues that the use of bribery and corruption has historically been a well-established multinational strategy. It examines multiple cases of grand corruption by blue chip corporations in different time periods and geographies, although there is no means of confirming whether these prominent case studies were tips of an iceberg...

    • Working Paper

    When Microcredit Hurts: Overindebtedness in Times of Uncertainty

    By: Natalia Rigol and Benjamin N. Roth

    Can credit hurt small businesses during times of uncertainty? We employ a re-gression discontinuity analysis that exploits a microfinance institution’s surprise credit freeze at the onset of Chile’s 2020 Covid shutdown. We document large and persistent harm to businesses that renewed their loan just before the freeze. Survey evidence suggests the harm was a consequence of making illiquid investments with the loan proceeds, shortly after disbursement. As a measure of external validity, we examine 21 randomized evaluations of microcredit and find treatment effects are negatively correlated with the World Uncertainty Index of Ahir et al. (2022).

    • Working Paper

    When Microcredit Hurts: Overindebtedness in Times of Uncertainty

    By: Natalia Rigol and Benjamin N. Roth

    Can credit hurt small businesses during times of uncertainty? We employ a re-gression discontinuity analysis that exploits a microfinance institution’s surprise credit freeze at the onset of Chile’s 2020 Covid shutdown. We document large and persistent harm to businesses that renewed their loan just before the freeze. Survey evidence suggests the...

Initiatives & Projects

Private Capital Project

The Private Capital Project facilitates deeper interaction between academia and practitioners in the Venture Capital and Private Equity industries, to understand the big challenges facing constituents and to work on potential solutions.
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Seminars & Conferences

Dec 17
  • 17 Dec 2025

Michele Belot, Cornell University

Dec 17
  • 17 Dec 2025

Matthew Baird, LinkedIn

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Recent Publications

Financing Innovation: Evidence from R&D Grants

By: Sabrina Howell
  • April 2017 |
  • Article |
  • American Economic Review
Governments regularly subsidize new ventures to spur innovation. This paper conducts the first large-sample, quasi-experimental evaluation of R&D subsidies. I use data on ranked applicants to the US Department of Energy’s SBIR grant program. An early-stage award approximately doubles the probability that a firm receives subsequent venture capital and has large, positive impacts on patenting and revenue. These effects are stronger for more financially constrained firms. Certification, where the award contains information about firm quality, likely does not explain the grant effect. Instead, the grants are useful because they fund technology prototyping.
Citation
Related
Howell, Sabrina. "Financing Innovation: Evidence from R&D Grants." American Economic Review 107, no. 4 (April 2017): 1136–1164.

Nuwa Capital: Investing During Uncertainty

By: Paul A. Gompers
  • October 2026 |
  • Teaching Plan |
  • Faculty Research
Teaching Plan for HBS Case No. 224-016. Nuwa Capital (Nuwa) was a venture capital firm based in Dubai in the United Arab Emirates and Riyadh in Saudi Arabia. The business was founded in 2020 by Khaled Talhouni and his partners Sarah Abu Risheh, and Stephanie Nour Prince (they were later joined by Nitin Reen and Victor Sunyer). Together, they had a combined experience of nearly 20 years investing in over 300 companies, including some of the Middle East and North Africa’s most successful startups. In a startup ecosystem as nascent as theirs, their track record eclipsed most other firms. By August 2021, Nuwa had achieved a first close on its fund and, in response to changing market conditions, pivoted their investment thesis to earlier stage startups. One of the industries they decided to invest in was foodtech, and they had been in advanced stages of conversations with Calo, a Bahrain based foodtech player. The team was conducting their already accelerated due diligence when they received word that another investor had just met Calo and was willing to take Nuwa’s spot. Promising founders like Calo’s were hard to come by and Nuwa had to decide quickly. The problem was that Calo did not, on the surface, fit Nuwa’s thesis. However, it had the potential to only after a pivot.
Citation
Purchase
Related
Gompers, Paul A. "Nuwa Capital: Investing During Uncertainty." Harvard Business School Teaching Plan 226-034, October 2026.

Approaching the Product Management Interview: Analytics

By: Sara Torti
  • December 2025 |
  • Background Note |
  • Faculty Research
This note is part of a broader series designed to help MBA students prepare for Product Management internship and full-time position interviews at leading Tech companies. Each note focuses on a specific set of skills that are considered critical to the job and are often explicitly assessed during the interview process. This note is specific to Analytics. Analytics interviews aim to evaluate how a candidate structures their reasoning and uses data to define product success, diagnose problems, and make decisions amid ambiguity. The note provides a framework for approaching these questions, highlights common pitfalls, includes sample interview questions, and provides a detailed candidate-hiring manager dialogue to help students better understand and feel more confident answering these types of interview questions.
Citation
Educators
Related
Torti, Sara. "Approaching the Product Management Interview: Analytics." Harvard Business School Background Note 826-135, December 2025.

