2020-2021年案例研究

You can’t build an effective investment strategy without first knowing your client… Meet Florian Hagenbuch!

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CASE STUDY: You just graduated college and now work at an up-and-coming asset management company, Wharton Global Asset Management (WGAM). The firm currently manages a $100,000,000 portfolio that is invested across several different sectors, representing a broad range of industries and companies. You are an analyst, but you hope to one day become a portfolio manager who makes the final investment decisions for WGAM’s portfolio.

WGAM’s current portfolio manager (your team’s teacher/advisor) recently met with a potential client Florian Hagenbuch. Born in Germany, raised in Brazil and educated in the United States at the Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania, Florian realized his passion for startups and entrepreneurship after spending two years working in the financial market in London. Florian says, “I love to invest my energy and money on startups and disruptive business.”

Florian is the founder and co-CEO of Loft, a startup that is reinventing the process of buying and selling real estate in Latin America by leveraging technology and data to simplify bureaucratic processes. Loft is backed by leading global financial technology and property technology investors, such as Andreessen Horowitz, QED, Thrive, Fifth Wall, and Monashees, and has raised more than $300 million in equity and debt capital.

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2018-2019年全球总决赛

The 2019 Investment Competition Global Finale Showcases Financial Literacy at Its Finest

by Diana Drake

While the KWHS Investment Competition has been around since 2012, each year it delivers unexpected ideas and experiences. The 2019 Global Finale weekend on May 3 and 4 was no exception. A new first: the top nine teams traveling to Wharton from India, China, Brazil and the U.S. to compete in a stand-alone Global Finale of the best teams from around the world. A new first: a Chinese team from Region 1 placing in the Global top three. A new first: a Friday learning day equipped with spaghetti and marshmallow towers and entrepreneurial innovation. Oh, and a Yeti – it was the first time in seven years we’ve had the Abominable Snowman make it to the 8th floor of Wharton’s Jon M. Huntsman Hall as part of a Global Finale team presentation.

What wasn’t new, other than the players? More than 50 determined and financially savvy high school students, led by educators and advisors, showing up to give the 10-minute presentations of their lives. They had all contributed to 10 weeks of team trading, deliberating and strategizing in hopes of landing potential client Sachin Rekhi, resulting in the submission of nearly 550 final investment reports in December 2018. Then came three regional final rounds in India, China and the U.S., identifying the top nine teams from those countries (plus a tenth wildcard pick from the U.K.) They would go in front of a panel of five industry experts, two representing the day’s sponsors – Aberdeen Standard Investments and Vanguard — in hopes of winning the title as the competition’s most competent, reliable and creative asset-management team.

First-place team Filter Coffee Investments from India, joined by advisors Manvir Singh Rana and Alka Munjal (center) and Srinath Chigullapalli (left) from Vanguard, a competition sponsor.

The full lineup of Saturday’s competitors included:

  • Pegasus, YK Pao School, Shanghai – Region 1, China, First Place
  • Filter Coffee Investments, Amity International School, Noida – Region 2, India, First Place
  • EVA (Eagles Value Added), Graded American School, São Paulo – Region 3, Brazil, First Place
  • OG, RDFZ, Beijing – Region 1, China, Second Place (chose not to present in the Global Finale)
  • Scion Capital, Jayshree Periwal International School, Jaipur – Region 2, India, Second Place
  • Yeti Investors, Maclay School, Tallahassee – Region 3, U.S., Second Place
  • CFuture, WHBC of Wuhan Foreign Languages School, Wuhan – Region 1, China, Third Place
  • Olympians, Amity International School, Vasundhra Sector 6, Ghaziabad – Region 2, India, Third Place
  • Sage Hill, Sage Hill School, Newport Coast – Region 3, U.S., Third Place
  • DC Capital, Dulwich College London – Region 3, U.K., KWHS Wildcard Pick

Following nine impressive team presentations and in-depth Q&A sessions by the judging panel, four top teams (including a tie for third) received trophies and $5,000, $2,000 and $1,000 respectively for their schools from sponsor, Vanguard.

The 2019 KWHS Investment Competition Global Finale winners are:

  • First Place: Filter Coffee Investments
  • Second Place: Scion Capital
  • Third Place: Pegasus
  • Third Place: Yeti Investors

Taking a front-row seat for the festivities was this year’s Global Finale panel of judges. They included Srinath Chigullapalli, senior IT program manager at Vanguard; David Lawrence, founder of RANE (Risk Assistance Network+Exchange) and long-time managing director at Goldman Sachs; Charles Rejonis, senior IT director in the Wharton Research Data Services group at the University of Pennsylvania; Fionna Ross, senior ESG (Environmental, Social, Governance) analyst on the North American Equity team at Aberdeen Standard Investments; and John Squires, a partner at Dilworth Paxson law firm and former chief IP counsel for Goldman Sachs. Special guest Chris Demetriou, CEO for the Americas, Aberdeen Standard Investments, returned for a second year representing the competition’s long-time sponsor, to welcome the teams and provide insight into trends in asset management.

Yeti Investors from Florida, U.S., which tied for third place in the competition, discusses teamwork, and gives us a glimpse of their mascot, Freddie the Yeti.

Underscored by words like “phenomenal” and “inspiring,” the judges honored the competing teams with their reflections on the day. “I was so excited to come judge again this year,” said Ross, who also judged the 2017 Global Finale. “You all show such professionalism and competence. It was a difficult decision to try to sort out the rankings. You should all be extremely proud of how you performed today.”

Lawrence, who also judged the competition in 2018, praised the teams’ energy and knowledge. “When I left Goldman Sachs, I told the then-head of [the company] that my compensation at Goldman was never reflected in my W-2 statement, it was in the relationships that I was able to form,” noted Lawrence. “I know this is an investment challenge, but your investment in friendships and associations is no less important.” Adding that every team showed “extraordinary teamwork,” he urged participants to value collaboration in all that they pursue.

Sumukh Srivastava of the Olympians highlights how his team got to know client Sachin Rekhi on Twitter.

Eli Lesser, KWHS’s new executive director of high school and summer programs, was amazed by his first KWHS Learning Day and Global Finale. “Our dean, Geoffrey Garrett, has a vision of Wharton as a place that ‘incubates ideas to transform business, to power Insights to reinvent decision-making, and create leaders who change the world.’ I am proud that in our Global Finale this past Saturday we saw high school students embody this vision,” noted Lesser, who began his career as a high school teacher. “Each team presented the ideas that they incubated during the current school year; used new powerful insights to build a team and make decisions; and ultimately become leaders that we know will someday transform the world! In my new position, I am looking forward to continuing to meet young people and their teachers through our programming.”

For more information on the KWHS Investment Competition, please visit the KWHS Competitions Page. Be sure to follow us on Instagram @KWHSLife, Twitter @WhartonHS and check out our KWHS Facebook page for many more photos and reflections from this year’s 2019 KWHS Investment Competition Finale. We will begin promoting the 2019-2020 competition soon, so make sure you are registered with KWHS to receive all the updates! #KWHSInvests

Eli Lesser, executive director of high school and summer programs (right), talks with Dr. Alka Munjal of Amity University and David Roberts, advisor to Yeti Investors, during Friday’s Learning Day.
The 2019 Global Finale judges: Srinath Chigullapalli, Fionna Ross, Charles Rejonis, John Squires and David Lawrence.

2018-2019年第一区决赛

Teams Pegasus, OG and CFuture Take Top Honors for the Region 1 Finals in Beijing

by Diana Drake

Students arriving at the Penn Wharton China Center in Beijing, China, on the morning of Saturday, March 2, 2019, for the KWHS Investment Competition Region 1 finals, were greeted by a statue of Benjamin Franklin sitting on a bench — a familiar icon to anyone who has visited the Wharton School, University of Pennsylvania campus in Philadelphia, Pa. Franklin, in addition to being a founding father of the U.S., founded Penn in 1755.

These high school students were also familiar with a Ben Franklin quote found on the KWHS Investment Competition website: “An investment in knowledge pays the best interest.”

