Twenty-two teams from fourteen schools will compete in the 2016-2017 GNAM Investment Competition.
The Global Network for Advanced Management Investment Competition, hosted by the Yale School of Management, is a one-of-a-kind contest dedicated to equity investments sourced from top business students around the globe. Student teams from Global Network schools submit five investment ideas from the region in which they attend school for a chance to win cash prizes. Two separate awards will be given for top investment thesis and for top portfolio returns.
Each team submits a portfolio of five investment ideas from their school’s region, accompanied by pitches for each of the selections. The International Center for Finance at the Yale School of Management is offering prizes for both the quality of the security analysis as well as the actual performance of the investment ideas presented.
Registered teams are from the following schools:
Asian Institute of Management
ESMT Berlin
FGV-EAESP
Hong Kong University of Science and Technology (HKUST) Business School
Indian Institute of Management Bangalore
INCAE Business School
Koc University Graduate School of Business
National University of Singapore Business School
Sauder School of Business, University of British Columbia
Renmin University of China School of Business
Seoul National University Business School
UCD Michael Smurfit Graduate Business School
University of Indonesia, Faculty of Economics
Yale School of Management
News from the 2015 – 16 Global Network for Advanced Management Investment Competition
- Global Network for Advancement Management Investment Competition Announces Winners
- Follow the Global Network Investment Competition with New Portfolio Tracking Tool
- Winners of the Security Analysis Prize for the GNAM Stock Competition are from Koç and NUS
Congratulations to the teams from Koç University Graduate School of Business and National University of Singapore Business School!
Two teams were chosen as co-winners of the Security Analysis prize contest in the 2015-16 Global Network for Advanced Management Investment Competition hosted by the Yale School of Management with funding from the International Center for Finance at the Yale School of Management.


Ten teams entered the competition and after reviewing many terrific submissions the judges chose four teams which exhibited exemplary security analysis to move on to the final round of the Security Analysis competition. The four teams, from Koç University Graduate School of Business, National University of Singapore Business School, IE Business School and Seoul National University Business School, pitched their investment ideas via videoconference to the panel of distinguished judges, Jim Chanos of Kynikos Associates, Eddie Tam of Central Asset Investments, Katalin Gingold of Cartica Capital, and Kimball Brooker of First Eagle Investment Management. The Koç and NUS teams were chosen as co-winners based on the quality of their investment theses, research, responses to questions, and presentation skills.
All ten teams that entered the competition are still eligible for the performance prize which will be decided in April 2016.
Congratulations to the ESMT Berlin Team and other Performance Prize Winners!
A student team from ESMT Berlin has won the 2015-16 Global Network for Advanced Management Investment Competition’s top Performance Prize.
Ten teams from throughout the Global Network for Advanced Management (GNAM) took part in the six-month contest, which challenged students to assemble and manage a stock portfolio from companies based in their home countries. The winning team had the highest risk-adjusted returns over the six-month period.
ESMT Berlin achieved a 46.37% return, far ahead of second-place finisher, Renmin University of China, School of Business, which had a 14.54% return.
"Thankfully, the German equity gods smiled on us with a nice return and even better timing," said Thomas Miller-Jones ’15, a former ESMT Berlin MBA student who was on the winning team. "If only this could happen in our personal trading accounts."
Miller-Jones said his entire team knew that with just a six-month investment horizon, volatility would be a big factor in stock performance. "Chasing big beta and a hammered global giant in Volkswagen, and designing a portfolio correlated to the German auto industry were our answers in lieu of looking for fundamentally discounted stocks that can sometimes take years to recover," he said.
The competition was sponsored by the Yale School of Management’s International Center for Finance (ICF). A tool on the Global Network website tracked the performance of each team’s portfolio.
The top eight finishers split a $5,000 prize, $2,318.27 of which went to ESMT Berlin. Rewards were based on a team’s portfolio return rate multiplied by the total prize pool.
In addition to ESMT Berlin and Renmin, the competition included teams from EGADE Business School, Tecnológico de Monterrey; IE Business School; Koҫ University Graduate School of Business, Lagos Business School, Pan-Atlantic University; National University of Singapore Business School; Seoul National University Business School; Universitas Indonesia Faculty of Economics; and University of Ghana Business School.
“Teams share their stock ideas from home markets around the world,” said William Goetzmann, the director of the ICF and the Edwin J. Beinecke Professor of Finance and Management Studies at the Yale School of Management. “The idea mirrors the philosophy and benefits of the GNAM itself: everyone in the network benefits from a collective effort to aggregate different perspectives.”
“We hope to run this competition annually and to demonstrate that the whole is more than the sum of the parts,” Goetzmann added. “Local knowledge contributes to a globally diversified portfolio.”
The competition also included a Security Analysis Prize, given in November 2015. Teams from Koç University Graduate School of Business and the National University of Singapore Business School were chosen as co-winners. That competition assessed quality of investment theses, research, responses to questions, and presentation skills.
“The GNAM competition pushed us to do deeper analysis of our local equity market than ever before,” said Sean Bellamy McNulty ’17, a National University of Singapore MBA candidate.
“The judges, with their industry backgrounds, forced us to think on our feet and immediately found the weak points in our story. It was a fantastic learning experience for all of us.”
Lloyd Baskin, ICF executive director, thanked every team for taking part in the competition. “On behalf of the International Center for Finance, I wish to congratulate the winners and thank all of our participants in the inaugural GNAM Investment Competition,” Baskin said. “The two-part competition was a terrific success due to the work and contributions of the 10 teams of students.”