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Cory Scott, an MBA student in the Sam M. Walton College of Business, University of
Arkansas, appeared on the CNBC program, Squawk on the Street, broadcast
from the New York Stock Exchange, on Tuesday, Aug. 26.
[ VIEW SEGMENT ]
Corey Scott is a member of the Shollmier MBA Fund portfolio management class.
“The Shollmier MBA Fund came to the attention of CNBC when it won first place in
the Graduate Hybrid Funds Class in a student-run portfolio competition,” said
Craig Rennie, Walton College faculty class advisor. The event was part of the
eighth annual Redefining Investment Strategy Education (RISE) Forum held at the
University of Dayton in Ohio, March 27-29. More than 2,300 students from 257
schools in 69 countries attended the competition.
“On the program, Corey will discuss some of the successful investment
strategies that the Shollmier Fund has used,” said Rennie, associate professor
of finance and holder of the Clete and Tammy Brewer Chair “In 2007, the fund
portfolio saw an 18.99 percent annualized return compared to the S&P 500’s 5.49
percent annualized return.”
The Shollmier MBA Fund was established in 2000 with a $250,000 investment
from University of Arkansas alumni and brothers Dudley and Ken Shollmier.As of
August 11, 2008, it was valued at $339,518.34.
"Squawk on the Street" provides viewers with the up-to-the minute news from
every major market around the world. The show not only reports the headlines of
the day, but also it puts top market guests on the air to provide the instant
analysis of all the market moving news. The show also takes viewers onto the
floor of the New York Stock Exchange.
Each week, the Shollmier MBA Fund class meets with the Rebsamen Fund
undergraduate portfolio management class and Garrison Financial Institute staff
to discuss the investment portfolio and to make buy, sell or hold
recommendations. The top 10 holdings in the Shollmier Fund are cash, Berkshire
Hathaway Class B, McDonald’s, Foster Wheeler, Cameron International Corp, Walt
Disney, Transocean, Oneok, CME Group, and Caterpillar.
Walton College students and faculty manage five portfolios — totaling
approximately $12 million — including the Rebsamen Fund, an undergraduate hybrid
fund with about $1.3 million that is also the third oldest student managed fund
in the world; the Shollmier MBA Fund; the Arvest Fixed Income Fund, a $5 million
fixed income fund belonging to Arvest Bank; and two separate accounts, one with
$5 million and one with $250,000.
The RISE VIII Forum was sponsored by the University of Dayton, United Nations
Global Compact, Deutsche Asset Management, Aman Stock Exchange, Bovespa, CFA
Institute, CME Group, CNBC, Colombo Stock Exchange, Dubai Financial Market, The
Financial Services Forum, Frankfurt Stock Exchange, Morningstar, NASDAQ, New
York Stock Exchange, Palestine Securities Exchange, Shangai Stock Exchange, The
Wall Street Journal and TIAA-CREF. The conference brings together students,
faculty and Wall Street in an interactive learning environment to discuss
significant issues that confront investment professionals.
The forum annually welcomes universities with student-managed portfolios to
showcase their success in the areas of growth, value, blend, alternative, fixed
income and hybrid styles of management. Twelve month risk-adjusted returns are
used to identify the top portfolio team in each investment category at both the
graduate and undergraduate levels. The forum included keynote presentations by
nationally renowned industry professionals, specialized breakout sessions
focusing on a range of investment, career strategies and academic program
development related issues as well as security analysis and portfolio management
workshops.
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