The March 2 event was a living testament to that sentiment. Throughout the day, 12 teams of high school students from Region 1 who had been selected to compete in the semi-finals – primarily from schools in China, and one from Mongolia – presented their compelling investment strategies and demonstrated their new financial knowledge to a panel of industry judges and an audience filled with students, teachers and parents.

David Lin, a teacher from YK Pao School in Shanghai, watched with particular interest as the presentations unfolded. Lin was the mentor and advisor to two finalist teams from YK Pao, Pegasus and YKPS Unicorn. “I am in total agreement with KWHS’s mission to spread financial literacy among young people through this Wharton Investment Competition,” Lin noted. “It’s becoming even more important nowadays for the next generation of the rising wealthy families in China, who are mostly single children, to receive earlier business/financial education to help them preserve and better manage their wealth soon to be inherited in the next decade or so.”

The KWHS mission of financial literacy was an unmistakable theme of the day, as students pitched dynamic investment strategies informed by everything from micro and macro economic (interest rate hikes!) and stock market trends, to corporate profits and portfolio values. In the end, however, the judges selected three top teams to proceed to the KWHS Investment Competition Global Finale at Wharton’s Philadelphia campus on May 3 and 4. The winners of the Region 1 finals were:

  • 1st Place: Pegasus, YK Pao School, Shanghai, China
  • 2nd Place: OG, The HS Affiliated to Renmin University of China, Beijing, China
  • 3rd Place: CFuture, WHBC of Wuhan Foreign Languages School, Hubei, China

Evaluating the day’s presentations were I Chuan Tao, executive general manager of wealth management, China Merchants Bank; Eric Leng, managing partner at Crescendo Capital Management, a hedge fund based in Beijing; and Yanbing Qiu, chief investment officer and board secretary at Hetai Life.

The judges were especially impressed by the logic and data used by the winning teams to support their creative investment strategies, as well as those teams that expressed a charismatic teamwork style that set them apart from the lineup of finalists.

Members of the third-place team, CFuture.

The six-person Pegasus team, for example, incorporated clever animation into its presentation that elevated its creativity scores and added a new dimension to its solid “High Yield ESG [Environmental, Social & Governance] Equity Portfolio Proposal.” Judges loved the team’s holistic presentation approach, incorporating the technical, analytical and teamwork aspects of their competition journey. The team declared, “As we worked together as a team through all the late nights, weekends, and after-school meetings, we ensured that we met at least eight hours per week. Now that we are at the end of the investment process, we have gained confidence both inside and outside of our class as well as the fulfillment knowing that we have acquired financial knowledge that can serve us for a lifetime.”

The seven members of Team OG used both top-down and bottom-up analysis to evaluate investments and risk and develop a tech-focused strategy fitting for tech entrepreneur and potential client, Sachin Rekhi. The team focused on industries with stable growth rates and companies with “good leadership, strong monopoly power, less cyclical earnings, and high ethical standards.” OG team leader Hangbo Guo was also a member of last year’s Region 1 winning team, RDFZICC.

CFuture delivered an especially energetic presentation as the team’s six members detailed a creative “Rock and Roll” investment strategy for short and long-term investments. The team’s deep commitment to learning was evident: “Initially, we hardly knew anything about real-world investment,” they said. “We started fresh from learning terminology, to investigating industries, analyzing corporation’s financial reports and finally designing a portfolio of our own. We are amazed that we successfully analyzed different sectors and companies by using a variety of methods (SWOT analysis, Porter’s Five Forces, and all kinds of financial ratios).”

The winning teams were awarded plaques, as well as $500, $300 and $200 USD respectively for their schools, given by generous KWHS Investment Competition award sponsor, Brickwork Ratings. All the teams were also treated to words of wisdom by the day’s judges, who urged them to keep working hard and to look to the “humanity” of their financial decisions, not just the numbers. They also reminded students to drill down to the basics through all the many layers of new financial knowledge. “Investment is a very uncertain business,” suggested Qiu of Hetai Life. “It’s very hard to find the right way to do it. Go back to the fundamentals of risk and return and that will serve you well.”

Team Coconut Union Jingshan talks with Region 1 judge, Yanbing Qiu.

After a busy few weeks traveling the globe, during which the KWHS team also held a dynamic Region 2 investment competition finals at the National Stock Exchange in Mumbai, India, we are now preparing for the third semi-final round to be held this Saturday, March 16, at Wharton in Philadelphia, Pa. With teams from Brazil, Canada, the U.K. and the U.S., it promises to be a powerhouse of financial skills and collaborative creativity. Stay tuned for the results and for a final list of the winning teams that will advance to the KWHS Investment Competition Global Finale at Wharton on May 3 and 4.

Business teacher David Lin, advisor to Pegasus and YKPS Unicorn, believes Chinese students need to embrace financial literacy.

2018-2019年第二区决赛

KWHS Holds Its Region 2 Investment Competition Finals at India’s National Stock Exchange

by Diana Drake

On the morning of Saturday, February 23, 2019, teams of high school students and their advisors streamed into the sunlit atrium of a Mumbai-based financial hub that few outsiders ever access: The National Stock Exchange of India. Many of them gazed in awe at the NSE logos, banners, and monitors delivering news about the financial markets, and they took a moment to visit the vibrant rangoli, a colorful, floor-based design of rich red, blue, green, pink and orange powders, that was created especially for this day. Manvir Singh Rana, a teacher at Amity International School in Noida, India, noted that he has long taught a unit on the NSE to his students, adding: “It’s incredible to actually be here.”

And so began the fourth-annual KWHS Investment Competition Region 2 Finale, during which the top 12 teams from Region 2 – this year all from India-based high schools — spent a full day at the NSE for a chance to present their team strategies and new investing knowledge to a panel of six professional judges. The judges included: Pankaj Dinodia of Dinodia Capital Advisors, Kisha Gupta of Infosys, Vivek Kulkarni of Brickwork Ratings, Rajat Kumar of ABP Digital, Rajesh Sehgal of Equanimity Investments, and Yatrik Vin of the National Stock Exchange of India Limited. The National Stock Exchange partnered with KWHS to host the event and Brickwork Ratings was an event sponsor, providing financial prizes for the winners. Dr. Biswajit Saha, director (skill education and training) of the Central Board of Secondary Education in India, was the keynote speaker.

Students and their advisor admire the specially designed rangoli in the NSE atrium.

The 12 teams each delivered powerful 10-minute strategy pitches, navigating P/E ratios, share prices, SWOT analyses and macroeconomic trends with confidence and conviction. And they all survived a tough five minutes of provocative questions from the judges. Even so, only three teams could be selected to advance to the upcoming KWHS Investment Competition Global Finale at Wharton in Philadelphia on May 4. The winners of this year’s Region 2 Finale were:

1st Place: Filter Coffee Investments from Amity International School, Noida

2nd Place: Scion Capital, Jayshree Periwal International School, Jaipur

3rd Place: Olympians, Amity International School, Vashundhra Sector-6, Ghaziabad

As the presentations wrapped up, Dinodia, who along with Kumar and Sehgal has judged the regional competition in India for the past several years, remarked, “What a day! The bar just keeps getting higher and higher.”

While all the teams were technically sound, their creative and thoughtful investment strategy themes – and how they expressed them – were often a key differentiator.

Filter Coffee Investments went all the way with its java theme, pouring it throughout the energetic presentation. The pitch? “What is a perfect cup of coffee? A bitter shot of espresso, a frothy cappuccino or a steamy latte? Well, the truth is, there is no one recipe for a perfect cup, as it is a function of different tastes and preferences. Similarly, there is no single portfolio ideal for all individuals.” The team created “The Percolator,” a software that filters potential investments to present “the best possible options for analysis.” The team also incorporated The Magic Cup Model, which identifies under-performing and over-performing stocks, and a COFFEE model of analysis that looked at a company’s competitive standing, financial past, ethics and other key factors.

Scion put forth an equally impressive “Swaying Iceberg” model that inspired the team to use machine learning to inform both its long-term and short-term strategies. The team followed up with a comprehensive analysis of the company Under Armour. Scion’s extensive research and deep understanding of its client’s needs really elevated the effectiveness of its teams strategy.

