May 2023 Student Simulation Competition - Contest Overview

1st
KSA Simio Challengers
KSA Simio Challengers Project Photo
KSA Simio Challengers Team Photo
2nd
G-Stark
G-Stark Project Photo
G-Stark Team Photo
3rd
Simoleons
Simoleons Project Photo
Simoleons Team Photo
4th
MasterRoss
MasterRoss Project Photo
MasterRoss Team Photo

Overview of Contest:

There are two ways to enter the Simio Student Case Competition. You can either enter directly or through class participation. In the May 2023 contest, we had 125 teams enter for a total of 360 students participating.

We had representation from the following 17 countries:

  • Chile
  • Colombia
  • Costa Rica
  • El Salvador
  • Guatemala
  • Hong Kong SAR
  • India
  • Jordan
  • Mexico
  • Portugal
  • Saudi Arabia
  • South Africa
  • Sri Lanka
  • Thailand
  • Turkey
  • United Kingdom
  • United States of America

The 360 students came from these 34 schools:

  • Altinbas University
  • Auburn University
  • Binghamton University
  • Buena VIsta University
  • Chulalongkorn University
  • Georgia Institute of Technology
  • Instituto Tecnologico Autonomo de Mexico (ITAM)
  • Jordan University of Science and Technology
  • King Abdulaziz University
  • Northeastern University
  • Purdue University
  • Rochester Institute of Technology
  • Savitribai Phule University
  • Southern Methodist University
  • State University of New York at Bingham
  • Ohio State University
  • The University of Hong Kong

  • Universidad Andres Bello
  • Universidad de San Carlos de Guatemala
  • Universidad de Santiago de Chile
  • Universidad EIA
  • Universidad Fidelitas
  • Universidad Panamericana
  • Universidade de Lisboa
  • University of Central Florida
  • University of Dayton
  • University of El Salvador
  • University of Exeter
  • University of Florida
  • University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign
  • University of Peradeniya
  • University of Southampton
  • University of the Witwatersrand
  • University of Vermont

Summary of the Problem:

BankOfSimio is a global custodian bank that offers currency exchanges for their clients. For example, a client may want to purchase equity in a British company that conducts their business in British Pound Sterlings (GBP), but the client wants to spend United States Dollars (USD). BankOfSimio will take the USD and give out GBP so that client can then purchase the desired equity. BankOfSimio will then take a small percentage on each exchange that it provides. Clients expect their exchanges to happen in a timely manner so that their transactions are not delayed. Therefore, BankOfSimio must hold cash on hand for each type of currency that it will exchange.

If at the end of the day, BankOfSimio has a net increase in one type of currency and a decrease in another, BankOfSimio will conduct a settlement with CLS (Continuous Linked Settlement Bank International). For a small percentage fee, CLS will take the excess currency that BankOfSimio has and return the equivalent amount in the currency they are lacking. This settlement confines the risk that BankOfSimio has to a single day, which is known as intra-day liquidity risk. If BankOfSimio needs a specific type of currency to support their transactions before the end of the day, they can conduct a midday swap with one of their counterparties. This is the same service that CLS provides but is more expensive and causes a delay in the exchange, which can lead to dissatisfied clients.

As a major bank in global finances, BankOfSimio is legally obligated to manage risk. If they are unable to support client transactions for even a short length of time, it can cause a disruption in the financial market. Accordingly, the government requires that BankOfSimio prove that they have sufficient funds on hand to avoid lengthy delays across a variety of stress tests. Choosing the amount of each type of currency to keep on hand is a difficult problem. Students will be asked to simulate system activity (e.g., cash flows from transactions, swaps, and settlements) to find the profit maximizing quantities subject to acceptable risk. Your team will deliver a video presentation and executive summary to BankOfSimio management with your findings and proposals.

Judging Criteria:

The judging was based on:

  • Quality/clarity of the presentation
  • Analysis/use of input data
  • Modeling detail/approach
  • Model internal documentation
  • Verification and Validation
  • Quality of animation
  • Experimentation/exploration of alternatives
  • Analysis of results
  • Quality of the recommendations
  • Overall project quality and Executive Summary

For more detail, see the Contest Judging Criteria.

Judging Panel:

Academic and Commercial:

  • Sean Carr, Industrial Engineer, HDR
  • Sven Guzman, Dean of Business Engineering, Decano de Ingeniería de Negocios
  • Linda Pichardo, Advisor/Teacher of Engineering, Universidad Anáhuac
  • Kumar Punugu, Senior Data Scientist (Operations Research), Eastman Chemical

  • Soemon Takakuwa, Simulation REsearch, Nagoya University
  • Chris Tonn, Simulatin and Data Management Engineer, Spirit AeroSystems
  • Peter Vanberkel, Professor & Associate Dean of Research, Dalhousie University
  • Ivan G. Vilaboa, Professor Adjuncto, Sist Complejos y Energía

Simio LLC:

  • Chiara Bondi, Solutions Engineer, Simio
  • Katy Ifkovits, Product Engineer, Simio
  • Drew Rose, Solutions Engineer, Simio
  • Dave Sturrock, Acadmeic Program Director, Simio

May 2023 Contest Winners

First Place

KSA Simio Challengers
King Abdulaziz Universitsy

Team Introduction Project Video

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Second Place

G-Stark
University of El Salvador

Team Introduction Project Video

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Third Place

Simoleons
Binghamton University

Team Introduction Project Video

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Fourth Place

MasterRoss
Auburn University

Team Introduction Project Video

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Top teams including Honorable Mentions & Semi-Finalists

The top 8 teams out of 125 

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Contest Overview

Contest Overview, Summary of Problem, Judging Criteria and Judges

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