Olive Young: Formulating Beauty Innovation

By: Rebecca Karp
  • December 2025 |
  • Teaching Note |
  • Faculty Research
This case focuses on an essential issue faced by many organizations: how to scale and grow the innovative products or services they have developed and enter new markets. Although a product, service or concept may be particularly successful in creating positive performance and securing a moat in one market or with a specific customer segment, that does not necessarily mean it will produce positive returns in a new market or with a different set of customers. Moreover, attempts to grow in a new market can fail and even backfire, eroding a company’s core market or audience. Consider how Snapchat’s attempts to innovate on its user interface and appeal to an older audience drew the ire of its core “younger” audience and triggered a $1.3B loss in market capitalization . Another example is that of Ofo, a bike sharing company that expended significant resources to expand internationally, but failed to do so. As a result, the company had limited resources to fend off intensifying competition in their home market. The Olive Young case dives into this tension by unpacking Sun-jung Lee’s (CEO of Olive Young) impending decision to enter a new market, the USA.
Citation
Purchase
Related
Karp, Rebecca. "Olive Young: Formulating Beauty Innovation." Harvard Business School Teaching Note 726-378, December 2025.

Moving Money Around: Mobile Energy Storage and the Value of Geospatial Flexibility

By: Vishrut Rana, Christian Kaps and Serguei Netessine
  • 2025 |
  • Working Paper |
  • Faculty Research
The growth of renewable energy has intensified the need for solutions that can address temporal and spatial mismatches between electricity supply and demand, arising from the intermittency of renewables. While battery storage has emerged as a key tool to store renewable electricity for future use, storage developers face diminishing and uncertain returns. In this paper, we first demonstrate how local competition and transient transmission capacity congestion lead to low and uncertain returns for Stationary Energy Storage System (SESS) operators. Using six years of price data from the PJM Interconnection and a staggered diff-in-diff approach, we estimate that an additional storage installation reduces existing SESS's annual profit at that location by $7,820 per megawatt on average. We then estimate how Mobile Energy Storage Systems (MESS)—an innovative business model that allows grid-scale batteries to be relocated—can increase operators' returns and improve grid-level congestion by providing geospatial flexibility. We introduce a dynamic programming-based forecasting framework for MESS developers' relocation and operating decisions and show that, even when relocation costs are high, MESS's profit consistently outperforms even the best-sited SESS by 11-47%. In part, this profit increase is driven by MESS capturing up to 22.5% more value from congestion prices than SESS, better aligning developer and grid incentives. Our findings quantify how competition and transience of price patterns limit storage profitability and highlight how leveraging mobile storage inventory in the energy transition can help storage developers, grid planners, and policymakers to accelerate storage build-out, renewable integration, and grid flexibility.
Citation
Related
Rana, Vishrut, Christian Kaps, and Serguei Netessine. "Moving Money Around: Mobile Energy Storage and the Value of Geospatial Flexibility." Working Paper, December 2025.

Cyborgs, Centaurs and Self-Automators: The Three Modes of Human-GenAI Knowledge Work and Their Implications for Skilling and the Future of Expertise

By: Steven Randazzo, Hila Lifshitz, Katherine C. Kellogg, Fabrizio Dell'Acqua, Ethan Mollick, François Candelon and Karim R. Lakhani
  • 2025 |
  • Working Paper |
  • Faculty Research
Research on human–AI collaboration in professional settings has focused primarily on isolated interactions between knowledge professionals and AI, usually at the point of decision making. Yet generative AI broadens these interactions into an ongoing conversational process that unfolds across the full workflow. In a field study of 244 global management consultants from the Boston Consulting Group, we investigated the human–GenAI decision-making workflow and found that knowledge professionals engaged in three distinct modes of human–AI knowledge co-creation: Fused Knowledge Co-Creation, Directed Knowledge Co-Creation, and Abdicated Knowledge Co-Creation. These modes correspond to three types that emerged in practice: “Cyborgs,” “Centaurs,” and “Self-Automators.” Across these modes, we identify two fundamental questions that structure any collaborative problem-solving dynamic between human and machine: Who selects what needs to be done? and Who identifies how it gets done? These questions reveal the underlying architecture of human–AI collaboration, showing not only what GenAI is used for but also who steers the workflow and how the division of labor unfolds in practice. As a result of these emergent modes of working with GenAI, Centaurs were upskilling themselves and increasing their current domain expertise. Cyborgs were newskilling themselves in GenAI-related capabilities, acquiring a new area of AI expertise. Self-Automators were not increasing either their domain expertise or AI expertise. We show how what seems to be the same “human-in-the-loop” workflow for decision making is actually enacted in three ways with significantly different implications for skilling and the future of work.
Citation
Related
Randazzo, Steven, Hila Lifshitz, Katherine C. Kellogg, Fabrizio Dell'Acqua, Ethan Mollick, François Candelon, and Karim R. Lakhani. "Cyborgs, Centaurs and Self-Automators: The Three Modes of Human-GenAI Knowledge Work and Their Implications for Skilling and the Future of Expertise." Harvard Business School Working Paper, No. 26-036, December 2025.