Olympians, building on potential client Sachin Rekhi’s resolution to run a half marathon, focused on “investing in food, fitness and new technologies that enable us to live longer and healthier lives.” The team spotlighted Nike as a company that followed its strategy and ideals, and the team took on different Greek god roles to illustrate their individual strengths.

Each of the winning teams took home trophies, as well as $500, $300 and $200 respectively from Brickwork Ratings for their schools.

‘I Loved Everything’

The competition marked most teams’ first exposure to trading and investing. And while nine of them couldn’t claim prizes, many valued the weeks of learning. “Our knowledge regarding investments increased manifold over the course of the competition,” said Ketan Kedia, student leader of Mr. Stock’s Enterprise, which traveled to Mumbai all the way from D.A.V. Model School in Durgapur, India. “We were the first team to participate from our school. Our school will continue participating in such competitions both to learn and to become experienced. This competition is a torchbearer for entry of financial literacy into our school curriculum. Indian school children are deprived of basic finance education, which adversely affects their decisions in the future.” Added his teammate Harsh Agarwal: “Traveling to Mumbai and delivering at NSE is a memory I will cherish throughout my life. I loved everything about it.”

Mr. Stock’s Enterprise takes the stage.

The 2019 KWHS Region 2 Investment Competition represented a first-time partnership between Knowledge@Wharton High School and the National Stock Exchange of India, including the NSE Academy Limited. During the event, Vikram Limaye, CEO of the NSE, said, “NSE has been engaged in promoting financial literacy and financial market courses in the country. A step in this direction is the collaboration with Knowledge@Wharton. Financial education for students is an important tool to improve the financial capability of our youth and our communities. We are confident that our collaboration with Knowledge@Wharton will further strengthen our mutual efforts in financial education.”

Serguei Netessine, Wharton’s vice dean of global initiatives, echoed those sentiments, saying that Saturday’s competition in Mumbai illustrated “what can be achieved when partners collaborate on a shared mission of financial literacy and building skills to empower the next generation of global leaders.”

Filter Coffee Investments, Scion Capital and Olympians have already begun to prepare for the KWHS Investment Competition Global Finale at Wharton on May 3 and 4. They will be presenting their strategies to the judges, along with the top three teams from the regional finals in Beijing, China on March 2 and Philadelphia on March 16. Be sure to register with KWHS to get all the results of this year’s KWHS Investment Competition – and updates about when it’s time to sign up for next year’s challenge. For more information, visit the KWHS Investment Competition website.

Judge Rajesh Sehgal talks to members of the team CREAM (Cash Rules Everything Around Me).

2018-2019年第三区决赛

The 2019 Investment Competition Region 3 Finale Features a Yeti and a Whole Lot of Talent

by Diana Drake

Madeleine Roberts admits that the thought of competing in the KWHS Investment Competition Region 3 finals gave her moments of anxiety prior to the big day on Saturday, March 16. Even so, her fears quickly subsided as she stepped off the elevator onto the 8th floor of Wharton’s Jon M. Huntsman Hall in Philadelphia and began to survey the landscape. “The worst part by far was all the time leading up to the competition,” said Roberts, a junior at Maclay School in Tallahassee, Florida, U.S., who led the four-student competition team, Yeti Investors. “Once we saw the room, I felt very relieved. It wasn’t the giant, cold lecture hall I was expecting. We were very excited to share our strategy, and that seemed to lessen the fear of presenting.”

That kind of confidence and enthusiasm, developed through 12 weeks of absorbing new investment concepts and strategies, and then packaging them into colorful and compelling presentations, was a signature trait of all 12 student teams competing in the Region 3 finals last Saturday.

The event, the third of three global semifinal rounds in February and March to identify the top nine teams to advance to the competition’s Global Finale at Wharton in May, brought together more than 100 students, teachers, parents, professionals and supporters from several different countries within the boundaries of the competition’s “Region 3,” including Brazil, Canada, the U.S. and the U.K.

Hayden McDaniel, Collin Roberts, Madelyn Stout and Madeleine Roberts of Yeti Investors.

The 12 teams each delivered powerful 10-minute strategy pitches, navigating P/E ratios, share prices, SWOT analyses and macroeconomic trends with ease and conviction. And they all survived – if not thrived — through five minutes of provocative questions from the four industry experts invited to sit on the March 16 judging panel. Those professionals were: Matthew Carlone, a certified financial analyst and Wharton MBA candidate in finance; Heather Crist, divisional director of the Midwest Region for UBS Global Wealth Management; Caitlin Cronin, junior analyst with Aberdeen Standard Investments; and Mukund Rao, senior technologist at Wharton Research Data Services, which operates Wharton’s OTIS Online Trading and Investment Simulator.

In the end, Roberts’ eagerness to share her team’s strategy projected well to the judges. The winners of the 2019 Region 3 Finale were:

  • 1st Place: EVA (Eagles Value Added), Graded American School of São Paulo, São Paulo, Brazil
  • 2nd Place: Yeti Investors, Maclay School, Tallahassee, Florida, U.S.
  • 3rd Place: Sage Hill, Sage Hill School, Newport Coast, California, U.S.

The winners received engraved glass plaques; $500, $300 and $200 respectively for their winning schools from competition financial awards sponsor, Brickwork Ratings; and an invitation to compete against the winners of Region 1 and Region 2 during the upcoming KWHS Investment Competition Global Finale at Wharton in May.

The winning Region 3 teams had unique strategies and experiences to share in their presentations. EVA built a value-oriented portfolio for the competition’s potential client Sachin Rekhi, that was customized to his long-term needs by, in part, creating a Social Value-added (SVA) evaluation model for their stock choices. “Our biggest challenge this year was looking into more complex investment tools, such as SVA and the Markowitz Efficient Frontier,” the team noted. “This year’s teamwork, cooperation, organization and commitment to learning proved to be essential when building a long-term investment portfolio.”

Yeti Investors built a sound strategy enriched by innovation and humor, creating the character Freddie the “money-managing” yeti through which to deliver their approach and help showcase their new financial knowledge. The team’s FRED quantitative, bottom-up criteria made “finding stocks in sizable snowdrifts easier” by screening portfolio stock choices through Fifty RSI (a stock’s relative strength index value must be under 50 at entry point); Relative value (a stock must trade at a discount to its peers and its historic levels); Earnings (a three-year trailing earnings growth of at least 10%); and Dividends (a stock must pay quarterly, semi-annual or annual dividends). The team mentioned that they faced unexpected challenges in their competition journey when they suffered heavy power outages resulting from Hurricane Michael hitting the Florida coast.

Sage Hill’s long-term strategy targeted “financially solid companies that have a strong potential for future growth.” The team also specified a short-term strategy totaling 20% of its total investment strategy to meet Rekhi’s annual donation to the ASPCA. The teams OMG or Operating Metrics Grade, a point system used for quantitative analysis that was similar to school GPA, looked at factors such as return on invested capital, free cash flow sales, five-year past growth and financial health to funnel out portfolio choices. A separate qualitative analysis predicted if companies would remain profitable for the next five years, an important forward-looking perspective within the team’s approach.

A colorful presentation from Team BRL of Colégio Bandeirantes in Brazil.

In a time of reflection during Saturday’s competition, the judges all had high praise for the 12 teams’ presentations and client pitches. “Your sophistication in investment knowledge is amazing,” said Carlone, who also encouraged the group of novice investors to “focus on forward-looking company performance, rather than on the performance for the last 10 years” when designing a sound long-term investment strategy.

Crist of UBS urged the teams to remember their audience when developing a strategy for a specific client. “While returns and a solid investment framework are absolutely foundations of any good investment philosophy and strategy, returns only matter so much in the relationship with your client, whether it’s an institutional client or, in this case, a retail client,” Crist noted. “I don’t think anyone mentioned Sachin’s wife, Ada. Dexter the dog got some honorable mentions. What if while you were making this pitch, your client had turned to his wife and said, ‘What do you think about this, they showed my picture, my quotes, only me?’ You’re all going to have good and bad returns. The best portfolio managers have years when their returns aren’t great, but what they rely on is the relationship with their client. Keep that in mind because it will carry you through everything.”

