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FMA 2017-2018 Magazine

Annual Magazine of Auburn University's Financial Management Association

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fma<br />

<strong>2017</strong>-<strong>2018</strong><br />

MAGAZINE<br />

Reaching<br />

New<br />

Heights<br />

<strong>FMA</strong> <strong>2018</strong> MAGAZINE 1


2 <strong>FMA</strong> <strong>2018</strong> MAGAZINE


TABLE OF CONTENTS<br />

INSIDE THIS ISSUE<br />

22<br />

26<br />

38<br />

45<br />

<strong>FMA</strong>’s First<br />

Financial Summit<br />

Members, alumni, and guest executives came<br />

together for two days of education, networking<br />

and camaraderie.<br />

Duff & Phelps<br />

Case Competition<br />

<strong>FMA</strong> team of five takes second place and<br />

wins $6,000 in prestigious international<br />

case competition.<br />

<strong>FMA</strong> Heads Back<br />

to Wall Street<br />

Members pack a lot into 36 hours, including<br />

some time with <strong>FMA</strong> grads now working in<br />

the Big Apple.<br />

Alumni<br />

Updates<br />

Moving up, moving on and marrying – a lot<br />

has happened in four years.<br />

5 Director’s Message<br />

6 President’s Message<br />

7 A Look to Next Year<br />

8 Who Are We?<br />

10 What We’re Up To<br />

16 A Look at Our Students<br />

22 Leadership Summit<br />

24 Diversity & Inclusion<br />

26 Case Competitions<br />

30 Awards & Scholarships<br />

38 <strong>FMA</strong> NYC Trip<br />

42 Where are We<br />

Going Now?<br />

44 Supporter Spotlight<br />

45 Alumni Updates<br />

<strong>FMA</strong> <strong>2018</strong> MAGAZINE 3


4 <strong>FMA</strong> <strong>2018</strong> MAGAZINE


FROM THE<br />

<strong>FMA</strong> DESK<br />

MESSAGE FROM THE DIRECTOR<br />

<strong>FMA</strong> has made incredible strides over the last four years with the vested and engaged<br />

help of its student members, young alumni and backers. The organization, as I see it, is<br />

a dichotomy: a start-up that has accomplished significant feats with limited resources;<br />

and a growth company that is now faced with a choice between good quality and<br />

excellence. I believe that there are boundless opportunities for <strong>FMA</strong> to establish itself<br />

as a nationally respected elite finance program. We can do this by building on a strong<br />

foundation and thoughtfully establishing a competitive strategy that identifies critical<br />

areas of focus, creates a curriculum to support each of these areas, and masterfully<br />

integrates the focus areas as a streamlined and integrative program of excellence.<br />

Mission Statement: Provide a fully integrated program at Auburn University that combines<br />

education, career preparation, industry intellectual capital, alumni engagement and<br />

information resources to produce the best trained and prepared students for finance careers.<br />

The critical success areas for an elite finance program include: Industry Exposure,<br />

Technical/Academic, Alumni Engagement, Professional Preparation, and Branding. It<br />

is truly remarkable how far and definite our progress has been in these areas, driven by<br />

student members and alumni with a sense of ownership and abounding drive.<br />

However, when I compare our young organization to elite programs in the nation, I<br />

question, not the worth of what we have accomplished to date, but whether there are<br />

other domains…with which we do not as yet deal effectively. Rapid as our advance has<br />

been, the failure to capitalize on further areas of growth and advancement for our<br />

students would be neglectful. I propose that we use the mission statement to guide<br />

this program toward an integrated and purposeful curriculum that seeks improvement<br />

in areas of weakness and coordinates efforts between students, alumni and faculty.<br />

Target improvement areas are: practical industry and academic integration including<br />

structured supporting coursework and credit, additional focused alumni engagement<br />

and communication, and the addition of a thoughtfully planned elite student<br />

investment lab. These targets only seem wildly aspirational when one forgets the path<br />

that we have forged in the short time since inception.<br />

Finance Rocks!<br />

<strong>FMA</strong> <strong>2018</strong> MAGAZINE 5


MESSAGE FROM THE PRESIDENT<br />

PRESIDENT JORDAN CARR<br />

A Year<br />

of Growth<br />

Once again, it was a year of tremendous growth for <strong>FMA</strong> as<br />

this year’s group continued to build on the progress of former<br />

students. We actively invested in efforts to increase our<br />

name recognition with purposeful branding – not only of our<br />

student successes, but also of our program in general - taking<br />

ownership of the impressive results derived from four years of<br />

curriculum building, determination and hard work. Another<br />

major focus this year was fostering discussions with the college<br />

and <strong>FMA</strong> Advisory Board regarding <strong>FMA</strong>’s strategic mission<br />

and trajectory as we continue to push for additional resources,<br />

integration and infrastructure. As you’ll see throughout this<br />

Annual, our focused efforts paid great dividends.<br />

1. 100% full time job placement for 20 seniors<br />

2. 100% internship placement for 19 juniors<br />

3. 14 sophomore and freshman finance related internships<br />

4. 16 sophomore and freshman leadership program participants<br />

5. Instituted <strong>FMA</strong>’s Advisory Board that will serve as a<br />

governing body and source of strategic guidance for<br />

upcoming initiatives<br />

6. Hosted <strong>FMA</strong>’s first annual Financial Leadership Summit<br />

that included a full weekend of events for alumni, students<br />

and executives<br />

7. Established <strong>FMA</strong>’s first Investment Banking Preparatory<br />

Group that met on a weekly basis to prepare students for IB<br />

recruitment and internships<br />

8. Competed in 7 national case competitions - taking 1 st in one<br />

and 2 nd in two<br />

9. Hosted two open-invite forums for business and<br />

engineering students:<br />

• What is Corporate Investment Banking? Wells Fargo<br />

Executives Walk Through a Live Deal<br />

<strong>FMA</strong> <strong>2017</strong>-<strong>2018</strong> President Jordan Carr joined <strong>FMA</strong><br />

as a sophomore and recently completed his major in<br />

Mechanical Engineering with minors in Finance and<br />

Business. He initially decided to pursue engineering<br />

professionally and completed an internship with<br />

ExxonMobil in Houston, TX. However, following his<br />

internship and multiple conversations with investment<br />

bankers, Jordan decided to alter his career path and<br />

pursue a career in investment banking. Jordan interned<br />

with Moelis & Co. in Houston last summer and accepted<br />

a full time offer to join Moelis in New York City as an<br />

investment banking analyst.<br />

10. Focused on branding and earlier education of <strong>FMA</strong> and<br />

finance careers with a visit to Hoover High School’s<br />

Finance Academy<br />

11. Recorded an average starting compensation for <strong>2018</strong><br />

graduating class of $93,600<br />

Knowing the plans that <strong>FMA</strong> leadership has for the next<br />

several years, I am excited to witness future growth and give<br />

back as an alumnus. As mentioned to my fellow <strong>2018</strong> graduates,<br />

<strong>FMA</strong>’s goal is to be a resource not only for current students, but<br />

also for alumni as they progress in their careers. Thank you to<br />

the students, alumni, guests and advisers who made this past<br />

year possible. Reaching new heights requires team effort and<br />

could not happen without your help.<br />

• Inclusion in the Workplace: Partnering Together for Success<br />

6 <strong>FMA</strong> <strong>2018</strong> MAGAZINE


INCOMING PRESIDENT<br />

BAILEY SULLIVAN<br />

Looks to<br />

Next Year<br />

Thank you to our outgoing executive team – through<br />

your collaboration and hard work, <strong>FMA</strong> reached exciting<br />

new milestones in placement, branding, curriculum and<br />

recognition at both the university and national level. These<br />

accomplishments drove the title of this year’s <strong>FMA</strong> Annual<br />

<strong>Magazine</strong>: “Reaching New Heights.” Though our young<br />

organization has experienced tremendous growth, with an<br />

eye on the future we will continue to focus on value-added<br />

initiatives for our members.<br />

For <strong>2018</strong>-2019, <strong>FMA</strong> Exec is targeting several key initiatives to<br />

support student development and growth. The first of these<br />

initiatives focuses on the career services we offer our members.<br />

We plan to create and publish an “<strong>FMA</strong> Career Guide” that<br />

will be available to all existing and potential members as<br />

well as other finance students seeking career preparatory<br />

advice. This formalized guide will lay out a four-year plan for<br />

students including track-specific career opportunities, course<br />

recommendations by year and ancillary training options and<br />

resources. <strong>FMA</strong> will use this guide in conjunction with insight<br />

from our executive speakers, alumni and peer advisors to<br />

expand the career services offered to our members.<br />

The second primary initiative is the establishment of an<br />

executive mentor program. This program will pair targeted<br />

members with an <strong>FMA</strong> alum or business professional based<br />

on their targeted career interests. Mentorship on a studentto-student<br />

level has been a core element of our members’<br />

success; the purpose of this program is to expand this element<br />

externally between students and alumni.<br />

We also plan to enrich the content of our shared programming<br />

for all HCOB students and systemically raise the level of<br />

awareness and preparedness within the college. This includes<br />

offering annual informational content though various venues:<br />

<strong>FMA</strong> Financial Leadership Summit, Fall Information Session<br />

<strong>FMA</strong> <strong>2018</strong>-2019 President Bailey Sullivan joined <strong>FMA</strong><br />

as a freshman and is currently completing her degree<br />

in Industrial & Systems Engineering with minors<br />

in Finance and Spanish. Through the resources and<br />

guidance that <strong>FMA</strong> provided, she received invitations<br />

to participate in diversity programs at multiple firms<br />

including Blackstone, Goldman Sachs, J.P. Morgan and<br />

Wells Fargo Securities. She spent two summers as an<br />

analyst with Wells Fargo Securities with their Financial<br />

Sponsors Group and Equity Capital Markets team in<br />

New York. Upon graduation, Bailey will return to New<br />

York as a full-time investment banking analyst with<br />

Goldman Sachs.<br />

- What is Finance? A focus on industry tracks and career<br />

planning, <strong>FMA</strong> Diversity and Inclusion Forum, <strong>FMA</strong> Student/<br />