Adobe: GenAI - Threat or Opportunity (B)

By: Sunil Gupta, Rajiv Lal and Ruth Page
  • December 2025 |
  • Supplement |
  • Faculty Research
[PRE ABSTRACT] Instructors should consider the timing of making the videos available to students, as they may reveal key case details. [ABSTRACT] In December 2022, Adobe CEO Shantanu Narayen faced a pivotal strategic decision due to the rapid rise of generative AI image models from OpenAI, Midjourney, and Dall-E. Adobe, a leader in digital media and marketing software with a 40-year legacy of innovation and successful adaptation recognized GenAI as both an opportunity and a threat to its core business. Many creative professionals, a critical Adobe customer segment, had expressed deep concerns over GenAI models trained through data mined from the internet, raising ethical and trust-related issues. The case supplement contains 9 videos and one exhibit which explore the deliberations of Narayen and his leadership team: Did GenAI represent a threat or an opportunity? Should Adobe partner with or acquire an existing model, or should it build its own GenAI model? If Adobe chose to build, how might it responsibly train the models to protect its trusted relationship with enterprise and creative professional customers while keeping its leadership position in the industry? Should Adobe always restrict the models to commercially safe content or were there use cases when it would allow the models to scrap the broad internet of data? How would Adobe monetize GenAI? Three years in, how had Adobe’s products offerings changed? What was the market response? How did Adobe’s corporate culture influence the company’s response?
Citation
Purchase
Related
Gupta, Sunil, Rajiv Lal, and Ruth Page. "Adobe: GenAI - Threat or Opportunity (B)." Harvard Business School Multimedia/Video Supplement 526-701, December 2025.

Alaan (B): Timing a Fundraise

By: Jeffrey J. Bussgang and Fares Khrais
  • December 2025 |
  • Supplement |
  • Faculty Research
"By mid-2024, Alaan, a young UAE-based fintech startup, had found its footing and reached profitability relatively quickly. But while performance in the UAE was encouraging, both existing and potential investors were beginning to look for signs of scale—and the domestic market alone might not be large enough to sustain Alaan’s growth ambitions. To unlock its next phase, co-founders Parthi Duraisamy and Karun Kurien turned their attention to Saudi Arabia—a much larger but markedly different and underpenetrated market. Its unfamiliar regulations, infrastructure, and customer behaviors made success far from guaranteed. As the team prepared to launch, Duraisamy faced an uncommon dilemma for a founder: not whether to raise capital, or how much, but when. Should he seek funding before entering Saudi Arabia, ensuring resources for expansion, or after, when early results could strengthen his negotiating position—but might just as easily expose new risks? The timing of that decision would determine not only Alaan’s valuation, but how—and how fast—the company could grow beyond its home market. Note: This case follows “Alaan (A): Is Y Combinator Worth It?” which examined Duraisamy and Alaan’s early years culminating in a decision of whether to accept a relatively modest offer (in terms of valuation) from Y Combinator"
Citation
Related
Bussgang, Jeffrey J., and Fares Khrais. "Alaan (B): Timing a Fundraise." Harvard Business School Supplement 826-116, December 2025.
More Publications

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    Florida keeps packing people and buildings on barrier islands. It comes at a high cost.

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    • 15 Dec 2025
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    Chip Stocks Meet Harvard’s Criteria for a Bubble: Equity Insight

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    • HBS Working Knowledge

    The 10 Most Popular Articles of 2025

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    • 15 Dec 2025
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    Should U.S. be worried about AI bubble?

    Re: Andy Wu
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The Case Method

Introduced by HBS faculty to business education in 1925, the case method is a powerful interactive learning process that puts students in the shoes of a leader faced with a real-world management issue and challenges them to propose and justify a resolution.
Today, HBS remains an authority on teaching by the case method. The School is also the world’s leading case-writing institution, with HBS faculty members contributing hundreds of new cases to the management curriculum a year via the School’s unique case development and writing process.
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