Region 3 teams were treated to a visit by the leaders of last year’s Global and Region 3 winning team, All You can Eat Buffett from Virginia. Sid Muralidhar and Suchet Taori, who are now freshmen at Virginia Tech and the University of Virginia, shared insights and advice about how the KWHS Investment Competition has created new opportunities for them this past year. “Talking about this achievement can really help, whether you win or lose,” said Muralidhar. “We’ve leveraged our success in this competition and the knowledge we’ve learned through this competition to get different internships and job opportunities and when talking to employers.” They both advised students in the room to share their new financial knowledge with others and to step outside their comfort zones and continually try new things. For example, Sid and Suchet have combined their separate interests in finance and neuroscience to explore the field of neuroeconomics, or how brain signals determine financial choices.

Reflecting on the overall experience, Madeleine Roberts of Yeti Investors was grateful for her heightened financial awareness and knowledge. “There aren’t many opportunities like this for high schoolers; the ability to gain hands-on experience with money management and investing is truly amazing,” she said. “We’re all very excited for the global competition. It’s such a wonderful and unique experience that I feel very privileged to get to attend!”

Two of the day’s four industry judges, Caitlin Cronin, a 2017 Wharton grad, and Matthew Carlone, a Wharton MBA candidate.

Looking ahead to the 2019 Global Finale, the stage for a competitive showcase of winning teams from around the world is now set. The following teams will be returning to the Wharton campus in a few weeks to present their investment strategies and competition highlights on May 4. They will also be invited to participate in a special learning day on May 3, which is a chance for them to learn about careers in finance and the admissions process, as well as meet one another before the big day.

The 2019 KWHS Investment Competition global finalists are:

  • Pegasus – Region 1, China, First Place
  • Filter Coffee Investments – Region 2, India, First Place
  • EVA (Eagles Value Added) – Region 3, Brazil, First Place
  • OG – Region 1, China, Second Place
  • Scion Capital – Region 2, India, Second Place
  • Yeti Investors – Region 3, U.S., Second Place
  • CFuture – Region 1, China, Third Place
  • OLYMPIANS – Region 2, India, Third Place
  • Sage Hill – Region 3, U.S., Third Place
  • DC Capital – Region 3, U.K., KWHS Team Wildcard Pick

Stay tuned for the news of this year’s top global asset-management teams. In fact, don’t miss any KWHS news, including our plans for next year’s investment competition! Sign up today for our biweekly newsletter. #KWHSInvests

DC Invests of Dulwich College in the U.K., which presented by videoconference on March 16, is the KWHS team Wildcard pick to compete in the Global Finale.

2018-2019年区域决赛入围者公告

The 2019 KWHS Investment Competition Finalists Are Ready for the Regionals

by Diana Drake

As we set out on the 2018-2019 KWHS Investment Competition, we knew this journey would be different. For one, all three competing regions – vying to become finalists in our regional competitions based in China, India and the U.S. in February and March of 2019 – started trading simultaneously on the OTIS platform on October 1, 2018. What had for years been a global competition with three separate onramps, was now one grand rivalry involving more than 2,000 teams around the world. Game on!

Additionally, the client profile had changed from the perhaps all-too-familiar wealthy young entrepreneur Jack Abraham, to another young Silicon Valley star with a somewhat similar background but different investing needs, Sachin Rekhi.

Change is good. This year’s competition has been the most robust on record, with more than 900 teams submitting mid-project team reviews, up from 480 last year, and nearly 570 teams detailing final strategies and teamwork dynamics in comprehensive competition reports, up from nearly 300 last year. Some 20 countries were represented among those teams that followed the competition through to the end. KWHS is grateful for a new partnership with the National Stock Exchange of India, which helped us recruit student teams from new high schools throughout the country.

Our intrepid team of evaluators from Aberdeen Standard Investments in Philadelphia, Pa., U.S., tackled hundreds of final reports through the Christmas break and into the new year, assessing if they met important criteria (such as addressing Mr. Rekhi’s short and long-term needs), and looking for several pillars of strength, including an understanding of their client, strategy articulation, analysis and teamwork. “We looked for groups that took the client’s preferences beyond [the basics] and made sure they provided a good level of detail in their research process and their experience,” notes Sarina Manetta, a graduate business analyst at Aberdeen Standard Investments who led the judging team. “The teams that made it to consideration for the Top 12 stood out either because of creativity, or because they went above and beyond in developing their own methods.”

And with that, here are the 2019 KWHS Investment Competition top 12 finalist teams:

Region 1

  • Arithmancers – Eton House International School, Suzhou, China
  • CFuture – WHBC of Wuhan Foreign Languages School, Wuhan, China
  • CHILLAX – Hangzhou Foreign Languages School, Hangzhou, China
  • Coconut Union Jingshan – Beijing Jingshan School, Beijing, China
  • DCSInvests – Dulwich College Shanghai Pudong, Shanghai, China
  • Deficit Demolition Team – Hangzhou No. 14 High School, Hangzhou, China
  • Lux Capital – WHBC of Wuhan Foreign Languages School, Wuhan, China
  • Money Scoopers – Shanghai High School Intl. Division, Shanghai, China
  • OG – The High School Affiliated to Renmin University of China, Beijing, China
  • Pegasus – YK Pao School, Shanghai, China
  • Shildeg-KWHS – Shildeg School, Ulaanbaatar, Mongolia
  • YKPS Unicorn – YK Pao School, Shanghai, China

Region 2

  • AlphaBulls – Podar International School, Mumbai, India
  • C.R.E.A.M. (Cash Rules Everything Around Me) – Greenwood High International School, Bangalore, India
  • Et Tauri Auream – The Doon School, Dehradun, India
  • Filter Coffee Investments – Amity International School, Noida, India
  • Infinito Asset Managers – Amity Intl. School, Sector-46, Gurgaon, India
  • InvestoMania – Sushila Birla Girls’ School, Kolkata, India
  • Keepers of the BULLevard – Amity International School, Noida, India
  • Mr. Stock’s Enterprise – DAV Model School, Durgapur, India
  • OLYMPIANS – Amity Intl. School, Vasundhra Sector-6, Ghaziabad, India
  • Scion Capital – Jayshree Periwal International School, Jaipur, India
  • SnF Capital – SVKM, Mumbai, India
  • Wallstreet Wolves – The PSBB Millennium School, Chennai, India

Region 3

  • The BRLs – Colégio Bandeirantes, São Paulo, Brazil
  • DC Capital – Dulwich College, London, United Kingdom
  • EVA (Eagles Value Added) – Graded American School of São Paulo, São Paulo, Brazil
  • Lions Investment – Saint Theresa of Lisieux Catholic High School, Richmond Hill, Canada
  • Make Bank – Palo Alto High School, California, United States
  • Midas Money Management – The Harker School, California, United States
  • Princeton Tigers – Princeton High School, New Jersey, United States
  • Prophet – Moorestown Friends School, New Jersey, United States
  • Sage Hill – Sage Hill School, California, United States
  • Saints Capital – St. George’s School, Vancouver, Canada
  • TJ Asset Management (TJAM) – Thomas Jefferson High School for Science and Technology, Virginia, United States
  • Yeti Investors – Maclay School, Florida, United States

Congratulations to all of this year’s finalists! Be sure to follow their progress in the regional competitions by checking back to the KWHS Newsroom and registering with KWHS to receive our bi-weekly updates. The Region 2 finals will be held at the National Stock Exchange of India facilities in Mumbai on February 23, 2019; the Region 1 finals follow on March 2 at the Penn Wharton China Center in Beijing; and the Region 3 finals (the first year we’re holding them separately!) will be on March 16 at Wharton in Philadelphia. The top three teams from each will advance to our KWHS Investment Competition Global Finale, held on Friday and Saturday, May 3 and 4, at Wharton in Philadelphia.

2017-2018年全球总决赛

Student Investors Compete and Win, with a ‘Common Desire for Knowledge and Teamwork’

by Diana Drake

On Saturday, May 5, 2018, more than 100 high school students, along with their families, advisors and mentors, traveled from around the world to Wharton’s Philadelphia campus to participate in the 2018 KWHS Investment Competition Global Finale.