Employer Meet & Greet (open to all 3.5 GPA finance majors)<br />

and an additional annual open presentation focusing on a<br />

specific area of the financial services industry. With this<br />

shared programming, we will continue to champion Auburn’s<br />

focus on inclusion by actively recruiting and assisting students<br />

from all areas of our campus and community.<br />

<strong>FMA</strong> has made remarkable progress since its creation in 2014,<br />

and we will strive to reach “new heights” throughout this<br />

next year. Thank you to all <strong>FMA</strong> supporters who make the<br />

growth of this organization possible – we truly appreciate<br />

your support.<br />

Best,<br />

<strong>FMA</strong> <strong>2018</strong> MAGAZINE 7


WHO ARE WE?<br />

We are Auburn students who pressed<br />

for an organization that could identify<br />

top talent and provide focused<br />

preparation for a career in finance.<br />

<strong>FMA</strong> Graduation Party <strong>2018</strong><br />

We are a growing base of involved alumni<br />

that continue to give back, both financially and as<br />

mentors and advisors from inside the corporate world.<br />

8 <strong>FMA</strong> <strong>2018</strong> MAGAZINE


We are involved ambassadors that continuously push for resources and training. We<br />

are a morning mock interview, an afternoon happy hour and a late night in the Bloomberg room.<br />

<strong>FMA</strong> Graduation Party <strong>2017</strong><br />

We are a source of honest feedback,<br />

a study partner, a mentor.<br />

<strong>FMA</strong> Graduation Party 2016<br />

We are a group of dedicated students who want<br />

the best opportunities for ourselves and our fellow members.<br />

<strong>FMA</strong> Graduation Party 2015<br />

WE ARE <strong>FMA</strong>.<br />

<strong>FMA</strong> <strong>2018</strong> MAGAZINE 9


Reaching<br />

New Heights<br />

<strong>FMA</strong> On-Campus Presentations<br />

Regions Securities | Charlotte, NC<br />

SunTrust Robinson Humphrey |<br />

Atlanta, GA<br />

Turner Broadcasting | Atlanta, GA<br />

Wells Fargo Government & Institutional<br />

Banking | Washington, D.C.<br />

Wells Fargo Corp/Invest Banking|<br />

Las Vegas, NV, San Francisco, CA<br />

Stifel Equity Research | Atlanta, GA<br />

Welch Hornsby | Birmingham, AL<br />

Vulcan Value Partners | Birmingham, AL<br />

Training<br />

Two Training the Street on campus Bootcamps<br />

Wall Street Prep Online Courses<br />

LinkedIn workshop<br />

Student Mentor Program<br />

Investment banking prep group<br />

Team Building<br />

<strong>FMA</strong> Member Bowling Night<br />

New Member Social at AU Hotel<br />

<strong>FMA</strong> Christmas Party<br />

Annual Grad Party<br />

What we’re up to...<br />

10 <strong>FMA</strong> <strong>2018</strong> MAGAZINE


Corporate Headquarter Visits<br />

SunTrust Robinson Humphrey | Atlanta, GA<br />

Delta Air Lines | Atlanta, GA<br />

Duff & Phelps | Atlanta, GA<br />

RSA | Montgomery, AL<br />

Goldman Sachs |New York, NY<br />

JP Morgan |New York, NY<br />

MUFG Securities |New York, NY<br />

Events and Engagement<br />

Financial Leadership Summit<br />

• Panel speakers included Raymond Harbert,<br />

Paul Jacobson (Delta CFO) and Steven Aldridge<br />

• Private information session with bankers from<br />

Goldman Sachs<br />

• Alumni and supporter luncheon and<br />

awards banquet<br />

• Supporter | Student tailgate<br />

<strong>FMA</strong> Meet & Greet – hosted 13 firms for a<br />

private career fair<br />

Inclusion in the Workplace Forum<br />

• Seminar and discussion surrounding diversity<br />

and inclusion in the workplace from Betsy<br />

Bagley with Catalyst New York<br />

• Breakout session for <strong>FMA</strong> Women followed<br />

Corporate Investment Banking Forum<br />

• Wells Fargo executives walk through deal flow<br />

on multi-company M&A transaction<br />

CFA Forecast Dinner | Birmingham, AL<br />

CSIC Conference | Tuscaloosa, AL<br />

Edward Tufte Data Conference | Atlanta, GA<br />

Power lunches with executives from investment<br />

banking, corporate finance, and private wealth<br />

<strong>FMA</strong> Meet & Greet – hosted 13 firms for a private<br />

career fair. All finance majors with above a 3.5<br />

GPA invited<br />

<strong>FMA</strong> Student Leadership Trip - NYC<br />

Members involved in 7 Case Competitions<br />

<strong>FMA</strong> <strong>2018</strong> MAGAZINE 11


12 <strong>FMA</strong> <strong>2018</strong> MAGAZINE


Work Hard...<br />

<strong>FMA</strong> <strong>2018</strong> MAGAZINE 13


14 <strong>FMA</strong> <strong>2018</strong> MAGAZINE<br />

Play Hard.


<strong>FMA</strong> <strong>2018</strong> MAGAZINE 15


A LOOK AT OUR STUDENTS<br />

DAVID BUCKO<br />

Senior <strong>FMA</strong> student<br />

David Bucko holds<br />

triple citizenship in<br />

the United States,<br />

Hungary, and Serbia,<br />

and credits much of his success to<br />

his arrival in the U.S. at the age of 12.<br />

David’s move from Hungary instilled in<br />

him a deep sense of appreciation for the<br />

opportunities he has been able to pursue<br />

here in the U.S. “I’m so appreciative of my<br />

experiences; I grew up in a country where<br />

opportunity is often hard to find.” Always<br />

with an eye on his future, David completed<br />

both his Life & Health Agent License<br />

and his Series 6 while still in college and<br />

landed a sophomore internship with<br />

Merrill Lynch.<br />

David’s advice to younger members?<br />

“Figure out as quickly as possible what you<br />

want to do and build your resume around<br />

that. If you have training or experience<br />

in a certain field, you are far more likely<br />

to be selected than someone who is just<br />

‘interested’ in that field.” David will join<br />

Regions Securities in Charlotte as a Debt<br />

Capital Markets Financial Analyst.<br />

16 <strong>FMA</strong> <strong>2018</strong> MAGAZINE


A LOOK AT OUR STUDENTS<br />

KATIE<br />

GRUNDER<br />

With a curious mind and<br />

innate athleticism,<br />

Katie truly exemplifies what it means to be an<br />

Auburn student-athlete. The Dayton, OH native<br />

chose Auburn to continue her soccer career at the<br />

Division I level with a full scholarship.<br />

While at Auburn, Katie and the Auburn Women’s<br />

Soccer Team made four NCAA Tournament and<br />

four SEC Tournament appearances - posting two<br />

of the most successful seasons in program history.<br />

Katie also claimed the prestigious Spirit Award her<br />

senior year for best representing the Auburn Creed<br />

on and off the field. As the soccer season closed<br />

during her senior year, Katie decided to add another<br />

challenge to her resume by joining the Auburn<br />

Women’s Track and Field Team and competing in<br />

the 100m Dash.<br />

Katie’s athletic achievements are only part of the<br />

story. The talented athlete pursued membership<br />

in <strong>FMA</strong> her freshman year and went on to obtain<br />

an internship with Regions Bank as an investment<br />

portfolio analyst the summer of her junior year.<br />

Katie channeled her grit and determination toward<br />

landing a full time position. She will join JP Morgan<br />

Private Bank in Boston, MA this summer as a wealth<br />

management analyst.<br />

“Stay open-minded<br />

to new opportunities<br />

- small or large. You<br />

never know how<br />

many doors can be<br />

opened by the simple<br />

decision to take<br />

a risk.”<br />

<strong>FMA</strong> <strong>2018</strong> MAGAZINE 17


A LOOK AT OUR STUDENTS<br />

NICK<br />

POPE<br />

Nick Pope, a junior double<br />

majoring in finance and<br />

accounting, may have grown up in Memphis,<br />

Tennessee, but he was raised a proud Auburn fan. Nick<br />

followed in the steps of his parents and two sisters when<br />

deciding to come to The Plains for college.<br />

Pope started on a pure accounting track but began<br />

rethinking his future career when he took his first<br />

finance class. A conversation with <strong>FMA</strong> member and<br />

friend Jordan Carr proved to be impactful for Pope and<br />

was a turning point in his decision to pursue a career in<br />

investment banking. Pope added finance as his second<br />

major, joined <strong>FMA</strong> and began actively networking with<br />

industry professionals. Nick’s hard work paid off when he<br />

secured an internship with Piper Jaffray for Summer <strong>2018</strong><br />

in the Diversified Industrials Group out of Charlotte, NC.<br />

Here, Nick gained valuable experience and worked on a<br />

When reflecting upon his time in <strong>FMA</strong>, Nick says, “This<br />

organization gave me the opportunity to learn so much<br />

about the finance industry and surrounded me with peers<br />

who are driven to succeed. The older students in <strong>FMA</strong><br />

have had a profound impact on me and have pushed me<br />

to pursue a career that I am passionate about.”<br />

In his free time, Nick can be found hiking, mountain<br />

biking or planning his next travel adventure. Prior to his<br />

internship this summer, he participated in the Harbert<br />

College of Business’ “Intern Abroad Program” in<br />

Rome, Italy when he worked as consultant for two local<br />

restaurant entrepreneurs.<br />

Upon graduation, Nick will return to Piper as a full-time<br />

analyst in the Consumer Products group where he will<br />

work on M&A transactions, buy-side engagements and<br />

variety of sell-side M&A deals and pitches.<br />

capital raises.<br />

18 <strong>FMA</strong> <strong>2018</strong> <strong>2017</strong> MAGAZINE <strong>FMA</strong> <strong>2017</strong> MAGAZINE 18


