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Next stop: Wall Street

Virginia Business
January 2005

The Madison Investment Fund has beaten the S&P 500 by an impressive 40 percentage points since its inception in 2000, but don’t bother getting out your checkbook. This student-run fund at James Madison University is not open to the public. Instead, it’s meant to give students hands-on experience in the research, analysis and evaluation of securities. Apparently, it’s doing a good job. Fund managers report a profit of more than $27,000 on their initial $100,000 investment, and they recently received recognition for having the best student investment fund in Virginia at a conference sponsored by Virginia Tech’s Pamplin College of Business. “We don’t pick many losers,” says Gerald Henderson, a third-year economics major who manages the fund’s energy sector.

And that’s without any real research capabilities. Relying only on the Internet and S&P 500 reports, students look for companies with strong fundamentals, solid management and growth themes that fit well in the larger economic environment. Admit-tedly, students don’t have the same element of risk as real portfolio managers because the investment money comes from — and returns to — a JMU endowment. But student managers and analysts, most of whom aspire to careers on Wall Street, still put in a lot of hours, getting together for weekly meetings and performing analyses in their spare time. Not only does being part of a top-performing fund look good on a resume, says Henderson, but “if we lost money, that would be pretty embarrassing.”

Return to Virginia Business - January 2005