They were all soon reminded of another journey, the one that brought them to that moment on the 8th floor of Wharton’s Jon M. Huntsman Hall. Ten weeks of team trading, deliberating and strategizing, resulting in the submission of 300 final investment reports. Two regional finals in India and China, providing the top six teams from those countries the opportunity to travel to the Global Finale and compete against students from Brazil, Canada, Denmark, Malaysia, Norway, the United Kingdom and the United States — 18 top teams, all prepared on May 5 to give the 10-minute presentations of their lives. They would go in front of a panel of six industry experts, several representing the day’s sponsors – Aberdeen Standard Investments, Dechert LLP, Dilworth Paxson LLP, Finclusive Capital, Principle Quest Foundation and UBS — in hopes of winning the title as the competition’s most savvy, reliable and creative asset-management team. The full lineup of Saturday’s competitors included:

  • All You Can Eat Buffett, Virginia, United States
  • ALPHA, Sevenoaks School, Sevenoaks, Kent, United Kingdom
  • Brazilian Bulls, Colégio Santa Cruz, São Paulo, Brazil
  • Charlottesville High School Student Investment Group, Charlottesville High School, Virginia, United States
  • Dollar Tiger$, Germantown Friends School, Philadelphia, Pa., United States
  • Longer-Term Capital Management, Monta Vista High School, Cupertino, Calif., United States
  • Maple Eagle, York Mills Collegiate Institute, Toronto, Ontario, Canada
  • Medici Capital, Lovejoy High School, Lucas, Texas, United States
  • Oakridge Investment Enterprises, Oak Ridge High School, El Dorado, Calif., United States
  • Pied Piper Investments, Amity International School, Noida, India
  • Pine Stone Capital Management, Beijing RDFZ, The High School Affiliated to Renmin University, Beijing, China
  • RDFZ ICC, Beijing RDFZ, The High School Affiliated to Renmin University, Beijing, China
  • Saints Capital, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada
  • Scion Capital, Jayshree Periwal International School, Jaipur, India
  • The Alchemy of Investments, Amity International School, Noida, India
  • United World Capital, United World College RCN, Norway
  • Vancity Capital Management, Canada
  • War Wolves, Beijing Academy, Beijing, China

It was a journey with an inspirational destination. Following 18 thought-provoking team presentations, Saturday’s judging panel selected six top teams – three winners from the top 12 teams in Region 3 and three global winners from among the full scope of competitors. Regional winners received trophies and global winners received trophies and $5,000, $2,000 and $1,000 respectively for their schools from Dilworth Paxson law firm in Philadelphia. Here are the results:

  • 1st Place, Region 3: All You Can Eat Buffett
  • 2nd Place, Region 3: Medici Capital
  • 3rd Place, Region 3: ALPHA
  • 1st Place, Global: All You Can Eat Buffett
  • 2nd Place, Global: The Alchemy of Investments
  • 3rd Place, Global: Scion Capital

Algorithms, Analysis and Alchemy

Each PowerPoint or Prezi-supported presentation, delivered by four to nine students, communicated the group’s unique investment strategy, as well as summarizing its competition experience, takeaways and team dynamics. In the allotted time of 10 minutes to present and five minutes for questions from the judges, students articulated their tactics and tools, incorporating details about proprietary algorithms, top-down, bottom-up analyses, risk attenuation and yield capitalization, qualitative and quantitative approaches to stock selection, Porter’s Five Forces and SWOT evaluations, and more — all guided by a long-term, client-focused mindset.

The day’s winners were especially strong on content and creativity, punctuated by strategy pitches that dazzled the judges on a professional level.

Take, for instance, All You Can Eat Buffett, whose unique team investment strategy included a self-created machine learning-based natural language processing algorithm that used news outlet information to predict stock market trends. The team’s multi-layered presentation incorporated humor and even the results of a direct outreach to competition client Jack Abraham. The Alchemy of Investments delivered a sharp, enthusiastic and engaging presentation articulating with color and confidence its ALCHEMACRO model that reviewed economies using macro-level factors. Alchemy advisor Manvir Singh Rana, who has guided many top teams in the competition, including this year’s Pied Piper Investments, said that he is more than a teacher to his students, he is “an awakener.” Scion Capital communicated a strong client-first philosophy and brought in its team leader, Mohammad Darvish, at the end via video conference for a compelling Q&A with judges. Darvish, an Iranian citizen, was unable to secure a visa to travel to the U.S. for the competition finals.

This competition has been a great learning experience, indeed a roller coaster ride, reflected Jahnvi Vig, student team leader and chief investment officer for India’s The Alchemy of Investments. “It was the first of November when our trading journey began and we started to explore the world of finance, until the fourth of May, when we got to meet brilliant brains from all around the world and learned the skill of negotiation [from Wharton professor Maurice Schweitzer],” she explained. Vig was one of more than 100 students who also attended the KWHS Investment Competition Learning Day on Friday, May 4, for an afternoon of speakers sharing insights on business, University of Pennsylvania admissions, and careers in asset management. “We have come out to be a group of seven confident and engaging students who have the power to tackle all obstacles that come our way.”

While the teams’ exploration of new knowledge and financial concepts was, at times, challenging, it was nothing compared to the task laid out before the Global Finale judging panel – to select winners from among a passionate room filled with imposing young minds and hearts.

Following the presentations, the judges – including Saras Agarwal, chief journey owner at Vanguard; Iain Gillespie, corporate strategy manager for the Americas at Aberdeen Standard Investments; David Lawrence, founder of RANE and long-time managing director at Goldman Sachs; Mukund Rao, financial products architect at Wharton Research Data Services; John Squires, partner at Dilworth Paxson law firm; and Scott Stimpfel, a director at Citi who was instrumental in starting the KWHS Investment Competition in 2012 — offered a few thoughts on the day.

“In a world where divisiveness, tribalism and rancor seem to rule, today was very much a reminder of what holds us together, and that there is a common culture — a common desire for knowledge, information and teamwork,” said Lawrence, who urged students to always remain humble and to remember that there are no stop-gap measures in life, but only a genuine need to absorb the volatility in the stock market as well as in interpersonal relationships, and to learn from them both. “Each and every team that participated here in this room or remotely was exceptional. I can say that after being at Goldman Sachs for more than 20 years.”

Added Agarwal, a Wharton MBA: “I’m impressed by the thoughtfulness that you bring to what you’ve done here. Clearly there’s a lot of effort. As you think about your careers going forward, have the courage in your convictions. Be purposeful in what you’re doing and be confident as you make decisions.”

“Chris Demetriou, Aberdeen Standard Investments’ CEO who was speaking here this morning, came right over to me and assured me that my job was definitely under threat in the next year or two,” quipped Gillespie, alluding to the students’ talent and out-of-the-box thinking.

Tackling Financial Illiteracy

The importance of financial knowledge is a key message of the KWHS Investment Competition, as well as the broader Knowledge@Wharton High School initiative, which promotes business literacy and financial literacy globally among high school students and educators through content, competitions and seminars. Financial education and access emerged as a theme that shaped the tone of Saturday’s event.

Drawing comparisons to his firm’s work related to racial inequality and the landmark Brown v. Board of Education school segregation case, Squires suggested that financial illiteracy is the separate-but-not-equal and disparate impact that is befalling today’s global citizenry. “In the U.S. alone, 40 million people are underbanked or unbanked, and 2.5 to 3.5 billion people globally,” noted Squires, who began his career as chief IP counsel for Goldman Sachs and today is considered one of the world’s thought leaders in fintech, block chain, cybersecurity and risk. “As a firm and on behalf of one of our sponsors FinClusive, we are taking that to task, tackling financial illiteracy head-on and working with Knowledge@Wharton and KWHS to remove that as an issue. Financial access should be a basic human right. And with all the good works you’ve done here today, I think that you’ve experienced that. Be ambassadors for the knowledge that you’ve gained.”

