MBA students from 16 of the nation's top business schools received
practical experience in the rapidly growing energy industry as
they competed in the McCombs School’s second annual National
Energy Finance Challenge, September 29, 2006.
Each team member assumed a role in a corporate negotiating
team for McKween, a fictional company located in the imaginary
island of Nirvana off the West African coast. Until recent
advancements in technology and the increased need to meet rising
energy demands, natural gas was an underappreciated energy
source in Nirvana.
The recent discovery of gas in the ground has revealed
opportunities but also created many challenges for the energy
industry.
The teams were asked to address these challenges while
maximizing shareholder value and monetizing its natural gas
resources efficiently. Each team discussed its solutions in a
25-minute presentation followed by 20-minute question and answer
sessions with the judges.
“You guys are performing and competing on par with our
analytical shops in house,” said Wayne Borduin, who authored the
case and does financial forecasting and business planning with
Chevron's International Upstream Finance organization.
The Haas School of Business at Berkeley took first place and won
$5,000. Its members included Nathan Cope, Irem Karacagil,
Sheldon Kimber, Matthew Price and Nicolas Spicer. Harvard took
second place and garnered $2,500 while Northwestern came in
third and received $1,500.

The Haas School of Business
at Berkeley team took first place in the National Energy
Finance Challenge hosted by the McCombs School of
Business. |
“The competition was a fantastic opportunity to apply skills
from a broad range of MBA classes to a very realistic business
problem,” said Berkeley team member Sheldon Kimber. “The
networking with other MBAs and recruiters was certainly very
helpful. I fully expect to see some members of the other teams
throughout my career in energy.”
While the competitors gained practical experience, the
competition was not without its challenges. Both Kimber and
teammate Matthew Price note the added pressure of time
constraints made analyzing the complicated financial and
strategic data more difficult.
“The time constraint of the competition reinforces the need to
identify roles for each team member and trusting their
capabilities,” Price said.
Eduardo Fernandez-Moran, manager of finance MBA development
program for Chevron, the lead sponsor for the competition, hopes
this experience will prove beneficial in the participants’
future careers as they become leaders in the energy industry.
“Our industry in general is facing a demographic issue with our
senior executives retiring,” Fernandez-Moran said. “We’re glad
to see there are so many talented individuals in our industry.”
The Texas Energy Finance Group, a McCombs MBA student
organization, hosted the challenge. Chevron, Tesoro, Peabody,
Simmons & Co. International, ExxonMobil, ConocoPhillips, Merrill
Lynch, TXU and the McCombs School Center for Energy Finance
Education and Research sponsored the challenge.
For more information on this event, please contact
Jack
Crancer.