Profile
Mr. Peng Wang, CFA, is an Associate at University of Virginia Investment Management Co. He joined the firm in November 2012.
Mr. Wang was previously employed as Quantitative Analyst by Georgetown University.
Mr. Wang received his undergraduate degree from Peking University and a graduate degree from Georgetown University.
Former positions of Peng Wang
| Companies | Position | End |
|---|---|---|
Georgetown University
Georgetown University Other Consumer ServicesConsumer Services Functions as a College/University | Corporate Officer/Principal | 2012-10-29 |
University of Virginia Investment Management Co.
University of Virginia Investment Management Co. Investment Trusts/Mutual FundsMiscellaneous University of Virginia Investment Management's employs leverage and derivative securities, both directly and within funds, only to the extent that the aggregate risk of the pool is not increased beyond that which would be allowed by the policy portfolio without using leverage or derivatives. The most direct form of leverage is borrowing but many other strategies, structures, funds, and derivative securities produce similar results and therefore imply leverage. | Portfolio Manager-Equities | - |
Training of Peng Wang
Experiences
Positions held
Active
Inactive
Listed companies
Private companies
Connections
1st degree connections
1st degree companies
Male
Female
Members of the board
Executives
Linked companies
| Private companies | 3 |
|---|---|
Peking University
Peking University Other Consumer ServicesConsumer Services Functions as a College/University | Consumer Services |
Georgetown University
Georgetown University Other Consumer ServicesConsumer Services Functions as a College/University | Consumer Services |
University of Virginia Investment Management Co.
University of Virginia Investment Management Co. Investment Trusts/Mutual FundsMiscellaneous University of Virginia Investment Management's employs leverage and derivative securities, both directly and within funds, only to the extent that the aggregate risk of the pool is not increased beyond that which would be allowed by the policy portfolio without using leverage or derivatives. The most direct form of leverage is borrowing but many other strategies, structures, funds, and derivative securities produce similar results and therefore imply leverage. | Miscellaneous |
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