Many investment competition teams have already started doing just that. Pied Piper Investments of Noida, India, for example, spreads financial literacy through its Piper Press newsletter, while neighboring team The Alchemy of Investments conducts community outreach on financial education through in-class visits and even a TED Talk on personal finance skills. Countless teams involved in the competition, both finalists and otherwise, have started investment clubs in their schools to develop their passion for investing and promote financial engagement and knowledge among their peers.

Sid Muralidhar, team leader of regional and global winning team All You Can Eat Buffett, counted a focus on financial literacy among his most valuable takeaways from his KWHS Investment Competition Global Finale experience. “We met and befriended some extremely talented students from across the world – from a team in our home state of Virginia, to a team in Norway, and teams in India and China – and were very proud to be amongst them as finalists,” noted Muralidhar, who is a senior at Thomas Jefferson High School for Science and Technology in Great Falls. “We learned a lot from these teams, not just about different financial techniques and concepts, but also about being active participants in our community to further the goal of financial literacy. Hopefully, these connections and friendships will lead to some form of collaboration in the future to ensure that individuals can save, achieve their goals, and retire safely. We will continue to share information gleaned through our own research and experiences to others. In fact, we have already offered to help Wharton’s alumni outreach in Brazil take our experience to help students from Brazil participate in this competition – hopefully, they become the agents for change in their country.”

Muralidhar added that the KWHS Investment Competition was instrumental in teaching him the power of teamwork in a secondary-education world that often advocates individual success. “Each member of our team was assigned a specific role, but more importantly, we had to find ways to support one another and compromise when we had disagreements. Each member brought a unique perspective and skill set to the table. Today, students are under pressure to outperform their peers to be admitted to college, but this competition taught us that everyone that is a team player, and shares and learns, is a winner.”

2nd Place global winners, The Alchemy of Investments from Amity International School, Noida, India, led here by chief investment officer Jahnvi Vig.
Judge Muk Rao of Wharton Research Data Services offers some inspiring parting shots to the crowd, while his fellow judging panel — including (l-r) Saras Agarwal, Iain Gillespie, David Lawrence, John Squires and Scott Stimpfel — looks on.

2017-2018年第一区决赛

Teams Show Off Their Strategic Thinking at the First-ever Investment Competition Regional Finals in China

by Diana Drake

The Penn Wharton China Center (PWCC) inside the World Financial Center in Beijing was a flurry of activity at 9:00 a.m. on Saturday, March 10. In keeping with the mission of the center, which was opened in 2015, it promised to be a day of collaboration, education and research with high school students and educators from all over China who had come to compete in the KWHS Investment Competition Region 1 Finale – the first ever to be held in Beijing.

The 11 finalist teams (Gold Standard from Hong Kong International School could not participate), including The Korean Bulls from South Korea, arrived excited and anxious to deliver their final team strategies to a panel of investment experts, which included Dr. Hua Fan, the head of the Asset Allocation Department at China Investment Corporation, the Chinese Sovereign Wealth Fund; Eric Leng, a Wharton MBA and managing partner at Crescendi Capital Management, a hedge fund based in Beijing; and Yanbing Qiu, the chief investment officer and board secretary at Hetai Life, a Chinese insurance company established in February 2017, with Tencent as the strategic investor.

The KWHS Investment Competition Region 1 finalists were selected from a group of 68 high school teams from around the world that submitted final written investment policies in January. Those final policies were the culmination of 12 weeks of studying and learning investing concepts, developing strategies in teams of four to nine students, placing online trades through Wharton’s OTIS platform, and thinking critically and creatively. While Chinese teams have previously participated in the KWHS investment challenge, which launched in 2012, this was the first year that finalist teams had the opportunity to advance to a China-based regional event.

The student teams competing in Beijing hoped to win top honors and earn the chance to advance to the Global Finale at Wharton Philadelphia on May 4 and 5. For many, it was the culmination of an educational journey that was new in many ways. “When I first came into contact with the game, I knew very little about finance,” admitted Jiaxi “Jessie” Cai, leader of the War Wolves team from Beijing Academy. “But when I heard that each group could be responsible for $100,000 of virtual capital and have 10 weeks of practice on the simulated trading platform, I quickly formed a team. In order to accumulate investment knowledge, we often learned some business knowledge and investment ideas from Knowledge@Wharton High School and gradually, we formed our own investment themes and strategies. After completing the interim report, we realized that what the competition tested was the rationality and effectiveness of the investment strategy, rather than simply looked at the profit and loss of each team’s online operation.”

It was the development and uniqueness of those strategies that ultimately elevated the 12 Region 1 finalist teams and led them to create a compelling message for their big day at PWCC. Those who articulated their strategies and their overall competition experiences the best during their 10-minute team presentations, as well as responded with insight and ease to the judges’ five minutes of questions, emerged victorious.

While many teams impressed the crowd with their analysis and poise on March 10, the judging panel settled on three clear winners. The winning teams received top scores in all areas of judging, including strength and clarity of investment strategy, articulation of strategy and competition experience, understanding of investing concepts, presentation skills, team member participation and creativity.

Earning the first-place trophy was RDFZ ICC from Beijing RDFZ, The High School Affiliated to the Renmin University of China, with an investment approach that was 80% qualitative and 20% quantitative, combining both bottom-up and top-down analysis. They started by studying a company’s business model and competitive landscape and then used the team’s quantitative scoring system that rated stocks in four metrics: quality, value, growth and competitiveness. Judges were impressed by the content of the team’s analysis.

Second place went to Pine Stone Capital Management, also from Beijing RDFZ. The six-member team summarized its GREAT model of stock selection, involving Growth, Reasonable price, Events, Attitude and Theme. Pine Stone’s energetic presentation skills incorporated humor, deep analysis and an especially strong and thoughtful delivery. Team captain Taotao Wang was thrilled for the win: “The Region 1 Finale on March 10 was a great experience for us, for we learned so much from others and had fun during the process. We were glad to present our investment strategy to the wonderful audience and professional judges, who put forward so many thought-provoking questions during the competition.”

War Wolves accepted the third-place trophy for its unique China-only investment strategy, explaining: “The 19th Congress of the Chinese Communist Party recently proposed an all-round plan for China’s future development, and we anticipated that China will continue to maintain a stable and sustainable development for more than 30 years, and China will provide good investment opportunities to global investors. Our investment theme is to invest in China and utilize China’s development opportunities. Therefore, our investment target is set on Chinese companies.” Added team leader Cai following the event: “We have never really thought about entering the top three of this competition before. In fact, the goal of our attending this competition is to enjoy the course of acquiring knowledge, but not to win an award. During the four months of the ‘protracted war,’ we have grasped the company analysis method, the stock method, the correct concept of the value investment and the enhancement of the financial quotient. Without doubt, the teamwork has made undeniable contributions…We hope more and more students could join this competition.”

Other strategy standouts who did not win prizes included the Seoul Global High School’s Korean Bulls, who created an industry analysis format and a stock analysis format to determine the viability of industries and stocks; Shanghai Pinghe Bilingual School’s Golden River Ventures, which compared investment choices to animals like the bull, elephant and leopard to show how they behaved; and BNDS Investment Group (BIG) from Beijing National Day School, which built a strategy that compared to The Art of War, with the right buying point, the right stock and the right portfolio.

As much as the Region 1 KWHS Investment Competition finale event was a day of performing and strategy pitching, it was also steeped in learning. Each judge offered a unique perspective on the day’s financial literacy and the teams’ takeaways. “There were no correct answers to a lot of our questions,” noted Fan, as she offered her congratulations to all the teams. “What we were looking for was your logic of thinking and especially we valued your independent opinion, and hopefully you can do even better in the next competition.”

Added Leng: “I’m a Wharton grad. About one-third of us become investors, either in investment banking or go to investors and present exactly what you did here today. When I got those job offers graduating from Wharton, I couldn’t have put together a presentation like all of you have put together – very, very impressive. I personally encourage you all to apply to Wharton. What you’ve learned gives you foundations for whatever career you choose. No matter what kind of career you choose, financial knowledge will be a very important part.”

