Capital benefactor
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Graduate students at UC Irvine will soon have the opportunity to hit
it big on the stock market with investment guru Chuck Martin’s money.
Martin, who founded several venture capital and investment firms
before retiring three years ago, is putting up $1.5 million for
graduate students who come up with good proposals.
Five teams of four or five MBA students will get $300,000 from
Martin to execute their plans -- if they sound inviting enough to
Martin.
The UCI trustee’s offer has garnered overwhelming response from
business students, and Martin said he’s looking forward to hearing
some good, big ideas from young minds.
The Daily Pilot caught up with Martin to hear his thoughts on the
contest, the stock market and Arnold Schwarzenegger, among other
things.
Where did you grow up, and how would you describe your childhood?
I grew up in a small town in the Midwest (Willard, Ohio). My mom
and dad were hard-working folks with good values, but very poor.
What sparked your interest in the stock market, and how old were
you when you started paying close attention to it?
I became interested in the stock market at a very young age. I did
not have any money, so I would study companies and play the market
with paper money as a young teenage boy. I enjoyed the game of it. It
was like playing Monopoly, only with company stocks.
Describe your most exciting trade.
I am not into trading, I am an investor. While you may not see the
difference, a trader buys and sells on short timeframes. He or she is
seldom interested in the fundamentals of the business. I like to find
very good businesses that can be bought [through the company’s stock]
at a reasonable valuation and hold them for appreciation in value as
the company continues to succeed.
How long have you considered putting on this contest with UC
Irvine students?
I have been putting this contest together for UCI MBA students
over about the last three months. It has just now been announced and
there is a flood of interest among the students. The orientation
session has been scheduled for Feb. 28 and student investment
proposals are due by April 9.
Do you see similarities between college business students now and
students in your college years?
When I went to college, the best and brightest went into
engineering or medicine. Only the weaker students [intellectually]
went into the business school. If you flunked out of engineering, you
would transfer into the business school. That’s all very different
now. Young men and women are very interested in business and it
attracts a lot of talented young people.
What do you think about the quote from an MBA student in the Jan.
16 Daily Pilot article about the contest that reads, “This is a
chance to prove what I learned and do it on someone else’s money.”
Does that sound like something you may have said if you were in his
position and someone else was in yours?
This program is a great opportunity for students to learn about
companies with some real money on the line. Mostly, students learn
from case studies and simulations in school. With real consequences
to their decisions, I believe the learning process will be enhanced
and be a practical supplement to what they learn in the classroom.
The only flaw that I see in the program is that the students are not
at-risk with their own money. That’s not real life! However, they do
have to sell their ideas to me and, if they do not do their homework
or if the quality of their thinking is poor, they will not get
funded.
What are you looking forward to most when the contest begins on
May 15?
I am very hopeful to see a lot of good, quality thinking by these
students and good ideas about growing businesses.
What do you expect to be the biggest roadblock?
Student participants are young and enthusiastic, but have little
experience or seasoning in investing. It will be a disappointment if
I don’t get at least five teams with fundable proposals.
Where do you see the market heading in this election year?
It will probably be a choppy market. Many of the fundamentals are
in place for our economy to show solid improvement. However, the
market question is what happens when the stimulus runs out next year
and interest rates move higher? Also, we live in a more dangerous
world where the risk of adverse events is high. Also, there is a very
good chance that Iraq is going to turn out to be a huge mess later
this year.
You retired three years ago, but this venture sounds like quite a
lot of work. Do you plan to continue finding work that you’re proud
of, even in retirement?
I may be retired, but I am very active. The development of our
Orange County community is of high interest to me. I serve as a
trustee of both UC Irvine and Chapman University and I am committed
to the advancement of both. My wife, Twyla, is very active in the
development initiatives for Chapman’s top-ranked school of film and
television and I support her in that. I serve on the Regent’s
Investment Committee for the University of California. It takes a
very big effort to manage my own investment program. Twyla and I are
very involved in the arts. I have a full plate and will never get
bored.
What do you see in college students these days that you’d like to
change?
The dot-com bust was the best thing that has happened for young
people. The late ‘90s were characterized by greed, impatience and the
view that you could make a quick buck and not have to work hard or do
something of significant value for business or society. That is dead
wrong, and today’s students are getting back to reality. We have a
great new generation coming along and I am enthusiastic about the
promise that they bring to our society.
If you had the opportunity to be 22 again, what would you do
differently?
I grew up in a life of hardship, but I earned my way in life. It’s
easier to achieve coming from that background than from one of
privilege. I would not change a thing.
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