Managing Money
Comes Easy to Finance Case
Competition Winners
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Nathaniel
Zola used his winnings to
take a summer class in
London. |
Four Smith undergrads had some extra
spending money this summer, compliments
of the Joseph M. Wikler Finance Case
Competition, held in April. Nathaniel
Zola, Michelle Donnelly, Julianne Kortz,
and Zach Barratt each received $1,000 in
prize money by earning first place in
the competition, which was organized by
Smith's finance department.
Zola used his winnings to fund a
study abroad venture this summer. He
enrolled in a six-credit class, "Sports
Commerce and Culture in the Global
Marketplace," offered by the University
of Memphis. One of the reasons Zola
signed up for the class was because the
trip leader was David Andrews, associate
professor of Kinesiology at UM. The
class was a fourteen day trip to the
United Kingdom which comprised of daily
lectures and field-trips. Students were
exposed to theories and practices in the
economics of sports and the impact of
globalization. Besides lectures, their
class visited such places as Wimbledon,
Lords, Twickenham, and the F.A. Premiere
League headquarters, where the students
spent time touring facilities and having
Q&A sessions with executives.
Zola said that he particularly
enjoyed the field-trip component of the
class. "They provided me with great
experience into the real workings of our
lectures in practice," he said. Students
also visited sponsoring organizations
like Coca Cola U.K., and media centers
like BSkyB.
Kortz put her money toward tuition
and a down payment on a new car, while
Donnelly and Barratt invested their
winnings.
The competition was sponsored by
Joseph Wikler, who is a director of
OppenheimerFunds and a consultant for T.
Rowe Price Small-Cap Value Fund. He also
serves as a director for a number of
other private and non-profit
organizations. Wikler has been
professionally associated with Professor
Lemma Senbet, chair of Smith's finance
department, since their days as
directors of Fortis Funds, which was
acquired by Hartford Life. Wikler
initiated the competitive program in
consultation with Senbet, who then led
the adoption process with finance
faculty, naming Susan White, teaching
professor of finance, as the faculty
coordinator.
Much like the Smith MBA Case
Competition, students were given a
limited timeframe to develop a solution
and strategy for a real-world
organization's current issue. To support
their strategies, undergraduate students
were asked to provide financial analyses
using formulas and calculations learned
in the classroom.
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Winning Team (l to r):
Nathaniel Zola, Michelle
Donnelly, Joseph Wikler,
Lemma Senbet (Smith Finance
Chair), Julianne Kortz, and
Zach Barratt. |
This year's case involved Radio One
Inc., an urban-oriented music,
entertainment, and information radio
operator that caters primarily to an
African-American audience. In the case,
Radio One had the opportunity to acquire
21 established urban radio stations from
numerous reputable operators around the
country. These purchases would almost
double Radio One's market reach and
increase revenues tremendously. Students
were asked whether Radio One should
invest in these stations, and if so, how
much? They were given only 40 hours to
come up with a practical answer and
compelling presentation, given case
facts and intelligent assumptions.
Zola said, "One of our goals was to
be as accurate as possible in our
assumptions. We did background research
so that we could begin calculations.
After reading the case, we knew
immediately that it was an NPV [Net
Present Value] problem, but we also knew
that we needed to do a sensitivity
analysis."
The winning team presented excellent
rationale for their solution to proceed
with the acquisition. Judging the
competition with Wikler were Allen R.
Freedman, retired CEO and chairman of
Assurant (formerly Fortis Inc.), and
Eric-Vincent Guichard, managing director
and CEO of GRAVITAS Capital Advisors
LLC.