A LOOK AT OUR STUDENTS<br />

Lauren Spiwak, a<br />

junior from Sugar<br />

Land, Texas, didn’t<br />

grow up thinking she<br />

would attend Auburn.<br />

But, after touring 22 colleges across the<br />

United States, she knew Auburn was the<br />

place for her. Auburn has given Lauren<br />

so many professional and extracurricular<br />

opportunities during her undergraduate<br />

career. Within the business school,<br />

Lauren is a member of the Financial<br />

Management Association and the HCOB<br />

Executive Society. Outside of the business<br />

school, Lauren has served in a variety<br />

of organizations including the Student<br />

Government Association and in multiple<br />

positions on Panhellenic Council. Lauren<br />

currently serves as the Administrative Vice<br />

President on Panhellenic’s Executive Board<br />

where she leads an 18 member Panhellenic<br />

Cabinet in putting on programs and<br />

initiatives for over 5,000 Greek women.<br />

LAUREN<br />

SPIWAK<br />

Lauren joined <strong>FMA</strong> during her sophomore<br />

year and spent that summer as a<br />

manufacturing finance intern at Shell Oil<br />

Company. <strong>FMA</strong> provided Lauren with<br />

resources to supplement her studies and<br />

prepare her for the summer. The internship<br />

at Shell solidified Lauren’s desire to work in<br />

oil and gas and the Texas native decided to<br />

pursue an internship in energy investment<br />

banking the following summer. <strong>FMA</strong><br />

senior members helped Lauren prepare for<br />

a variety of investment banking interviews<br />

and super days. Lauren accepted an offer<br />

to intern with Bank of America Merrill<br />

Lynch in their Energy & Power group as an<br />

investment banking summer analyst and<br />

received a full time offer at the end of her<br />

internship. Following graduation, Lauren<br />

will return to the bank as a full-time<br />

investment banking analyst in the Natural<br />

Resources group.<br />

<strong>FMA</strong> <strong>2018</strong> MAGAZINE 19


A LOOK AT OUR STUDENTS<br />

CHRIS COSTELLO<br />

Chris Costello, a junior <strong>FMA</strong><br />

member, is the owner of BALI Media, LLC and<br />

subsidiary SpectSocial. Both companies aim to help businesses<br />

and marketers grow their brand presence on social media and<br />

online. BALI Media, LLC not only focuses on social media<br />

management, but also on web development, content creation,<br />

app development and digital consulting. Costello came up with<br />

the idea after growing his entrepreneur themed Instagram page<br />

to 101,000 followers in less than 8 months. “That was when I<br />

recognized a market for helping brands and businesses obtain<br />

the optimal exposure,” Costello said. SpectSocial works with<br />

smaller, independent marketers while BALI Media focuses on<br />

small businesses and larger corporations. Over the last year and<br />

a half, Costello’s businesses including LeadFriend, a business<br />

he co-founded, have generated in excess of $600,000.00 in<br />

revenue and have worked with famous musicians, clothing<br />

brands, journalists and comedians.<br />

Costello says the biggest challenge going forward is keeping<br />

the momentum, and continuing to take advantage of updated<br />

technology. What’s next for Costello as an entrepreneur?<br />

Partnering with bigger brands and companies, while marketing<br />

himself into a full time career at a top tech firm.<br />

20 <strong>FMA</strong> <strong>2018</strong> MAGAZINE


A LOOK AT OUR STUDENTS<br />

Jenny Herrell, a<br />

freshman at Auburn<br />

University, discovered<br />

her interest in investing<br />

when she took a<br />

macroeconomics course<br />

in high school. The Madison,<br />

Alabama native enjoyed mathematics<br />

and history and viewed finance as the<br />

intersection between the two - allowing her<br />

to analyze companies both fundamentally<br />

and qualitatively. Intrigued by the field and<br />

wanting to learn more, Herrell found an<br />

internship at a local retirement fund and spent<br />

her senior year absorbing all that she could<br />

about investment strategy. Entering Auburn,<br />

she knew she wanted to major in finance<br />

and quickly became involved in the Auburn<br />

Student Investment Fund. After joining <strong>FMA</strong>,<br />

Jenny was encouraged to apply to the Girls<br />

Who Invest Summer Intensive Program, an<br />

organization that advocates for greater female<br />

presence in the financial services industry and<br />

seeks to provide women with the tools to make<br />

this initiative possible. Jenny was ultimately<br />

accepted by Girls Who Invest – becoming the<br />

first woman from the SEC to participate in the<br />

program. As a summer scholar, Herrell spent<br />

four weeks completing asset management<br />

training at the University of Pennsylvania<br />

and was then matched with an internship<br />

at Prudential in Atlanta, Georgia where she<br />

worked in mezzanine debt and real estate.<br />

Jenny will be joining Point72, a hedge fund<br />

headquartered in Stamford, CT next summer<br />

and hopes to eventually pursue a career in real<br />

estate investing. “I’m looking forward to the<br />

rigor and growth opportunities the next three<br />

years in <strong>FMA</strong> will bring and helping other<br />

Auburn women utilize the organization to<br />

explore possibilities once thought out of reach.”<br />

Along with her interest in personal investing,<br />

Jenny loves presidential autobiographies,<br />

podcasts, and cooking – when her HelloFresh<br />

box arrives.<br />

JENNY<br />

HERRELL<br />

<strong>FMA</strong> <strong>2018</strong> MAGAZINE 21


REACHING NEW HEIGHTS—PROGRAMMING<br />

22 <strong>FMA</strong> <strong>2018</strong> MAGAZINE


LEADERSHIP SUMMIT<br />

Inaugural <strong>FMA</strong> Leadership Summit featured guest<br />

panelists, awards luncheon and alumni involvement<br />

Jennie Powers<br />

It was a homecoming weekend, of<br />

sorts, for Harbert College’s Financial<br />

Management Association alumni.<br />

Nearly half of the program’s 48 alums<br />

descended upon The Plains to attend<br />

<strong>FMA</strong>’s first annual Financial Leadership<br />

Summit – a two-day event that included<br />

the group’s first advisory board meeting,<br />

an alumni luncheon, an executive panel<br />

of distinguished industry leaders, an<br />

investment banking focused information<br />

session, an evening alumni networking<br />

event and a Saturday morning tailgate on<br />

the Lowder Hall Lawn.<br />

“It was great to have our alums back for<br />

the weekend,” said Tracy Richard, finance<br />

instructor and <strong>FMA</strong> Director since its<br />

inception four years ago. “We established<br />

the Summit in order to increase exposure<br />

for our finance students and to create an<br />

annual event that will bring our finance<br />

alums, supporters, and students together.”<br />

Throughout the year, <strong>FMA</strong> members have<br />

the opportunity to hear first-hand career<br />

advice from industry professionals, meet<br />

with financial executives and gain insight<br />

on the training necessary for a successful<br />

career in finance. Members also receive<br />

career coaching, resume guidance and<br />

mock interview opportunities.<br />

Jimmy Brewster, a sophomore <strong>FMA</strong><br />

member from Atlanta, noted that<br />

providing students with “the proper<br />

framework and guidance” is an integral<br />

part of <strong>FMA</strong>’s mission. “When a student<br />

comes into the business school and is<br />

willing to put forth the effort to achieve a<br />

successful career in finance, <strong>FMA</strong> provides<br />

the tools and opportunities that will help<br />

them succeed. The organization provides<br />

not only a framework for success, but also<br />

the mentorship and support.”<br />

The Summit kicked off on Friday with<br />

the group’s first advisory board meeting.<br />

According to Tracy Richard, “Our board<br />

will be a critical source of support for<br />

us and will play an important role in<br />

identifying and addressing students’ needs.”<br />

Current students, alums and industry<br />

executives then gathered for a luncheon,<br />

where the organizations’ first three<br />

student presidents were honored. Later<br />

that afternoon, all HCOB students were<br />

invited to an open panel featuring three<br />

finance alumni and prominent industry<br />

executives: Raymond J. Harbert, CEO of<br />

Harbert Management Corporation, Paul<br />

Jacobson, Chief Financial Officer<br />

of Delta Air Lines, and Steven Aldridge,<br />

an investment banking executive at<br />

Cantor Fitzgerald.<br />

“We’re trying to expose the students that<br />

are interested in a career in finance to<br />

various segments of the financial services<br />

industry from private equity to corporate<br />

finance and to highlight successful and<br />

engaged alumni who can tell that story<br />

best,” Richard said.<br />

“We plan to establish the Summit<br />

as a continuing source of education,<br />

engagement and fellowship for students<br />

seeking a career in finance,” said <strong>FMA</strong><br />

President Jordan Carr. “None of this would<br />

be possible without the support of the<br />

Finance Department, the Harbert College<br />

of Business, and our sponsors and alumni.”<br />

The finishing touch for <strong>FMA</strong>’s inaugural<br />

Summit? Visitors were treated to an<br />

