Quote from Rearden Metal:
It is widely known that academic types usually make lousy traders- but I doubt that's the real reason.
I'd like to know what other here think, but I think its due to the fact that great traders usually have such a burning drive to get rich NOW, they're not inclined to spend (waste) years in a classroom when they could be out pursuing their dream.
Bruce Kovner, George Soros, Jim Simons, Nassim Taleb are all "academic types", so I can't really subscribe to this theory. Maybe if someone could show me the deluge of former Chicago cab drivers who are running multi-billion dollar hedge funds, I might start to believe it.
I agree that the need to pursue trading fully is what stops most budding trading successes from doing any other career for very long. But in that case, on might as well say that *all* career "types" suck at trading. That's a tautology - if they didn't suck, they would be traders, wouldn't they? Why single out academia? What about real estate brokers, software programmers, engineers, athletes, garbage disposal workers, janitors etc?
I think it's pretty simple. People who are likely to be great at trading will become almost obsessed by it from the moment they first encounter the idea of the markets. It will suck them in and they will do everything they can to get into that field. Anyone who, after encountering the markets, does not go full out to work in that field within a few years, is unlikely to possess the drive and love of the game sufficient to become great. A future chess grandmaster or poker champion would have fallen in love with it within a few games or hands, and would rather grind out a pittance doing 16 hour days for years in that field, than have to work a normal job and give up their passion. Someone who chose to become a college professor and get tenure, whilst pursuing chess or poker as a hobby, while always have it as a "hobby", and never as a calling. That's why academics suck at trading, because you are studying the self-selecting sample who never bothered to pursue it seriously and with true focus and effort. The ones who did that became traders and if they were ever in academia, dropped out eventually to pursue trading full-time.