The college students who dominated trading competitions around North America this school year aren’t finance majors at Harvard, the University of Pennsylvania or the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

They’re students at Baruch College.

Students in the Baruch Traders Club crushed rivals at several competitions this year, claiming first, second and third place at MIT’s ninth annual trading face-off in the fall—an unprecedented feat—and beating Columbia University and Carnegie Mellon to rank first at the Rotman International Trading Competition in February.

At a typical competition, undergraduate students are given a limited amount of time to maximize profits in trading simulations that might focus on stocks, commodities, volatility instruments or other areas of the markets.

Most students in the Baruch Traders Club join without having ever held an internship in the financial-services industry. Baruch, a public college in the City University of New York system, isn’t usually thought of as a feeder school for Wall Street jobs: The University of Pennsylvania, Harvard and Columbia sent the most graduates into asset management, data provider eVestment found in a 2015 study.