Auburn victory over Georgia.<br />

<strong>FMA</strong> <strong>2018</strong> MAGAZINE 23


REACHING NEW HEIGHTS—PROGRAMMING<br />

Diversity & Inclusion<br />

This April, <strong>FMA</strong> welcomed Betsy Osterling<br />

Bagley (AU College of Business ’88),<br />

Catalyst Vice President of Consulting<br />

Services to campus for an open-invitation<br />

forum on diversity and inclusion in the<br />

workplace. Approximately 200 students<br />

gathered in Lowder Hall for a co-ed session<br />

that was no-holds-barred informative,<br />

honest and relevant.<br />

Catalyst is a global nonprofit<br />

headquartered in New York that works<br />

with some of the world’s most powerful<br />

CEOs and leading companies to build<br />

workplaces that work for women. The<br />

company helps organizations remove<br />

barriers and drive change with pioneering<br />

research, practical tools, and proven<br />

solutions to accelerate and advance women<br />

into leadership. Catalyst focuses on<br />

three areas to drive workplace change:<br />

accelerating women at work by building<br />

inclusive cultures; addressing workplace<br />

issues at the intersection of gender, race<br />

and ethnicity; and engaging men as<br />

champions to help women advance<br />

and succeed.<br />

The co-ed forum addressed relevant<br />

issues for students preparing to enter the<br />

workforce by starting at ground zero –<br />

awareness. Men and women alike were<br />

taken back by the information presented.<br />

Prior to the forum, Ms. Bagley sent a<br />

student survey out to check awareness<br />

and perceptions. Seventy <strong>FMA</strong> students<br />

24 <strong>FMA</strong> <strong>2018</strong> MAGAZINE


esponded; the results sombering, yet inline<br />

with similar surveys conducted across<br />

the nation. When asked if they believe<br />

that men and women have equal access to<br />

career opportunities, 73 percent of men<br />

answered “yes” compared to 44 percent<br />

of women. Responses also indicated<br />

that Auburn men feel more comfortable<br />

approaching faculty for help and speaking<br />

out in class.<br />

Betsy did not hesitate to dig in,<br />

encouraging students to start a dialogue<br />

about the differences and focus efforts<br />

on understanding perspectives. At one<br />

point, the Catalyst maverick drew a circle<br />

on the board and asked students to shout<br />

out positive and negative words associated<br />

with each of the sexes. “It was a great<br />

visual” said one male student. “Words are<br />

powerful, but we don’t really think about<br />

the fact that what’s often seen as a strength<br />

for a guy, like speaking up or taking charge,<br />

has a negative connotation when applied<br />

to a woman. That display really hit home<br />

for me.”<br />

Following the open session, <strong>FMA</strong> hosted<br />

a women-only coffee-hour and provided<br />

each member with a copy of Sheryl<br />

Sandberg’s book, Lean In. “Sometimes it’s<br />

easier to open up in a women-only setting”<br />

said Betsy. “I wanted to be frank about the<br />

challenges and give the women a chance to<br />

ask questions. This is such a critical time<br />

in their lives - I’m passionate about helping<br />

these young women navigate systemic<br />

disadvantages and launch their careers.”<br />

Betsy Bagley, Catalyst, NYC<br />

Betsy’s message hit home with male and<br />

female students alike. One female student<br />

followed up with Ms. Bagley after the<br />

forum: “Women’s equality in the workplace<br />

is a topic that is not typically discussed<br />

but is crucial that it is evaluated and<br />

talked about. I especially enjoyed the final<br />

point about insuring that you are having a<br />

discussion rather than a debate.”<br />

<strong>FMA</strong> <strong>2018</strong> MAGAZINE 25


Reaching New Heights—<br />

Case<br />

Competitions<br />

26 <strong>FMA</strong> <strong>2018</strong> MAGAZINE


<strong>FMA</strong> TEAM takes second place,<br />

wins $6,000 at prestigious international case competition<br />

Five students representing Auburn<br />

University’s Financial Management<br />

Association took second place<br />

internationally out of 77 teams and won<br />

$6,000 in scholarships Feb. 1 at the<br />

prestigious Duff & Phelps YOUniversity<br />

Deal Challenge in New York City.<br />

“To pursue competitive careers out of<br />

school, students need to express a drive<br />

that extends beyond the classroom,” said<br />

Jimmy Brewster, a sophomore finance<br />

major in the Harbert College. “Auburn’s<br />

team viewed this challenge as an<br />

opportunity to do just that.”<br />

Other team members included Jordan<br />

Carr, a senior majoring in mechanical<br />

engineering and minoring in finance,<br />

Bailey Sullivan, a junior majoring<br />

in industrial systems engineering<br />

and minoring in finance, Ben Yost, a<br />

sophomore majoring in finance and<br />

electrical engineering, and Ty Lamar, a<br />

junior majoring in finance.<br />

“The students that were on the Duff<br />

and Phelps team are incredibly driven<br />

and hard working,” said Harbert College<br />

finance instructor and <strong>FMA</strong> Director<br />

Tracy Richard, “This competition<br />

was rigorous and required a deep<br />

understanding of all aspects of the<br />

valuation process, including distinct<br />

valuation approaches, and the ability<br />

to build and explain models within<br />

each. These students were required to<br />

use valuation models to value not only<br />

tangible assets, but intangible assets<br />

as well. They immersed themselves in<br />

investment banking and valuation selfstudy<br />

opportunities provided by the<br />

<strong>FMA</strong> and also relied on their internship<br />

experience within the investment<br />

banking industry.”<br />

The Duff & Phelps case study put students<br />

into consulting roles and gave them a long<br />

list of objectives to meet in preparing a set<br />

of multi-million dollar recommendations<br />

to present before judges.<br />

This year, teams played the role of<br />

investment banking consultants<br />

and were tasked with valuating a<br />

newspaper publishing company (the<br />

team recommended the company<br />

value between $350 and $385 million),<br />

determining what type of buyer it should<br />

be sold to, and then recommending the<br />

precise purchaser.<br />

“There are several different types of<br />

buyers that you might see,” Carr said.<br />

“You might get a strategic buyer, which<br />

is another big company with a similar<br />

operation. That would be like an Exxon<br />

purchasing a smaller oil company. Then<br />

you have financial buyers, which are like<br />

private equity firms looking to invest.”<br />

The team recommended selling to a<br />

strategic buyer.<br />

“What we tried to focus on was how the<br />

entire presentation flowed together,”<br />

Carr said. “It’s real important to have a<br />

common theme that backs up the whole<br />

presentation and ties it together. When<br />

you’re pitching to a board of a company,<br />

you want the theme to run through<br />

everything and creates a story that backs<br />

up what your final recommendation is.”<br />

Brewster noted that meeting a<br />

demanding deadline with a laundry list<br />

of recommendations was just nature of<br />

the business.<br />

“Duff & Phelps looked to incorporate<br />

this theme in their challenge because of<br />

the nature of the investment banking<br />

industry,” he said. “Investment banking<br />

is a very client-facing business, and<br />

therefore the client can be extremely<br />

demanding and ask as many deliverables<br />

as they choose.<br />

“The experience we had in this challenge<br />

helped us prepare for careers in<br />

investment banking because we improved<br />

our multi-tasking, teamwork, and timemanagement<br />

skills.”<br />

Richard likened case competitions to<br />

‘real-life experiences that challenge<br />

students to go beyond the textbook.’<br />

“Seldom will they encounter a<br />

competition of this rigor where they<br />

don’t have to build on their existing<br />

skills. The skills required for analysis and<br />

presentation are relevant and applicable<br />

to what they will see in the market.”<br />

<strong>FMA</strong> <strong>2018</strong> MAGAZINE 27


<strong>FMA</strong> Mambers At CFA Institute<br />

The CFA Institute Research Challenge is<br />

a global competition, providing university<br />

students with the opportunity to work<br />

with industry mentors and develop<br />

their skills in financial analysis. Over<br />

the course of several months, a team of<br />

Auburn students, along with the help<br />

of professor Albert Wang, crafted an<br />

in-depth equity research report on the<br />

United Parcel Service (UPS). Through the<br />

competition, the students were able to<br />

analyze industry trends, cost structures,<br />

competitive differentiators, and value<br />

drivers for the Company. It was a great<br />

opportunity to apply classroom material<br />

into a real-world scenario, and have the<br />

student’s opinion evaluated by a panel of<br />

CFA-licensed professionals.<br />

<strong>FMA</strong> members competed in 7 case competitions<br />

in <strong>2017</strong>-<strong>2018</strong> and brought in $46,000 in<br />

scholarship and corporate funding.<br />

<strong>2017</strong>-<strong>2018</strong> <strong>FMA</strong> Case Competitions<br />