Qiu made sure the students knew that when he was in high school he spoke poor English and knew nothing about finance. “Today’s experience was fantastic!” he said. Qiu asked students to consider his “ABCD” life lessons that he has found most valuable during his 16 years in business: “The four biggest words are ambition, big picture, curiosity and discipline – you learn very differently in school compared with what you learn in life. Keep trying to learn new things.”

Diana Drake, managing editor of Knowledge@Wharton High School, noted that it was encouraging to see all the hard work put forth by the Region 1 student teams, especially given the fact that Chinese schools don’t always provide business and finance education as part of the curriculum. The new China-based regional finals, she added, has been a necessary and successful addition to the competition’s global financial-literacy mission.

“It has been exciting to see the evolution of our investment competition, which began in early 2012 as a pilot project with a handful of Philadelphia teams, into a truly global experience,” said Drake, adding that KWHS started the challenge as an extension of its varied business and personal finance online content and experiences for high school students and educators. “The growth is so much more than the fact that we are now reaching thousands of students through the game,” Drake continued. “The inspiration comes in what students do with their new financial knowledge. For many, this is their first exposure to investing and the stock market. Ultimately, the deep learning they encounter both inside and outside the classroom helps to inform their investment strategies. We also witness such impressive teamwork and communication skills, and appreciate the students’ stories about the struggles and triumphs with these types of dynamics. From start to finish, this competition is a testament to the value of engaging, hands-on learning.”

Qui wrapped up the March 10 Region 1 event with these words of advice: “The finals will be very fierce. The teams from India and the U.S. and Europe are very strong in every aspect. You all still have lots of work to do to go to the final stage.” You can bet that the winning Region 1 teams are already preparing for the Global Finale. Pine Stone’s Taotao Wang, for one, has her eye on the prize: “We are all looking forward to going to Philadelphia in May and meeting stronger and more competitive teams around the world.” Stay tuned. #KWHSInvests

2017-2018年第二区决赛

Bangalore Is Abuzz Over the Results of the KWHS Investment Competition Region 2 Finale

by Diana Drake

As the sun shone brightly over Bangalore, India at 9.00 a.m. on Saturday, March 3, a swarm of bees clustered high above the entrance to the N. Narayan Murthy building of the Infosys Limited corporate headquarters in Electronics City. The throng – clinging to the face of the building – gathered strength throughout the day, but it was nothing compared to the buzzing enthusiasm happening just inside in Infosys’s high-tech R. N. Tata Hall. The KWHS Investment Competition Region 2 Finale was underway – and the 12 finalist teams from India, Singapore and the United Arab Emirates were eager to deliver their 10-minute investment-strategy presentations to a panel of five expert judges in hopes of scoring the prize as top investment analysts.

They didn’t disappoint. Team after team, nine in person and three by video conference, stepped into the spotlight to present their strategies, case studies about key stocks in which they invested on the OTIS online trading platform, their team dynamic, and the finance lessons and personal-growth reflections that they would take with them through life. None of them used notes, a testament to their deep preparation and skilled presentation styles. Some of the competitors, like Team Green Black White from Singapore, were first-year economic students with no prior background in finance, making their debut in the regional finals that much sweeter.

Observers were nothing short of dazzled by the students’ performances. “When I first heard about the Knowledge@Wharton High School Investment Challenge, rightly to its name I thought this is about high school children working on a competition which in due course helps them enhance their financial literacy. After witnessing the event, I was happy to be proven wrong,” said Kisha Gupta, global head of academic relations at Infosys, which partnered with KWHS for the first time this year to sponsor the India-based Region 2 finals. “These students were a powerhouse,” continued Gupta. “Some of their analysis and conclusions surprised all of us, their business acumen and understanding of financial concepts was way beyond their age. These amazing students, who came from some of the best schools across Asia, their evolved ability to understand, react, and craft, reflects the tremendous potential we hold for our future. It is not surprising that the whole jury gave a standing ovation, filling the entire event hall at Infosys with applause and cheers, saluting the spirit and diligence of all the finalists of the KWHS Region 2 Challenge.”

Though all the teams brought their best games, ultimately the judges had to select the top three. The first-place winners of this year’s Region 2 KWHS Investment Competition were Pied Piper Investments from Amity International School, Noida, India, led by team leader and chief investment officer Naman Tekriwal and advisor Manvir Singh Rana; second place went to The Alchemy of Investments from Amity International School, Noida, India, led by team leader and chief investment officer Jahnvi Vig and advisor Manvir Singh Rana; and the third-place trophy went to Scion Capital from Jayshree Periwal International School, Jaipur, India, led by team leader Mohammad Darvish. All three teams will advance to the competition Global Finale at Wharton Philadelphia on May 4 and 5.

The winning teams received top scores in all areas of judging, including strength and clarity of investment strategy, articulation of strategy and competition experience, understanding of investing concepts, presentation skills, team member participation and creativity.

Pied Piper Investments impressed with its SMILE investment philosophy, encompassing Small sized big risks, Medium aggression, It’s not I, but only we, Large in aspiration, and Extra large in potential. The team articulated a comprehensive top-down strategy, punctuated by a recap of its visit to the head office and manufacturing operations of one of its main OTIS investments, Hero Motocorp, where they were surprised to learn that Hero produces a motorcycle every 18 seconds.

Using its unique model ALCHEMACRO, the Alchemy of Investments reviewed economies using certain macro-level factors that led the team to select India, the U.S. and the United Kingdom as investment destinations. The team also developed a Python model known as Alche.Py to create a possible set of portfolios and analyze their returns, volatility and Sharpe’s ratios. They too took their learning to new levels, delivering an actual TED talk to promote financial literacy.

Scion Capital filtered and funneled firms on the approved stock list into easily researchable chunks through its “reverse iceberg method,” and built a strategy guided by the core principles of clients first and no investment in companies in which they did not understand the business models. Of the KWHS Investment Competition, Scion Capital concluded: “We had all the right elements: passion, work ethic and a sense of camaraderie, that made the competition very fulfilling for all of us.”

Following the Region 2 Finale, the Pied Pipers said they were “left spellbound with some of the ideas of specific teams, with their innovative strategies and amazing answers to the questions of the judges.” Summing up the experience, team leader Tekriwal said, “Starting from October 30, one word to summarize this entire competition would be “more.” This competition had always more to offer, be it learning about financial concepts or learning how to work in a team. This competition has made us more aware about the world and it did not only teach us about the financial world, but about the world and how it is connected to the financial market.” He added: “Being the winners of Saturday, is definitely a wonderful feeling, and it feels like the hard work has paid off. The feeling is amazing but keeping our feet on the ground, we have to just perform and emerge victorious in the global round in Pennsylvania, too.”

The judging panel — Pankaj Dinodia of Dinodia Capital Advisors in New Delhi; Vivek Kulkarni, founder of Brickwork Ratings in Bangalore, also a sponsor of the Region 2 competition; Rajat Kumar, COO of ABP Capital in New Delhi; Sanjay Purohit, strategic advisor to EkStep Foundation in Bangalore; and Rajesh Sehgal, founder and managing partner of Equanimity Investments in Mumbai – expressed time and again how impressed they were with the quality of the student-team analysis and presentations, and the teams’ ability to apply all that they learned throughout the 10-week trading period and competition strategy development.

“It was indeed an amazing experience for me, like earlier years, to see these young teams competing fiercely and learning/imbibing things far beyond their curriculum,” noted Sehgal, who has judged the regional competition in India for the past three years. “Understanding basic economics and finance and then being able to articulate concepts like portfolio management and fundamental analysis, sprinkled with technical and statistical analysis is testimony that these teams are punching way above their weight. As the panel rightly felt and expressed – a bow to all the teams and students who have managed all this along with their grueling academic studies.”

“The bar just seems to get higher every year,” added Kumar, who is also a three-time judge. “And it’s great to see students being prepared not only with the presentations, but also being super ready with the answers to questions that the judges throw at them — that to my mind is a better reflection of the quality of preparation put in.”

