Best college major for trading

Quote from omcate:

Agree. Some employers may think in the following manner:
Getting good grades in exam is easy. Leading a good, meaningful life, establishing a successful business, collaborating with colleagues to finish a mission critical project on time despite all office politics, ect. are much more difficult. If you fail the easy test(college education and exam), why should I believe that you'll become a good employee, and a great asset to my company ? A loser won't become a winner overnight.

Of course, rules are made to be broken. There are always exceptions.

Just my two cents.

:p :p :p
:D :D :D

Not at all how we think in any of my companies ..... This is a great way to get a company full of dead wood. If your companies can thrive on simply repeating the same idea over and over and over then these are exactly the type of people you want to hire.

The ability to navigate office politics is antithetical to creating value in any company or business process. If you ever actually worked in a large organization on mission critical projects you would quickly come to realize that most of the people on most projects could as well not be there and about 10% of the project team are the people that actually get something done and more often than not these people dont play politics well.

I have hired many people that did not come out of a top school or at the very top of their class and I have worked with many top management at fortune 100 companies that did not satisfy these criteria. Smart hardworking creative people are difficult to find and using the criteria mentioned will only get mediocre hires IMHO.
 
With emphasis on formal systems (logic, foundational Mathematics)

Add all the undergrad Computer science course, some psycology,
History, law, music business finance.

I.e. take a wade variety and go 5 years and study like a mad person. Do every internship you can, study some more, read read read. Discuss.

Cheers
 
Quote from harrytrader:

I don't consider the guys working for big houses as traders but rather as commercials

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Figure the right & bright teacher maybe important;
wish i had more of Professor/trader Jim Rogers college course in book form.:cool:

Study & occasional ''labor'' in extra curricular activities like Blair
Hull did/does;
labor
fish
politics/trading
& being the slowest market maker on the floor:D

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Have you seen that commercial where Lassie the sheep dog does a skip or dance and wins the lion/bear deal.:cool: ???
 
Quote from Don Bright:

Simple answer...."Gaming Theory" (as taught at UCLA by Chris (Jesus) Ferguson's father, our trader who won the World Series of Poker a couple of years back, for $1.5 Million). Software development can certainly help. My brother insists that "Banking and Fincance" is a good bet. UNLV is a good school for most of these, and we have Internship programs there. Also, Interships at UCLA, BYU, and a few California schools.

Yes, there is intelligent life West of the Mississippi...LOL

Don


Don,

Any "Gaming Theory" books that top your list?

Axe
 
Quote from dbphoenix:

You guys do realize that this is a four-month-old thread, right?

And your point is? If I get a response in my email, I check it out...LOL 4 months, 4 years, what the hell....

don :D
 
Quote from axehawk:

Don,

Any "Gaming Theory" books that top your list?

Axe

You might go to www.rge.com -- and a few people like this one...

Gaming the Market : Applying Game Theory to Create Winning Trading Strategies
(which I'm ordering now)..

Don
 
Quote from dbphoenix:

You guys do realize that this is a four-month-old thread, right?

Yes MrMarket did a key word search on Wharton and posted so he could put up heis new email address.

What he gets is a ton of spams.

Has he asked you to email him as yet??
 
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