• Duff & Phelps - $6,000 (2nd)<br />

• eFest <strong>2017</strong> - $25,000 (3rd)<br />

Jenny Herrell, Matt Hultstrand, Emily Kravec, and Gary Gray<br />

represent Auburn in the UGA Stock Pitch Competition.<br />

• EO GSEA Atlanta Regionals (1st) and<br />

Nationals (2nd) - $5,000<br />

• UGA Entrepreneur of the Year - $10,000 (1st)<br />

• UGA Stock Pitch Competition<br />

• CFA Equity Research Competition<br />

• Southeastern Hedge Fund Competition<br />

28 <strong>FMA</strong> <strong>2018</strong> MAGAZINE


Chris Maurice and his start-up company<br />

Yellow Card, continued to impress the<br />

entrepreneurship business world this<br />

year, taking top awards in three major<br />

business competitions. Maurice and his<br />

business partner Justin Poiroux took<br />

third place nationally in the E-Fest <strong>2017</strong><br />

competition and brought home $25,000.<br />

E-Fest is the largest undergraduates-only<br />

business plan competition established to<br />

promote and support entrepreneurship<br />

education. Yellow Card also placed first<br />

at regionals and second in the nation at<br />

the Global Student Entrepreneur Awards,<br />

claiming $5,000. Additionally, Chris and<br />

Justin took first place ($10,000) at UGA’s<br />

Entrepreneur of the Year Competition.<br />

In addition to claiming top honors, Chris<br />

and Justin met some influential business<br />

leaders at the competitions and were<br />

invited to speak in April at Gathering<br />

of Titans (http://gatheringoftitans.com/<br />

who/), a nationwide gathering of seasoned<br />

investors and entrepreneurs at MIT.<br />

<strong>FMA</strong> <strong>2018</strong> MAGAZINE 29


REACHING NEW HEIGHTS—<br />

AWARDS & SCHOLARSHIPS<br />

Zachary Spencer<br />

Internship Scholarship<br />

HCOB Graduation Marshall<br />

Bailey Sullivan<br />

W. James Samford, Jr. Foundation Scholarship<br />

McWane Foundation Scholarship (Plainsman Prestigious)<br />

Auburn University Presidential Scholarship<br />

Edward and Catherine K. Lowder Scholarship<br />

Duff & Phelps Case Study Scholarship<br />

Tyler Fraebel<br />

Spirit of Auburn Presidential Scholarship<br />

Alabama Young Bankers’ Endowed Scholarship<br />

East Alabama Medical Center Endowed Scholarship<br />

Summa Cum Laude Graduation<br />

Matthew Duggan<br />

PNC Finance Scholarship<br />

James Brewster<br />

SunTrust Scholarship<br />

Duff & Phelps Case Study Scholarship<br />

Chris Maurice<br />

W. James Samford, Jr. Foundation Scholarship<br />

Harbert College of Business Annual Internship Scholarship<br />

National Merit Finalist Presidential Scholarship<br />

Harbert College of Business President’s Award<br />

University of Georgia Next Top Entrepreneur<br />

Entrepreneurs’ Organization Global Student Entrepreneur<br />

Award Winner (Atlanta), Finalist (U.S. Nationals)<br />

Emily Kravec<br />

National Merit Presidential Scholarship<br />

Kench Lee Lott, Jr. Endowed Scholarship<br />

J.W. Triplett Memorial Endowed Scholarship<br />

Alabama Power Scholarship<br />

Rheem Manufacturing Scholarship<br />

Neptune Technology Group Scholarship<br />

Nadine Moussalli<br />

Neptune Technology Group Scholarship<br />

Jordan Carr<br />

American Cast Iron Engineering Scholarship<br />

O’Neal Austin - Best Student Award<br />

Auburn Male Student Leader of the Year (<strong>2017</strong>)<br />

Duff & Phelps Case Study Scholarship<br />

Caleb Carter<br />

Auburn University Founder’s Scholarship<br />

Edward and Catherine K. Lowder Scholarship<br />

Russell Noletto<br />

Auburn University Founder’s Scholarship<br />

Auburn Athletics Scholarship<br />

Kathleen Leavitt<br />

J.W. Triplett Memorial Endowed Scholarship<br />

Wilda W. And Roy Lee Farish Endowed Scholarship<br />

Joseph McCormick<br />

Spirit of Auburn - Founder’s Scholarship<br />

J.W. Triplett Memorial Endowed Scholarship<br />

James “Hunter” Collier Endowed Scholarship<br />

Lauren Spiwak<br />

Doris Tanquary Memorial Accounting Scholarship<br />

Honors College Compass Bank Honors Endowed Scholarship<br />

Edward and Catherine K. Lowder Scholarship<br />

Chris Costello<br />

Dudley Scholarship<br />

J.W. Triplett Business Scholarship<br />

Trent Baggerly<br />

McDaniel Presidential Scholarship in Business<br />

Brady Johnson<br />

Drummond Company Honor’s Endowed Scholarship<br />

Edward and Catherine K. Lowder Scholarship<br />

Matt Hultstrand<br />

Spirit of Auburn - Presidential Scholarship<br />

John Edward Wiatt Fund for Excellence<br />

Guiles E. Maxwell, Jr. and Jean Fields Maxwell Scholarship<br />

Delaney Kennedy<br />

Edward and Catherine K. Lowder Scholarship<br />

Sam Schuessler<br />

Harbert College of Business Annual Internship Scholarship<br />

Brittany Clark<br />

Auburn University Presidential Scholarship<br />

J.W. Triplett Memorial Endowed Scholarship<br />

Colonel Donald T. Jones Scholarship<br />

P.E.O. STAR Scholarship<br />

30 <strong>FMA</strong> <strong>2018</strong> MAGAZINE


AWARDS & SCHOLARSHIPS<br />

Ben Yost<br />

National Merit Presidential Scholarship<br />

E.Z and L.G. Huff Endowed Scholarship<br />

Polly McAdams Alldredge Scholarship<br />

Duff & Phelps Case Study Scholarship<br />

Riley Bell<br />

John and Linda Havron Mengelt Endowed Fund for<br />

Excellence<br />

Academic Heritage Scholarship<br />

Mengelt Distinguished Honors Scholarship<br />

Ethan Reback<br />

Auburn University Presidential Scholarship<br />

Jack Albert<br />

Alabama Young Bankers’ Endowed Scholarship<br />

Taylor Hardin<br />

Auburn University Presidential Scholarship<br />

Regions Bank Endowed Scholarhsip<br />

Josh Horton<br />

Wilda W. and Roy Lee Farish Endowed Scholarship<br />

Spirit of Auburn University Scholarship<br />

Ty Lamar<br />

Duff & Phelps Case Study Scholarship<br />

Kate Bagley<br />

Aubun University Academic Charter Scholarship<br />

Blanchard H. Stallworth Endowed Scholarship<br />

Nathan Stein<br />

Spirit of Auburn University Scholarship<br />

Auburn University Legacy Scholarship<br />

Nick Pope<br />

Edward and Catherine K. Lowder Scholarship<br />

Jenny Herrell<br />

Spirit of Auburn - Presidential Scholarship<br />

Nelson Endowed Scholarship<br />

Hightower Endowed Fund for Excellence Scholarship<br />

Ari Alexander<br />

Auburn University Board of Trustees Scholarship<br />

Alabama Power/Southern Company Scholarship<br />

Kevin and Kathy Mims Scholarship<br />

Sarah Green Memorial Scholarship<br />

Charles Barkley Scholarship<br />

Dustin Watts<br />

SOA Founders Scholarship<br />

Regions Bank Scholarship<br />

Edward and Catherine K. Lowder Scholarship<br />

<strong>FMA</strong> <strong>2018</strong> MAGAZINE 31


AWARDS & SCHOLARSHIPS<br />

How successful was Auburn’s Financial<br />

Management Association chapter this year?<br />

JOSEPH MCADORY<br />

The Auburn chapter was named <strong>FMA</strong><br />

Superior Chapter by <strong>FMA</strong> National.<br />

Add that national recognition to the<br />

fact that they were nominated for<br />

five of the university’s 12 Student<br />

Involvement Awards – and won three.<br />

<strong>FMA</strong> members participated in seven<br />

national case competitions – and won<br />

more than $45,000 in scholarships and<br />

equity funding. There’s more -- outgoing<br />

chapter President Jordan Carr was<br />

named Auburn University Male Student<br />

Leader of the Year and Tracy Richard, a<br />

finance instructor at the Harbert College<br />

and the <strong>FMA</strong> Director, earned Auburn<br />

University’s Corey Edwards Organization<br />

Advisor of the Year and Parents’<br />

Association Faculty and Staff Awards.<br />

In addition, Tim Monte, a member of<br />

<strong>FMA</strong>-Auburn’s advisory board, was<br />

selected as <strong>FMA</strong> National Finacial<br />

Exceutive of the Year.<br />

Carr, a rising senior in engineering,<br />

reflects on the association’s achievements.<br />

“<strong>FMA</strong> was founded three and a half years<br />

ago when Tracy saw a need to develop and<br />

train top students interested in finance to<br />

be more competitive in the job market,”<br />

he said. “What was created with her<br />

students has grown into an organization<br />

that is far more than just a professional<br />

society – it is a support network for<br />

students that exposes them to different<br />

areas of finance and helps them get to the<br />

area they decide on.”<br />

Members agree that the organization<br />

gives students the tools necessary<br />

to compete with peers from the core<br />

investment banking schools. “The finance<br />

department has an amazing faculty. As we<br />

grow and strengthen <strong>FMA</strong>, so too are we<br />

focused on tangentially drawing on the<br />

available academic expertise to create an<br />

integrated major – one that includes both<br />

outstanding teaching and excellent career<br />

preparation,” Richard said.<br />

How does <strong>FMA</strong> succeed? Ownership,<br />

drive, and attitude, Richard said, giving<br />

the students credit. “How can you not be<br />

amazed by a group of students that seek<br />

challenges, work tirelessly to accomplish<br />

their goals and then turn around and<br />

help the next in line?” she said. “Our<br />

seniors spend countless hours helping<br />

our younger members, and it doesn’t<br />

stop there. <strong>FMA</strong> alumni are incredibly<br />

engaged. They recognize what the<br />

organization provided them, and they<br />

have a vested interest in its future.”<br />

32 <strong>FMA</strong> <strong>2018</strong> MAGAZINE


AWARDS & SCHOLARSHIPS<br />

“What don’t you do?”<br />

would be an appropriate<br />

question for <strong>FMA</strong>’er<br />

Chris Maurice who was<br />

honored with the <strong>2017</strong>-<br />

<strong>2018</strong> President’s Award<br />

for the Harbert College<br />