Concluded Kulkarni: “It was a pleasure participating in an event with bubbling, enthusiastic, knowledgeable youngsters. They worked hard and were well prepared with good guidance from their advisors.” Kulkarni also appreciated the presence of 15 middle school students and their teacher in the audience from Sujana Convent in Bangalore, who looked “eager to learn” from the day’s competing teams.

Stockland Yard, a finalist team from Mumbai that won a special audience choice award at the regional finals, walked away richer from the competition experience. “The KWHS Investment Competition was an intellectually stimulating activity that our team was lucky enough to participate in,” said team leader Aryan Shah. “The competition, over the course of five months, taught us a lot more than we would have imagined. While we learned how to work better as a team, be more patient and resilient, there was one aspect that stood out for us: the deeper insight into the stock market. As the competition progressed, we realized that the stock market was not an isolated system, but could instead be used along with technology and mathematics that made it much more exciting and ignited our interest in this field.”

The KWHS team is now in Beijing, China preparing for the Region 1 Finale involving 10 teams from China and one from South Korea, to be held on Saturday, March 10. Stay tuned for the results, as a very exciting Global Finale begins to take shape for May. #KWHSInvests

2017-2018年第三区决赛

Student Investors Compete and Win, with a ‘Common Desire for Knowledge and Teamwork’

by Diana Drake

On Saturday, May 5, 2018, more than 100 high school students, along with their families, advisors and mentors, traveled from around the world to Wharton’s Philadelphia campus to participate in the 2018 KWHS Investment Competition Global Finale.

They were all soon reminded of another journey, the one that brought them to that moment on the 8th floor of Wharton’s Jon M. Huntsman Hall. Ten weeks of team trading, deliberating and strategizing, resulting in the submission of 300 final investment reports. Two regional finals in India and China, providing the top six teams from those countries the opportunity to travel to the Global Finale and compete against students from Brazil, Canada, Denmark, Malaysia, Norway, the United Kingdom and the United States — 18 top teams, all prepared on May 5 to give the 10-minute presentations of their lives. They would go in front of a panel of six industry experts, several representing the day’s sponsors – Aberdeen Standard Investments, Dechert LLP, Dilworth Paxson LLP, Finclusive Capital, Principle Quest Foundation and UBS — in hopes of winning the title as the competition’s most savvy, reliable and creative asset-management team. The full lineup of Saturday’s competitors included:

  • All You Can Eat Buffett, Virginia, United States
  • ALPHA, Sevenoaks School, Sevenoaks, Kent, United Kingdom
  • Brazilian Bulls, Colégio Santa Cruz, São Paulo, Brazil
  • Charlottesville High School Student Investment Group, Charlottesville High School, Virginia, United States
  • Dollar Tiger$, Germantown Friends School, Philadelphia, Pa., United States
  • Longer-Term Capital Management, Monta Vista High School, Cupertino, Calif., United States
  • Maple Eagle, York Mills Collegiate Institute, Toronto, Ontario, Canada
  • Medici Capital, Lovejoy High School, Lucas, Texas, United States
  • Oakridge Investment Enterprises, Oak Ridge High School, El Dorado, Calif., United States
  • Pied Piper Investments, Amity International School, Noida, India
  • Pine Stone Capital Management, Beijing RDFZ, The High School Affiliated to Renmin University, Beijing, China
  • RDFZ ICC, Beijing RDFZ, The High School Affiliated to Renmin University, Beijing, China
  • Saints Capital, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada
  • Scion Capital, Jayshree Periwal International School, Jaipur, India
  • The Alchemy of Investments, Amity International School, Noida, India
  • United World Capital, United World College RCN, Norway
  • Vancity Capital Management, Canada
  • War Wolves, Beijing Academy, Beijing, China

It was a journey with an inspirational destination. Following 18 thought-provoking team presentations, Saturday’s judging panel selected six top teams – three winners from the top 12 teams in Region 3 and three global winners from among the full scope of competitors. Regional winners received trophies and global winners received trophies and $5,000, $2,000 and $1,000 respectively for their schools from Dilworth Paxson law firm in Philadelphia. Here are the results:

  • 1st Place, Region 3: All You Can Eat Buffett
  • 2nd Place, Region 3: Medici Capital
  • 3rd Place, Region 3: ALPHA
  • 1st Place, Global: All You Can Eat Buffett
  • 2nd Place, Global: The Alchemy of Investments
  • 3rd Place, Global: Scion Capital

Algorithms, Analysis and Alchemy

Each PowerPoint or Prezi-supported presentation, delivered by four to nine students, communicated the group’s unique investment strategy, as well as summarizing its competition experience, takeaways and team dynamics. In the allotted time of 10 minutes to present and five minutes for questions from the judges, students articulated their tactics and tools, incorporating details about proprietary algorithms, top-down, bottom-up analyses, risk attenuation and yield capitalization, qualitative and quantitative approaches to stock selection, Porter’s Five Forces and SWOT evaluations, and more — all guided by a long-term, client-focused mindset.

The day’s winners were especially strong on content and creativity, punctuated by strategy pitches that dazzled the judges on a professional level.

Take, for instance, All You Can Eat Buffett, whose unique team investment strategy included a self-created machine learning-based natural language processing algorithm that used news outlet information to predict stock market trends. The team’s multi-layered presentation incorporated humor and even the results of a direct outreach to competition client Jack Abraham. The Alchemy of Investments delivered a sharp, enthusiastic and engaging presentation articulating with color and confidence its ALCHEMACRO model that reviewed economies using macro-level factors. Alchemy advisor Manvir Singh Rana, who has guided many top teams in the competition, including this year’s Pied Piper Investments, said that he is more than a teacher to his students, he is “an awakener.” Scion Capital communicated a strong client-first philosophy and brought in its team leader, Mohammad Darvish, at the end via video conference for a compelling Q&A with judges. Darvish, an Iranian citizen, was unable to secure a visa to travel to the U.S. for the competition finals.

This competition has been a great learning experience, indeed a roller coaster ride, reflected Jahnvi Vig, student team leader and chief investment officer for India’s The Alchemy of Investments. “It was the first of November when our trading journey began and we started to explore the world of finance, until the fourth of May, when we got to meet brilliant brains from all around the world and learned the skill of negotiation [from Wharton professor Maurice Schweitzer],” she explained. Vig was one of more than 100 students who also attended the KWHS Investment Competition Learning Day on Friday, May 4, for an afternoon of speakers sharing insights on business, University of Pennsylvania admissions, and careers in asset management. “We have come out to be a group of seven confident and engaging students who have the power to tackle all obstacles that come our way.”

While the teams’ exploration of new knowledge and financial concepts was, at times, challenging, it was nothing compared to the task laid out before the Global Finale judging panel – to select winners from among a passionate room filled with imposing young minds and hearts.

Following the presentations, the judges – including Saras Agarwal, chief journey owner at Vanguard; Iain Gillespie, corporate strategy manager for the Americas at Aberdeen Standard Investments; David Lawrence, founder of RANE and long-time managing director at Goldman Sachs; Mukund Rao, financial products architect at Wharton Research Data Services; John Squires, partner at Dilworth Paxson law firm; and Scott Stimpfel, a director at Citi who was instrumental in starting the KWHS Investment Competition in 2012 — offered a few thoughts on the day.

“In a world where divisiveness, tribalism and rancor seem to rule, today was very much a reminder of what holds us together, and that there is a common culture — a common desire for knowledge, information and teamwork,” said Lawrence, who urged students to always remain humble and to remember that there are no stop-gap measures in life, but only a genuine need to absorb the volatility in the stock market as well as in interpersonal relationships, and to learn from them both. “Each and every team that participated here in this room or remotely was exceptional. I can say that after being at Goldman Sachs for more than 20 years.”

Added Agarwal, a Wharton MBA: “I’m impressed by the thoughtfulness that you bring to what you’ve done here. Clearly there’s a lot of effort. As you think about your careers going forward, have the courage in your convictions. Be purposeful in what you’re doing and be confident as you make decisions.”

“Chris Demetriou, Aberdeen Standard Investments’ CEO who was speaking here this morning, came right over to me and assured me that my job was definitely under threat in the next year or two,” quipped Gillespie, alluding to the students’ talent and out-of-the-box thinking.