Small summary: Finance undergrad from a non target. Only took finance to learn about markets. Didn't learn jack about how to trade/markets in uni....and was spending most of my time reading about technical analysis in the uni library.
After many years of attempting to be a successful trader, failing miserably when I risked it all to go full time, rollercoaster equity curves, I have finally come to a place where it is consistent and rising. I'm sure there will still be setbacks but I am heavily aligned with Mark Douglas's Trading in the Zone and why it is a gem. I am waiting for a few more months of consistent profits before I increase the amount of contracts I am trading in futures and start earning back the tuition money I lost to the markets.
Right now I want to learn something new other than trading. (I will still be open to learning and adapting with the ever changing market, but I can do this as a hobby I've realized).
In terms of the future and the real world, I am wanting to grow myself professionally now that I've somewhat cracked the puzzle of the markets Ive been wanting to solve since high school.
1. CFA- I failed with a band of 9 the first time I took it. I didn't enjoy learning it at the time since it wasn't teaching me how to trade. Now that I am not looking for it to teach me to trade, I am more open to the things they teach and feel like I can actually soak it in this time around. Getting the certification will help me land a job in an industry I like and maybe help with networking and maybe one day build my own fund?
2. Coding-Honestly looking back, I wish I majored in computer science vs finance. However I feel like with trading, if I commit myself to learning and speaking code....I could become good at it. It's one technology that has revolutionized the world and helped my life in so many ways. I also think if I study how to code, it will help me automate my strategies/data research, etc.
3. Chinese- A mysterious place with interesting changes. It really does feel like the 21st century will be Asia's century and it could help me get a job there and get a better understanding of how people operate there. Won't help with my trading but opens a whole new world up by knowing the language.
4. Data Science- Currently data scientists are becoming more and more in demand. Professionally, this will help my "reliable salary" boost up by a lot. Also with the inevitable shift into AI, feels like it will become more in demand similar to how coding is now. Not only will this help professionally, I feel like it can help tremendously in my own individual trading. I'll have lots of data and heck, maybe might find a new edge I never thought of.
If you were currently young and weren't sitting comfortably in leisure now, which would you pick to learn for the next 20-30 years?
(I want to use my time to pursue one of the options above when market has low vol/opportunities/balancing)
Coding. And you can't be a 'data scientist' (whatever the hell that is) without being able to do a reasonable standard of coding anyway.
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