of Business.<br />

Chris, who has passionately pursued his love<br />

of entrepreneurship since 5th grade, has<br />

dabbled in just about everything from shoe<br />

manufacturing to search engine optimization<br />

and professional writing services. Then, in his<br />

sophomore year, Chris discovered Bitcoin and<br />

hasn’t looked back (or stopped talking about<br />

it) since.<br />

In 2015, alongside longtime friend Justin<br />

Poiroux, Chris founded Yellow Card Financial<br />

with the vision of making cryptocurrency<br />

readily available to anyone, anywhere. In<br />

the years since, Yellow Card has grown to<br />

accommodate cryptocurrency exchange in 17<br />

countries across Africa, the Middle East, and<br />

the United States, offering exotic currency<br />

pairs and liquidity for local exchanges. They<br />

will be launching their namesake product, the<br />

Yellow Card, in retail stores across Africa<br />

this summer.<br />

Chris has presented Yellow Card and their<br />

vision in Minnesota at eFest 2016, in Dallas<br />

at the Entrepreneurs’ Organization GSEA, in<br />

Boston at the Gathering of Titans Conference<br />

at MIT, and in Lagos, Nigeria, at Blockchain<br />

Nigeria. Chris recently returned from Nigeria<br />

to raise more money, after which you might be<br />

able to catch him in Nigeria, Ghana, Uganda,<br />

Kenya, Zimbabwe, Botswana, or South Africa,<br />

in no particular order. Chris plans to spend<br />

the fall in Africa finalizing plans for their<br />

Lagos office and getting things ready to go<br />

across the continent.<br />

CHRIS<br />

MAURICE<br />

<strong>FMA</strong> <strong>2018</strong> MAGAZINE 33


AWARDS & SCHOLARSHIPS<br />

BY STEPHEN LANZI | CAMPUS WRITER,<br />

AUBURN PLAINSMAN<br />

Male student leader of<br />

the year, mechanical<br />

engineer finds himself<br />

in investment banking.<br />

Excerpt taken from full article that appeared<br />

in The Auburn Plainsman<br />

In most cases, a rising junior studying<br />

mechanical engineering would think they<br />

had their life all but figured out when they<br />

secured an internship with ExxonMobil.<br />

Jordan Carr found himself in this situation<br />

a few years ago, but he had no idea that<br />

by the end of his senior year, he would<br />

find himself pursuing a career in<br />

investment banking.<br />

After a friend in <strong>FMA</strong> invited him to<br />

a private information session with a<br />

representative of Goldman Sachs, Carr<br />

started to reconsider what he wanted to<br />

do. He went into the internship with the<br />

mindset that if he didn’t love engineering,<br />

he would pursue investment banking.<br />

Although he enjoyed the experience<br />

and people at Exxon, Carr realized<br />

engineering wasn’t for him. On his<br />

return to Auburn, he decided to keep<br />

the mechanical engineering major and<br />

pick up a minor in finance. “It was either<br />

I stick with something that I liked, and<br />

yes, I’d probably be happy there, or do I<br />

risk it for something an Auburn kid hasn’t<br />

done in the past several years? And I’m<br />

engineering. I’m not the typical finance<br />

kid. And I have no idea if I even have a shot<br />

against these Penn and Harvard kids, but I<br />

really want to do this.”<br />

The story of Carr’s transition to a radically<br />

new career can’t be told without telling<br />

a story of his involvement on campus,<br />

which began with being elected president<br />

of his fraternity, Phi Gamma Delta, his<br />

sophomore year. “I grew up a lot during<br />

that and made a lot of mistakes, but I think<br />

JORDAN<br />

CARR<br />

that’s what you learn from,” Carr said with<br />

a chuckle. Carr’s long list of involvements<br />

throughout his time at Auburn also<br />

included serving as a treasurer for IFC,<br />

a director of ODK, member of SGA<br />

Elections Board and member of his<br />

fraternity’s judicial board.<br />

“That’s when I started with the coffee,”<br />

Carr said pointing to his large iced<br />

Americano.<br />

However, one of his prouder experiences<br />

at Auburn has been getting involved with<br />

Financial Management Association, a<br />

growing student organization meant to<br />

optimize finance students’ pursuit of<br />

their career. <strong>FMA</strong> is where Carr had the<br />

realization that finance was the career<br />

that he really wanted to pursue. He found<br />

mentors in <strong>FMA</strong>, which Carr said was key<br />

for him finding his feet.<br />

This past year, he decided to give back<br />

to the organization that had given him<br />

so much, and he was elected president of<br />

<strong>FMA</strong>. He was ecstatic about being able<br />

to help form an organization that was<br />

still in its infancy. “That made it really<br />

fun — getting to apply what I feel like<br />

I’ve learned from other things and now<br />

getting to make such a substantial change,<br />

hopefully, on the organization,” Carr said.<br />

Through passion and hard work and with<br />

the aid of peers and advisors, Carr helped<br />

bring the organization to new heights,<br />

which recently won him the award for<br />

Male Student Leader of the Year at the<br />

<strong>2018</strong> Involvement Awards.<br />

“At some universities, it seems like it’s a<br />

negative thing to be involved, but for me,<br />

I wouldn’t have had the entire student<br />

experience if I didn’t get involved, and I<br />

think involvement at Auburn has radically<br />

changed my experience at Auburn, but<br />

also what I want to do for the next four<br />

years of my life and has taught me more<br />

than the classroom,” Carr said.<br />

34 <strong>FMA</strong> <strong>2018</strong> MAGAZINE


Financial Management<br />

Association members<br />

start out with an<br />

average salary of 93K -<br />

The Auburn Plainsman<br />

AWARDS & SCHOLARSHIPS<br />

The following is an excerpt from the<br />

full article that appeared in the Auburn<br />

Plainsman on 4/20/18<br />

Through providing training and business<br />

connections to students, Auburn<br />

University’s Financial Management<br />

Association is in its fourth year of giving<br />

students a head start in their career.<br />

This year, 18 <strong>FMA</strong> members will graduate<br />

from Auburn, and their average starting<br />

salary is almost $94,000. The average<br />

starting salary for Auburn business<br />

graduates is around $55,000.<br />

“If you think about the difference in<br />

the top students and where the average<br />

finance student is,” Carr said. “I believe<br />

that a large portion of that nearly $40,000<br />

difference is from value that <strong>FMA</strong> added.”<br />

Tracy Richard, a lecturer for the school of<br />

business and <strong>FMA</strong> Director, talks highly<br />

of the program: “We had a lot of talented<br />

students that were highly interested in<br />

careers in finance, but we didn’t have<br />

a solid vehicle for getting them there,”<br />

Richard said. “I get a call at least once a<br />

week from an Auburn alumnus who wants<br />

to turn around and help finance students<br />

successfully navigate a career.”<br />

Carr said that <strong>FMA</strong> focuses on recruiting<br />

freshmen and sophomore students to<br />

have sufficient time to prepare them for<br />

graduation. “They’re interested in finance,<br />

and they’re willing to put in the work to<br />

get to next level – those are the two big<br />

things that we look for in applicants,”<br />

Carr said. “They’re clearly interested in<br />

the topic, they want to put in work to be<br />

successful and be competitive in these<br />

career paths, and also they have the<br />

academics to back that up”<br />

“The resources that we offer includes<br />

training - we bring a company down from<br />

New York twice a year to do Excel training<br />

for our students, we have a mentorship<br />

program, we do case competitions, we<br />

have an advanced modeling class, we<br />

host seminars for the HCOB and arrange<br />

corporate visits for our members” Carr<br />

said. “There’s a lot of stuff that we do<br />

beyond the classroom.”<br />

“With <strong>FMA</strong> you really receive support in<br />

two ways, there’s the industry exposure<br />

where <strong>FMA</strong> helps each student figure out<br />

what area of finance they want to pursue,”<br />

Carr said. “<strong>FMA</strong> then provides senior<br />

mentors and online training courses and<br />

resources that equip members for an<br />

internship and ultimately a full-time job.”<br />

“I joined <strong>FMA</strong> as an energetic freshman<br />

who had some time to devote toward<br />

something, but I didn’t know what,” said<br />

Jimmy Brewster, sophomore in finance.<br />

Brewster is interning in NYC for the<br />

spring semester, and he has already<br />

secured another internship in NYC for this<br />

upcoming summer. “One of the biggest<br />

things that <strong>FMA</strong> has given me is they’re<br />

genuinely excited and interested in my<br />

career and my success,” Brewster said. “I<br />

think that’s one thing that is commonly<br />

overlooked - Tracy and Jordan and the<br />

members of this organization care so<br />

much about each other’s success.”<br />

<strong>FMA</strong> <strong>2018</strong> MAGAZINE 35


AWARDS & SCHOLARSHIPS<br />

Harbert College<br />

graduation marshal<br />

‘personifies excellence’<br />

When instructors and fellow students are asked about<br />

Harbert College of Business senior Zach Spencer, they<br />

often quickly point out the finance student’s initiative.<br />

“He personifies excellence, hard work, heart and<br />

determination,” said Tracy Richard, an instructor<br />

within Harbert College’s Finance Department<br />

