Are financial programmers under paid?

Are financial programmers underpaid?

  • Yes, they sell themselves out too easily

    Votes: 73 40.6%
  • No, they are scum that are mostly lazy

    Votes: 39 21.7%
  • I am not sure

    Votes: 31 17.2%
  • I don't care

    Votes: 37 20.6%

  • Total voters
    180
Quote from rosy2:


The main thing is that programmers or tech people don't understand the business in the begining of their career and really think other people are doing something. That causes them to work for less than what they are worth.

I doubt they are worth more if they don't understand the business.
 
Quote from gkishot:

I doubt they are worth more if they don't understand the business.

In all seriousness, in modern automated trading, the execution performance is worth more than the strategy. The platform facilitates models, the models don't facilitate the platform. The business types try to maintain the mystique, but this is changing.

My suspicion is that the real reason the industry is fighting so hard against the automated guys is because they know that once the government steps in, it goes away from being a meritocracy back to the "good ol' boys" club, where profits are a function of deal-making more so than raw quantitative and computational elegance. Automated trading was the best thing that ever happened to the markets, and as you know, government has a habit of ruining things in this country (the US.)

In terms of market insight, it's really a question of whether the programmer has the drive or not. The job of "trader" is done for, unless that trader has some special quantitative ability or programming ability that can work magic with simple ideas.
 
Quote from garchbrooks:

In all seriousness, in modern automated trading, the execution performance is worth more than the strategy. The platform facilitates models, the models don't facilitate the platform. The business types try to maintain the mystique, but this is changing.

My suspicion is that the real reason the industry is fighting so hard against the automated guys is because they know that once the government steps in, it goes away from being a meritocracy back to the "good ol' boys" club, where profits are a function of deal-making more so than raw quantitative and computational elegance. Automated trading was the best thing that ever happened to the markets, and as you know, government has a habit of ruining things in this country (the US.)

In terms of market insight, it's really a question of whether the programmer has the drive or not. The job of "trader" is done for, unless that trader has some special quantitative ability or programming ability that can work magic with simple ideas.

i agree that traders in the automated trading space are useless. and in chicago they are usually guys right out of school watching systems. however, i disagree that the platform is worth more than the strategy. for the most part, the platforms are the same and 99% of firms are NOT microsecond focused; they are competitive. what good is the fastest platform if you have nothing to run on it.
 
Quote from Logic:

I'm a trader/programmer myself; but my experience with traders is different from yours, nitro.

The traders I've been around (the successful ones at least) have a strong tolerance for risk on top of a knack for analytical thinking; they do know quite a bit of things that the pure programmer types just don't understand. (Not saying that programmers couldn't learn it - it's just that most don't.)

In my experience, it's the traders with the true keys to profitability. They're the ones who come up with the strategies. Programmers just implement them (which is important, but not nearly as important as having the strategy in the first place.)

Furthermore, programming can be boiled down into something of an assembly-line routine. There's colleges and universities pumping out adequate programmers by the horde. That commoditizes programmers and makes them replaceable. There aren't equivalent education mills churning out good traders. Accordingly, it's much harder to come up with a practical strategy (with the proper risk parameters, etc) from nothing than it is to code a strategy once you're told how it works.

I certainly don't think programmers are overpaid, but I do think that (mostly) a trader's income is justified, given what he or she brings to the table.

Sorry, people coming out of universities cannot replace trained programmers. If you are talking about the bleeding edge, just any programmer will not do. It really takes some serious code-nazis to come up with the right implementation, and the experience to manage performance. And, the hard part is, it's not just a degree from MIT or CMU that makes you a good programmer.

If you're talking about the average system that just works, where slippage is ok, then sure, I agree. Why even bother with programmers then, just go use EasyLanguage or some other descriptive, high-level language.
 
Quote from rosy2:

i agree that traders in the automated trading space are useless. and in chicago they are usually guys right out of school watching systems. however, i disagree that the platform is worth more than the strategy. for the most part, the platforms are the same and 99% of firms are NOT microsecond focused; they are competitive. what good is the fastest platform if you have nothing to run on it.

The less risk there is involved in a trade (e.g, some well-known arb), the more the platform matters. If your trajectory is to take your business and put it on a colo and run some fancy algorithm, you still need to focus on developing the code right so you don't get screwed in the future when your VB/EasyLanguage/stuff-that-could-be-coded-by-anyone needs a costly, expensive re-architecting.

If you have some sophisticated hedged trade and a long-term forecast, you can hire anybody and write the code in visual basic for all it matters. Why even bother with customization? If you are getting away with 10-second executions and can use java to talk to Interactive Brokers, you can hire anyone has a pulse and 100-level computer science class training.
 
Quote from garchbrooks:

The less risk there is involved in a trade (e.g, some well-known arb), the more the platform matters. If your trajectory is to take your business and put it on a colo and run some fancy algorithm, you still need to focus on developing the code right so you don't get screwed in the future when your VB/EasyLanguage/stuff-that-could-be-coded-by-anyone needs a costly, expensive re-architecting.

If you have some sophisticated hedged trade and a long-term forecast, you can hire anybody and write the code in visual basic for all it matters. Why even bother with customization? If you are getting away with 10-second executions and can use java to talk to Interactive Brokers, you can hire anyone has a pulse and 100-level computer science class training.

If you are involved in some 'well-known arb' there is nothing proprietary about this trade and then of course one good programmer might be worth more than this entire firm.
 
Quote from gkishot:

If you are involved in some 'well-known arb' there is nothing proprietary about this trade and then of course one good programmer might be worth more than this entire firm.

Exactly. I think we ultimately see eye to eye, here.

Although, let's say hypothetically that programmer realized he was worth more than the firm. He may have issues raising the capital and getting situated into a position where his skill is applicable, so ultimately he ends up trading off his value for a much lower salary.

What do you think it would take a programmer like that to get started? Probably 3 to 10 mil?
 
Quote from garchbrooks:

Exactly. I think we ultimately see eye to eye, here.

Although, let's say hypothetically that programmer realized he was worth more than the firm. He may have issues raising the capital and getting situated into a position where his skill is applicable, so ultimately he ends up trading off his value for a much lower salary.

What do you think it would take a programmer like that to get started? Probably 3 to 10 mil?

The discussion lead me to ask this: Does anyone know if trading strategy can be patented?
 
Quote from gkishot:

The discussion lead me to ask this: Does anyone know if trading strategy can be patented?

yes. i know a guy who patented a fair value index for fx
 
Quote from rosy2:

yes. i know a guy who patented a fair value index for fx

But even though index being a trading strategy it does not mean that no one else can trade it, does it?
 
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