A Bullish Year

Photo by Nick Bailey '16.

The Student Investment Group board members gather in Old West after their year-end meeting. Photo by Nick Bailey '16.

Student Investment Group makes big gains in real and virtual realms

by MaryAlice Bitts-Jackson

As an international business & management major with a great passion for financial markets, Nick DellaVecchia 鈥16 was eager to put his financial savvy to the test when he joined the Student Investment Group (SIG) during the spring of his first year. 鈥淚 was the freshman who came in and thought I knew everything about the stock market, and I had a reality check,鈥 he says with a grin. 鈥淚鈥檝e learned a lot along the way.鈥

That鈥檚 a familiar scenario for members of this selective and immersive student group, which builds far-reaching career skills through simulated work experiences. And as members gathered on campus for their year-end meeting at the close of their first year as a Student Senate鈥搑ecognized campus organization, they had much more to celebrate, with significant gains in both the market and their club during the 2014-15 academic year, and forecasts for a bullish year ahead.

Connecting the dots

Co-founded in 2011 by Evan Kontras 鈥12, Adam Volchko 鈥13 and Christian Mueller-Wolf 鈥13, SIG is an educational stock-market club, much like a fantasy sports league for the financially minded. Instead of assembling dream teams, members put together diverse virtual portfolios鈥攄rawing from regional, national and international companies that interest the group.

Each member joins one of six teams鈥攁utomotive, industrial, health care, chemicals, financials and consumer goods鈥攁nd, with direction from senior members, who lead as sector heads, they pick a financial trend to research throughout the year. 鈥淎s you follow the trends, you start to see how different elements鈥攍ike one news article鈥攃ome together to affect a company鈥檚 performance,鈥 says international business & management (IB&M) major Will Yurcik 鈥15, who co-led the 2014-15 SIG. 鈥淚t helps you connect the dots.鈥

The club meets weekly in a virtual 鈥渢rading room鈥 (real-world location: Althouse). With one eye on current stock activity, each member pitches a strategy鈥攖o hold, buy, sell or short-sell the stocks in their sector, based on their latest research. The group then executes virtual trades in real time, while the stocks are moving.

鈥淵ou have to think and talk fast,鈥 says Ben Greene 鈥14, who served as co-president, along with Nolan Funchion 鈥14, during 2013-14, and now works for a brokerage firm in Connecticut, lending expertise and institutional knowledge to the group as an alumni mentor for the automotive team. 鈥淚t gives you a sense of the pace of what it鈥檚 like to work in finance.鈥

鈥淚t鈥檚 a crash course for a lot of us who don鈥檛 have a lot of experience in technical analysis, but you learn quickly, and we鈥檙e all good about collaborating and sharing information,鈥 says George Voris 鈥16, an economics major and last year鈥檚 vice president of securities analysis, who proudly notes that all major indexes in the virtual portfolio are up from last year.

Eyes on the road ahead

The club also is flourishing. A four-member organization in 2011, the group now boasts 40 active members鈥攊ts membership limit, according to club rules鈥攁ll with an acceptance rate of just 47 percent.

Those who make it through SIG鈥檚 several rounds of application interviews are rewarded with not only the rush of the virtual trading-room experience but also the chance to learn from more experienced peers through weekly informational sessions (co-president and IB&M major Steven Haynes 鈥15, for example, recently headed a workshop about hedge funds, based on what he learned during an intensive summer internship). SIG alumni, and other members of the Dickinson community who work in finance and investment banking, regularly contribute expertise via e-mail or Skype.

鈥淪IG members are very driven and are constantly working hard to better both their technical and soft skills,鈥 says marketing and public-relations officer Krysti Oschal 鈥17 (environmental studies, economics). She adds that club officers plan to partner with on- and off-campus groups to offer mock interviews and workshops in resum茅 building and Microsoft Excel, as well as networking and marketing skills.

The club officers also are quick to point to a more tangible asset to current and future job-seekers: SIG鈥檚 annual report detailing the virtual portfolio鈥檚 performance.

鈥淚t鈥檚 something tangible that you can take into an interview, hand to the interviewer and say, 鈥楾his is the work I did, outside of class and in my spare time,鈥 鈥 says outgoing co-president Phil Velez 鈥15 (IB&M), who facilitated a partnership with the Innovation Competition at Dickinson, so senior SIG members could provide investment and general business advice to student entrepreneurs. 鈥淭hat can be very useful to employers, and to students. And it can help prepare you for many different roads ahead.鈥

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Published April 24, 2015