and director of Auburn’s Financial Management<br />

Association (<strong>FMA</strong>) student honor society. “Never<br />

have I seen a student combine all of these qualities<br />

so masterfully.”<br />

Not only was Spencer instrumental in transitioning<br />

the Auburn Student Investment Fund from virtual<br />

to real money, but he served on the SGA Academic<br />

Grievance Committee, interned at SunTrust Robinson<br />

Humphrey and later served as a White House intern<br />

within the Office of American Innovation.<br />

It’s no wonder that Spencer, who will soon become an<br />

investment banking analyst at Wells Fargo Securities,<br />

was selected as this spring’s Harbert College<br />

graduation marshal.<br />

ZACH<br />

SPENCER<br />

WRITTEN BY HCOB PUBLISHER,<br />

JOSEPH MCADORY<br />

Spencer offered much credit to his involvement in<br />

the <strong>FMA</strong>. “I was the only freshman in the inaugural<br />

class and wasn’t sure what area of finance I wanted<br />

to pursue or how to begin preparing for my future,”<br />

he said. “<strong>FMA</strong> was instrumental in all aspects of my<br />

growth and career preparation, from creating an<br />

impactful cover letter to preparing for investment<br />

banking interviews. Membership also provided<br />

talented peer mentors and opportunities to compete<br />

in case competitions.<br />

“Zach is a driving force not only for the Financial<br />

Management Association, but also for the entire<br />

Harbert College of Business. He was the only<br />

freshman selected to this prestigious group in its<br />

inaugural year, and he continues to inspire and<br />

prepare students pursuing careers in finance,”<br />

said Richard<br />

36 <strong>FMA</strong> <strong>2018</strong> MAGAZINE


AWARDS & SCHOLARSHIPS<br />

BAILEY<br />

SULLIVAN<br />

Incoming <strong>FMA</strong> president Bailey Sullivan<br />

awarded with Samford Scholarship<br />

WRITTEN BY HCOB PUBLISHER,<br />

JOSEPH MCADORY<br />

Bailey Sullivan’s grandfather sold bonds<br />

on the New York Stock Exchange and her<br />

father is a financial advisor at Morgan<br />

Stanley. It makes sense that Sullivan,<br />

a rising senior from Tampa, Fla., and<br />

incoming president of Harbert College’s<br />

Financial Management Association (<strong>FMA</strong>),<br />

plans to follow in her family’s footsteps<br />

and pursue a career in investment banking.<br />

Sullivan, who will intern for a secondconsecutive<br />

summer at Wells Fargo<br />

Securities in New York City, credited her<br />

experience with the <strong>FMA</strong> for “challenging<br />

me to reach my full potential as a<br />

young professional.”<br />

“Through my relationship with the<br />

organization and its members, I have<br />

learned the importance of hard work, in<br />

addition to the skills necessary for success<br />

in my future career,” she said.<br />

Sullivan has served as an SGA at-large<br />

senator, vice president of operations for<br />

the War Eagle Girls and Plainsmen, and<br />

is currently <strong>FMA</strong>’s Director of External<br />

Engagement. As a result of her dedication<br />

to leadership and service, she was presented<br />

with the prestigious W. James Samford, Jr.,<br />

Memorial Scholarship in February.<br />

“When I initially applied for this<br />

scholarship, I was struck by the legacy that<br />

Mr. Samford left behind,” said Sullivan,<br />

who is pursuing a degree in industrial<br />

and systems engineering with a minor in<br />

finance. “He was an honorable Auburn<br />

man who made a lasting impact upon this<br />

university through his hard work, vision<br />

and determination.”<br />

Sullivan, who will participate in the<br />

Auburn Abroad program in China and<br />

a half-marathon in San Diego over the<br />

summer, was a member of <strong>FMA</strong>’s awardwinning<br />

team at the Duff & Phelps<br />

YOUniversity Deal Challenge, looks<br />

forward to her upcoming role as<br />

<strong>FMA</strong> president.<br />

“This organization has challenged me as a<br />

leader, student, and individual, and I look<br />

forward to continuing its growth,” she said.<br />

<strong>FMA</strong> <strong>2018</strong> MAGAZINE 37


<strong>FMA</strong> NYC TRIP<br />

38 <strong>FMA</strong> <strong>2018</strong> MAGAZINE


For the second year in a row, <strong>FMA</strong> sent student members to<br />

New York City for two full days of learning, networking and<br />

immersion in the financial services industry.<br />

Building on last year’s trip, the group got an even closer look<br />

at the intricacies of the New York Stock Exchange. Danny<br />

Cannon, Managing Director at Oberon Securities met our<br />

students on the exchange floor last year and offered to host<br />

this year’s group. With more than 30 years of experience<br />

across multiple sectors, Danny made sure that the students<br />

got a good look at the various players on the floor. “The<br />

stock exchange visit was an eye-opening experience,” said<br />

A.J. Stanley, sophomore. “We were able to talk with market<br />

makers and traders alike. Being on the floor and talking<br />

to professionals in the field helped to make sense of the<br />

transactional process that’s presented in the classroom.”<br />

The group even got to visit with Delta Air Lines’ Designated<br />

Market Maker, John McNierney.<br />

In addition to visiting the exchange, <strong>FMA</strong> students were<br />

hosted by executive teams from Goldman Sachs, MUFG<br />

and JP Morgan. One of the things that made the visit so<br />

meaningful was that current members and alumni alike took<br />

a vested interest in the programming. Stan Harris and Kelly<br />

Cash, both Auburn alumni, arranged for the students to hear<br />

<strong>FMA</strong> members with NYSE Host, Daniel Cannon<br />

<strong>FMA</strong> <strong>2018</strong> MAGAZINE 39


from several executives across different<br />

groups at Goldman Sachs.<br />

“We’re making moves - thoughtfully,”<br />

said <strong>FMA</strong> senior Timothy Strader. “As<br />

our students get out and accept positions<br />

at firms where we don’t have strong<br />

placement history, it’s critical to reach<br />

back and widen the door of opportunity<br />

for the next in line.” Strader and Kathleen<br />

Leavitt, both <strong>FMA</strong> graduating seniors,<br />

arranged info sessions and executive<br />

presentations with their soon-to-be full<br />

time employers, JP Morgan and MUFG.<br />

The visit to JP Morgan included an<br />

invitation to sit in on the morning market<br />

debrief - where JP Morgan executives<br />

across the nation digitally present market<br />

updates, strategy and best practices to<br />

employees across the globe.<br />

“The trip was a whirlwind,” said Leavitt.<br />

“We missed the first day of meetings due<br />

to a bad winter storm - leaving Auburn at<br />

2 pm on a Tuesday and finally arriving in<br />

New York at 1 am Thursday. We packed<br />

a lot into the 36 hours we were there!”<br />

MUFG hosted the Auburn students for<br />

an informational lunch that included<br />

presentations on investment grade credit<br />

sales, debt capital markets and US equity<br />

sales and trading.<br />

The highlight for many was the Auburn<br />

alumni event, which was coordinated to<br />

line up with the <strong>FMA</strong> student visit. It was<br />

here that students got to connect with<br />

Auburn alumni and former <strong>FMA</strong> members,<br />

now working full time in New York City.<br />

Seven <strong>FMA</strong> alums made it to the social,<br />

including Rushton Scott (<strong>FMA</strong> ‘17), who<br />

works in Atlanta but happened to be in<br />

New York with STRH that week. “It was<br />

pretty impactful to look around the room<br />

and see seven <strong>FMA</strong> alums - knowing that<br />

number will continue to grow, along with<br />

the <strong>FMA</strong> program. It makes you feel good<br />

about what we’ve done and where we’re<br />

going.” <strong>FMA</strong> will add seven additional<br />

members to the NYC population this<br />

summer, between full time starts,<br />

internships and summer training.<br />

40 <strong>FMA</strong> <strong>2018</strong> MAGAZINE


The <strong>FMA</strong>-NYC alumni base continues to grow.<br />

<strong>FMA</strong> <strong>2018</strong> MAGAZINE 41


Reaching New Heights<br />

WHERE<br />

ARE WE<br />

GOING<br />

NOW?<br />

42 <strong>FMA</strong> <strong>2018</strong> MAGAZINE


AGC Partners - Boston<br />

Thomas Collier - intern<br />

American Airlines - Dallas<br />

Matt Swedenburg - intern<br />

Matthew Dowd - intern<br />

Angel Oak Capital - Atlanta<br />

Mitwa Patel - intern<br />

Ethan Reback - intern<br />

Arlington Wealth - Birmingham<br />

Daniel Robinson<br />

Ashford Advisors - Atlanta<br />

Abby Gipson - intern<br />

Bank of America Merrill Lynch -<br />

Houston<br />

Lauren Spiwak - intern<br />

BASF – Raleigh<br />

Dustin Watts<br />

BBVA - Birmingham<br />

Sam Schuessler<br />

BB&T – Winston-Salem<br />

Braden Pichel<br />

Cobbs Allen - Birmingham<br />

Josh Horton<br />

Cornerstone Investment Mgmt.<br />

David Thomas – intern, Birmingham<br />

Credit Suisse - Houston<br />

Jimmy Brewster - intern 2019<br />

Crestmark – Boynton Beach<br />

Brittany Clark - intern<br />

Delta Airlines - Atlanta<br />

Emily Kravec - intern<br />

Matt Hultstrand - intern<br />

Duff & Phelps - Atlanta<br />

Mark Bergmeister<br />

ExxonMobil - Houston<br />

Kate Bagley - intern<br />

Eddie Neyman - intern<br />

Fenwick Brands - Birmingham<br />

Cole Crumrine - intern<br />

Founders - Birmingham<br />

Nathan Stein- intern<br />

Girls Who Invest<br />

Jenny Herrell - intern<br />

JP Morgan<br />

Timothy Strader - Los Angeles<br />

Katie Gründer - Boston<br />

Tyler Fraebel - Dallas<br />

LP Partners - Dallas<br />

