In 1986, the Union College Student Investment Fund was established by Heinz and Ruthe Eppler for the purpose of providing students the opportunity to actively gain experience in managing an investment portfolio. The fund is currently worth about one million dollars. Students are responsible for selecting and managing the fund investments. We believe that only examination of disparate sources of information has the potential to generate unique insights. Thus, our investment analysis requires a collaboration among students from all disciplines and among students with different sets of skills, and with different domains of expertise. The management of the fund also includes being responsible owners of the assets and participating in the governance of the companies the fund owns. This includes voting the fund shares for members of the board of directors, executive pay, major corporate decisions such as mergers and acquisitions, and shareholder proposals. Finally, the fund provides mentoring, career advice and education to help students achieve their career goals.
Group Structure:
The purpose of the Student Investment Fund is to educate and provide a real world learning tool for members through an actively managed portfolio. Sector Leaders, who are responsible for coverage on their respective sector of the economy, are expected to conduct market research, write trade proposals, present stock pitches, and serve as a resource to the whole body for sector analysis. It is the responsibility of Junior Analysts within each sector to stay up to date with financial markets, market moving headlines, and news in their sector to assist Sector Leaders in research and analysis.
An investment is made when a sector identifies an opportunity for a trade that serves a purpose of either conserving principle, providing income, or achieving long-term growth. The Sector Leader, and any Junior Analysts that covered the trade, will present a stock pitch to the whole body and prepare an investment thesis for the leadership team.
Investment Policy Statement (IPS):
The investment objective of the Student Investment Fund is three-fold: conserve principal, provide income, and achieve long-term growth of both principal and income. The fund will invest in a variety of asset classes including U.S. and non-U.S. stocks, bonds and exchange traded funds. The fund will not take short positions or use derivatives. All investments should be considered on a long-term time horizon of at least one year. The benchmark for the U.S. equity portion of the fund is the S&P 500, and the benchmark for the US bond portion of the fund is Bloomberg Barclays US Aggregate Bond Index.
Governance and Administration of the Student Investment Fund:
(The governance and administration outlined here is based on the original document outlining the gift that established the Fund.)
1. Purpose
The purpose of the Student Investment Fund (SIF) is to give Union College students “the opportunity to gain experience in the full range of management decisions encountered in the management of an investment portfolio.” The fund was established in 1986 through the generosity of Heinz and Ruthe Eppler, parents of Nancy Eppler Wolff ’75 and David Eppler ’82.
2. Student Managers
The fund is managed by student managers. Student managers must be full-time students in good standing and have satisfactorily completed Eco 334 and ACC100 or their equivalents. The student managers are appointed by a faculty committee described below. All students are welcome to be members of the fund. Students members are expected to participate in the fund’s activities such as research and investment pitches. Trade requests are submitted to a designee in Union’s Finance office with a copy to the faculty committee.
3. Faculty Committee
A faculty committee functions as a “stock holder” in SIF. The committee appoints and oversees the student managers. The committee will consist of at least three faculty members, who will be appointed annually by the Chair of the Economics Department.
4. Annual Report
The student managers prepare annual report due July 30th to the faculty committee who forwards the report to Union’s VP of Finance and Administration.
5. Fund Income
The fund’s income can be used for purchases such as reference material (including electronic resources), attendance at conferences, finance related travel, and the establishment of internships. The income available for such purposes in each fiscal year is limited to 2.5% of the average of last three annual values of the fund’s total assets.