1/2 reminds me that sometimes I need to dream bigger. Honestly still debating the tradeoffs.
- other people's money means more capital and sophistication and can get paid for "execution premium"; but heavy stress, and they can outright ban you from cool strats you dig
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A jr analyst on an institutional desk will learn in six months what would take you three years of messing around with data on your own. Working on a desk for five years is the perfect preparation for PA trading, if you are still interested in doing that.
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Great point. experience bit of that even learning from just 1 person. how's work:life balance for that? optimist in me hopes, it can be self taught. maybe it's naive. I also recognize, for better or for worse, I prefer running own thing vs clocking in for someone else
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I lived at the office for about 3 years. 1st yr my role was booking trades, hedging fx risk and doing PnL calcs. Wkends were for creating strats which I'd pitch once a week. After that it's a mix of creating strats, maintenance, etc. Once you get your own book it's even busier.
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Replying to @saanglee @M1tchRosenthal and
Looking back, I can't believe how stupid many of my initial pitches were. Same goes for interns/first years who worked for me. If you're working with people who know what they're doing, they'll immediately tell you (or yell at you) why your idea won't work. That's pretty crucial
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This is pretty important. You can learn on Twitter but on the whole people are quite nice and won’t necessarily tell you what you need to hear (which is sometimes “this is a really stupid idea, do something else”)
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Quote from old boss "next time you get an idea like that, look in the mirror and ask 'am I about to waste <boss>'s time with a dumb idea I havent thought through properly?' And if yes, why don't you go back to your desk and do the job I'm paying you to do?" Was very helpful
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Replying to @therobotjames @macrocephalopod and
could not agree more with all this. you learn the stuff by getting a job
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Replying to @bennpeifert @therobotjames and
Yup this was a mindblowing exchange for me (usually is haha) for sake of learning alone it seems like the way to go. I am nervous about how best to prepare
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Replying to @M1tchRosenthal @bennpeifert and
The best preparation for job interviews is to do a bunch of job interviews.
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Not always true because appetite for hiring comes and goes, and at some points in the past jobs were scarce and you couldn’t afford to do an interview “just for practice”. But right now everyone wants to hire and jobs are abundant, you can line a few up just to get experience.
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