Jack Albert - intern<br />

McKinley & Associates<br />

Russell Noletto - intern<br />

Moelis & Co. - NYC<br />

Jordan Carr - M&A<br />

MUFG Securities - NYC<br />

Kathleen Leavitt - S&T<br />

New Capital - Birmingham<br />

Price Delk - intern<br />

Northwestern Mutual – Jacksonville<br />

Carson King - intern<br />

Office of Alumni Affairs - Auburn<br />

Cameron Rice - intern<br />

Piper Jaffray - Charlotte<br />

Nick Pope - intern<br />

Regions<br />

David Bucko - Charlotte<br />

John Tapp - Atlanta<br />

William Cole - Atlanta<br />

Joseph McCormick - intern<br />

AJ Stanley - intern<br />

Annie Gigliotti - DPO, Orlando<br />

Brady Johnson - FDP, intern<br />

Sabre - Southlake, TX<br />

Toby Snook - intern<br />

Southwest Airlines - Dallas<br />

Matthew Dowd - intern<br />

SunTrust Robinson Humphrey -<br />

Atlanta<br />

Madison Langman<br />

Haley McDonnell - intern<br />

Ty Lamar - intern<br />

Stephens Investment Bank<br />

Judson Smith - Dallas<br />

Sysco - Atlanta<br />

Matthew Campbell - intern<br />

University of Chicago - Masters<br />

Ben Morgan<br />

Unum Group - Atlanta<br />

Trent Baggerly<br />

Valence Group - NYC<br />

Jimmy Brewster - intern<br />

Victoria’s Secret - Columbus<br />

Abby Jardine - intern<br />

Wealth Strategies, LLC<br />

Michael Byron - intern<br />

Wells Fargo Securities<br />

Bailey Sullivan - intern NYC<br />

Ari Alexander - intern NYC<br />

Zach Spencer - Charlotte<br />

Yenni Capital - NYC<br />

Jimmy Brewster - intern spring<br />

<strong>FMA</strong> <strong>2018</strong> MAGAZINE 43


SUPPORTER SPOTLIGHT<br />

Joseph McAdory<br />

STAN LEWIS<br />

This year, Auburn <strong>FMA</strong> nominated<br />

Stan Lewis (Auburn ’05 graduate)<br />

for the Auburn University Young<br />

Alumni Achievement Award. The<br />

following article was written as<br />

part of that nomination. We are<br />

truly grateful for Stan’s support,<br />

mentorship and involvement.<br />

Stan Lewis believes in giving back … to his talented employees<br />

and his alma mater’s top talent. Not only does the chief of staff<br />

and CFO for Goldman Sachs Real Estate Investment Banking<br />

help motivate and retain investment bankers, but he also serves<br />

as a key professional source for Auburn Financial Management<br />

Association students.<br />

“It’s making sure that students can know that they can call me and<br />

a number of other people here in New York or other financial hubs<br />

and ask, ‘Hey, I’m looking into this. What do you think?’ or, ‘What<br />

do I need to know about investment banking or trading?’” said<br />

the 2005 Harbert College graduate. “A lot of students don’t have<br />

access to this information without having access to somebody<br />

who’s been through it.”<br />

Lewis started at Goldman Sachs in New York City in 2008, and<br />

served in executive capacities with Goldman in Hong Kong and<br />

London before returning to New York last year.<br />

“It would be naïve for anybody to think that they have made it on<br />

their own,” Lewis said. “It would be incredibly selfish & shortsighted<br />

not to help other people, as well. Your career is not 100<br />

percent yours. You need people helping you and I’ve had plenty of<br />

people along the way, whether it was conversation or writing an<br />

email to help get me where I am. I enjoy doing that for others.”<br />

Lewis is particularly impressed with Auburn’s award-winning<br />

<strong>FMA</strong> Honor Society and the recent finance graduates coming out<br />

of the program.<br />

“I think that the caliber of people that I have met through<br />

Auburn’s finance program … I would put them up against<br />

anybody,” he said. “They have some incredibly bright, dedicated,<br />

humble, and inquisitive young people. It will be very exciting to<br />

see where they are five to ten years from now.<br />

“When I was at Auburn, getting to New York as a graduate was<br />

difficult, if not impossible. But what <strong>FMA</strong> and the Harbert College<br />

of Business has done there is incredible. They have rallied the<br />

Auburn alumni family’s support and done so much, changing<br />

the mindset to ‘You can make it to New York. You can work for<br />

Goldman Sachs. You can work at JP Morgan, or equivalent.’”<br />

Part of Lewis’ everyday challenge at Goldman Sachs is retaining<br />

top-level talent. He said a culture of new undergraduates in the<br />

field have the mindset to transfer “after two years and move on to<br />

something else.”<br />

“We’re saying, ‘Look, this is a long-term career for our best and<br />

our brightest, and we want to make sure that we keep the people<br />

that fit that bill.”<br />

Lewis said part of his job is helping employees figure out for<br />

themselves, and the company, what their goals are, and what can<br />

be done to help facilitate these goals.<br />

“A lot of my time is focusing on how I maximize good will for<br />

our corporation and our clients by giving people what they are<br />

looking for out of their careers and minimizing things that they<br />

are looking to avoid, where possible” he added.<br />

44 <strong>FMA</strong> <strong>2018</strong> MAGAZINE


ALUMNI<br />

BY THE NUMBERS<br />

7 Number of case<br />

competitions that members<br />

participated in this year<br />

Alumni<br />

Updates<br />

15 States where <strong>FMA</strong> grades<br />

are now working full time<br />

(plus Seamus in Dublin!)<br />

93,600 Average starting<br />

compensation for <strong>2018</strong> <strong>FMA</strong><br />

grads<br />

101 Applications to <strong>FMA</strong> this<br />

academic year<br />

23 Number of new members<br />

accepted<br />

14 Sophomores with<br />

internships<br />

<strong>FMA</strong> hosted its first<br />

regional alumni event in<br />

Atlanta this summer.<br />

<strong>FMA</strong> alums enjoy a tailgate<br />

16 Student diversity<br />

leadership programs attended<br />

35 Finance/career related<br />

books available for <strong>FMA</strong><br />

members to read & return in<br />

the <strong>FMA</strong> library<br />

Garrett Clemons ‘15 joined<br />

PriceWaterhouseCoopers, LLC<br />

as a Senior Manufacturing IT<br />

Associate in Birmingham. Garrett<br />

has grown to be one of the<br />

leading Subject Matter Experts on<br />

Smart Manufacturing and Digital<br />

Manufacturing.<br />

697 Cumulative student<br />

hours spent on Wall Street Prep<br />

<strong>FMA</strong> <strong>2018</strong> MAGAZINE 45


ALUMNI<br />

Alumni<br />

Blake Martin ’15 married<br />

Kelsey Curet on 6/30/18<br />

Updates cont.<br />

Cory Brinkman ’17 arranged for<br />

<strong>FMA</strong> to visit with Hoover High’s<br />

Finance Academy this spring<br />

Gehrig Nelson ’15 married Melanie Harris on 12/9/17<br />

Kaitlyn O’Connor<br />

’15 is now attending<br />

Vanderbilt’s Owen<br />

Graduate School of<br />

Management<br />

Krista Alexon ’17<br />

(previously with Wells<br />

Fargo) joined Silicon<br />

Valley Bank in Atlanta<br />

as an associate in their<br />

Credit Solutions Group<br />

Paul Aukstolis ’15 got his<br />

masters at Georgia Tech<br />

and is now with Prudential<br />

Global Investment<br />

Management in Atlanta<br />

Sagar Leva ’16<br />

is attending<br />

Northwestern<br />

Pritzker School<br />

of Law<br />

James Kay ’16 (previously with<br />

Stephens Inc.) is an Associate<br />

at Insight Equity in Dallas.<br />

Insight Equity makes control<br />

investments in strategically<br />

viable, middle market, assetintensive<br />

companies across a<br />

wide range of industries, and<br />

manages approximately<br />

$1.5 Billion<br />

46 <strong>FMA</strong> <strong>2018</strong> MAGAZINE


Reaching New Heights—Support<br />

We want<br />

to thank<br />

you.<br />

STEWARDSHIP<br />

Alumni Sponsors<br />

We raised $3000 in the <strong>2017</strong>-<strong>2018</strong><br />

academic year and used the funds to<br />

help offset some of the Training the<br />

Street expenses for our members.<br />

Your donations helped to make these<br />

training sessions more affordable for<br />

our students. This training helps to<br />

set our members apart from other<br />

applicants in the field.<br />

Rachel Abel ‘15<br />

Neil Kinnebrew ‘15<br />

Peter Lund ‘15<br />

Blake Martin ‘15<br />

Kaitlyn O’Connor ‘15<br />

Caroline Clothiaux ‘16<br />

Austin Howard ‘16<br />

Thank you for showing your commitment<br />

to Auburn <strong>FMA</strong>. The additional training,<br />

programming and opportunities afforded our<br />

student members could not be done without our<br />

amazing alumni. We are especially grateful to<br />

those alums that not only gave financially, but also<br />

reached out to help our members with mentoring<br />

and recruitment. Our graduates in the field have<br />

been critically instrumental in the growth and<br />

recruitment of our current members.<br />

<strong>FMA</strong> Executive Sponsors<br />

We would like to thank our executive donors, Chris Baker, John Bright, Betsy<br />

Bagley and John Hornsby, who have invested not only monetarily, but also<br />

of their time. These individuals believe in our mission to support motivated<br />

students with the tools that they need to reach their full potential.<br />

Hudson Joyner ‘16<br />

James Kay ‘16<br />

Sagar Leva ‘16<br />

Benjamin McCooey ‘16<br />

Shane Mulqueen ‘16<br />

David Alderman ‘17<br />

Krista Alexon ‘17<br />

Cory Brinkman ‘17<br />

Andrew May ‘17<br />

Jason McKinley ‘17<br />

Kelly Morris ‘17<br />

Drake Pooley ‘17<br />

Daniel Robinson ‘17<br />

Rushton Scott ‘17<br />

Darby Steinberger ‘17<br />

Corbin Tips ‘17<br />

Haley Walraven ‘17<br />

<strong>FMA</strong> <strong>2018</strong> MAGAZINE 47


48 <strong>FMA</strong> <strong>2018</strong> MAGAZINE

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