View Full Version : Barron's Challenge
maxrum
10-04-2006, 04:39 PM
I was reading Barron's magazine yesterday, and found that they are having a trading challenge for students and professors starting October 30th 2006. The prizes are not so high as an IB Olympiad, however it doesn't takes much effort to participate. You wouldn't need to write any code to trade. All trades are manual and there is a limit of 75 trades total during the challenge. I think, everyone who has an hour or so of free time should participate. The more our students are there, the more chances that someone will hit the top prize, and it will benefit our program in general and your resume particularly.
For official rules and registration go to:
http://www.barronschallenge.com/
You will have to give them your estimate of Dow, S&P500, and NASDAQ on March 30 2007 during registration.
The number of participants is limited to 200.000 I believe, so don't wait till the last day of registration.
Good luck! :)
Peik Looi
10-04-2006, 11:03 PM
Thanks for the information.
I've registered.
Thanks Max.
Registered as well. I filled as following
School: Baruch College
Major: Financial Engineering
Refering professor: Dan Stefanica
let publicize as much as we can about our MFE program :)
The DJ, SP500, NASDAQ estimates are called filters. In case of ties, the student with the estimates closest to the closing values that day will get the prize.
In all, I think this is a very fun way to build a portfolio, learn and win some money \:D/
maxrum
10-05-2006, 12:17 AM
Registered as well. I filled as following
School: Baruch College
Major: Financial Engineering
Refering professor: Dan Stefanica
I filled exactly the same way :smt043
Peik Looi
10-06-2006, 10:11 PM
Securities that can be Traded
You may buy, sell, sell short, and short cover almost all stocks (common and preferred) and Exchange Traded Funds (ETFs) that are listed on NYSE, NASDAQ, or AMEX and that are trading at $5.00 or more per share. You can not buy or sell short any stock that is, at that time, trading at less than $5.00 per share; but you may sell or short cover any stock in your account that falls below $5.00 per share. Initial public offerings (IPOs) are usually available the afternoon that the new stock starts trading on the exchanges.
Is there a specific reason to the bolded statement? Also, is it generally true for trades on the NYSE, NASDAQ or AMEX?
maxrum
10-06-2006, 11:00 PM
Securities that can be Traded
Is there a specific reason to the bolded statement? Also, is it generally true for trades on the NYSE, NASDAQ or AMEX?
No, they just don't want you to trade this kind of stocks, which have a very high variance. The reason is that they want to make this contest not just a lottery. For the same reason, I guess, they won't let you trade options.
vBulletin® v3.8.0 Beta 3, Copyright ©2000-2008, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.