Lemma Senbet Fund

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Formation2006; 20 years ago (2006)
FounderUniversity of Maryland endowment fund
PurposeEducation of future fund managers
Official language
English
Lemma Senbet Fund
Formation2006; 20 years ago (2006)
FounderUniversity of Maryland endowment fund
PurposeEducation of future fund managers
Official language
English
OwnerUniversity of Maryland
Students12 undergraduates from Robert H. Smith School of Business chosen each year
Websitewww.rhsmith.umd.edu/funds/senbet-fund

The Lemma Senbet Fund is the largest student managed investments fund by endowment in the U.S. It's offered as a limited-enrollment [1] year-round experiential learning course to top tier undergraduate students from the Robert H. Smith School of Business at the University of Maryland (UMD).[2] Each student in the fund gets to manage around $2.3 million as of 2023.

The fund, named for Lemma Wolde Senbet, the William E. Mayer Chair Professor of Finance at the Smith School of the University of Maryland, was founded in 2006 with initial capital of US$50,000 from the school's endowment fund.[1][3][4]

Since founding in 2006, even after annual distributions the Lemma Senbet Fund has grown 18-fold from $50,000 [1] to $1.8 Million (fiscal year ended Dec 31, 2022).[5]

Governance structure

The investment management team consists of 12 undergraduate students chosen through an interview and presentation process designed to simulate the hiring process of investment banking firms.[4] The team consists of 2 portfolio managers and 10 equity analysts each dedicated to a specific industry sector: consumer products (discretionary), consumer products (staples), energy, financial services, healthcare, industrials, information technology, materials, telecommunications, and utilities. Each sector analyst pitches approximately 4 stocks per year, and must persuade all 12 members (not just a majority) of the investment team to buy.[6] The student investment management team uses Bloomberg Professional Services running on Bloomberg Terminals to conduct in-depth financial analysis, manage the asset portfolio, and execute security trades.[7] The students are unpaid, and do not share in the fund gains nor receive distributions.

Investment strategy

Fund Distributions

References

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