High school students around the world are increasingly interested in the language of business and finance. Stocks, ETFs, portfolio strategy—these aren’t just nerdy topics in college anymore. They’re the stuff of competitions, classrooms, clubs, and real conversations about economics and the global market. One of the standout opportunities in this landscape is the Wharton Global High School Investment Competition—a robust, free investment challenge designed for students in grades 9–12.
Here’s what makes this competition worth knowing, especially if you’re curious about finance, want to build real-world skills, or are hunting for something that looks great on a résumé.
What It Is
- Organized by the Wharton Global Youth Program, this is a free competition. No entry fee. Wharton Global Youth Program
- Teams of 4–6 students are advised by a teacher. Wharton Global Youth Program
- Participants use a simulated stock market environment called WInS (Wharton Investment Simulator). Teams begin with $500,000 in virtual cash and use it to build a portfolio of stocks and ETFs over about 10 weeks. Wharton Global Youth Program
- The competition isn’t just about who gets the highest return—what really counts are strategy, analysis, teamwork, risk management, and how well you present and justify your decisions.
What Students Learn
Beyond competing, this is a learning lab. Participants gain experience in:
- Investment strategy development: Teams assess where to put their money, choosing among stocks, ETFs, sectors, considering risk vs. return. Wharton Global Youth Program
- Industry & company analysis: You can’t just pick hot names—you’ll look at performance, fundamentals, market conditions. Wharton Global Youth Program
- Risk, diversification and portfolio management: A big part of investing is not putting all your eggs in one basket. Wharton Global Youth Program
- Teamwork & communication: With multiple students and a teacher advisor, this is about working together; also the final reports and presentations matter. Wharton Global Youth Program
- Public speaking / presentation skills: The Semifinals and Global Finale involve presenting to judges. Clarity matters. Wharton Global Youth Program
Why It’s Attractive & Valuable
- Global competition: You’re not just comparing yourself to classmates—you’re going up against students worldwide. Wharton Global Youth Program
- Credentials: Having this on a college or scholarship application signals initiative, quantitative thinking, and real business skills. Wharton Global Youth Program
- Low risk, high learning: Because it’s simulated, you can experiment without real financial consequences. Mistakes become lessons.
- It’s free: There’s no cost barrier, which makes it accessible.
What It Takes to Excel
Here are some tips if you or your team decide to participate:
- Start early with research—companies, sectors, global economic issues, etc. The more informed your strategy, the better.
- Balance risk and reward—don’t chase only high growth stocks; diversification helps.
- Stay active—monitor the portfolio, be ready to adjust based on market shifts.
- Work well with your advisor and teammates—sharing insights, critiquing ideas respectfully, dividing responsibilities.
- Practice articulating your strategy—why did you choose X over Y, why that sector, etc., because that’s what you’ll need to defend in reports and presentations.