Quote from nyustudent:
What a joke -- I've been monitoring these forums for a while now since I first found this site from a google search back in November. For a while, I thought there were people on this board who knew what they were talking about, but now that I've read through this thread I know that isn't the case.
Being a student at NYU, and being in New York, a lot of students here are very interested in the markets and this a subject that comes up a lot in classes. Last year I took a statistical theory course and a decision theory course, and this semester I'm taking a general equilibrium theory course, and this question has come up on more than one occasion in all three courses during group discussions. I can tell you that no Professor I have ever had has ever taken the position that trading is gambling. All of them have said that at best, trading has several similarities to gambling -- but nothing more. There was even an entire chapter in one of my old text books that touched reasonably well on this subject, and it layed out very clearly the differences between the two.
So for all of you on this thread who have been harassed by the so-called experts who think trading is gambling, stay strong, don't be swayed by uneducated individuals who are more interested in picking fights than learning the truth, and take some comfort in the fact that there are a lot of very educated professors with PhD's who teach at NYU who would not only completely agree with you, but would scoff at their opinions and would write them off as nothing more than lay opinions from people who don't understand the nuances of higher level thinking -- not to mention mathematics and statistics