Over the past two weeks I've gotten about 10 PMs asking about the firm, therefore I just chose to copy/paste and put together my previous responses to the potential candidates that PMed me earlier...
Here it is:
Hi,
It's pretty funny because in this past week I've gotten about five messages from people like yourself asking about the firm... I'm assuming you googled "Genesis Investment Partners/Traders" and found elitetrader.com and just recently signed up (0 posts)... lol
Anyway, I will copy/paste several of the previous e-mails I sent out to other people like yourself... It's a LONG compilation of diff. letters, so if your confused about something feel free to message me again... Hope this will help:
I had two interviews at Genesis, the second of which at the conclusion I was offered a position. Anyway, Genesis Investment Trading appears to be a reputable firm. The interview was actually conducted in the Access Securities office (does arbitrage, executs orders for hedge funds) of the building. Genesis is just a new start up and affiliate of Access, so it certainly makes it appear rather legit in comparision to other prop firms. Regarding the interview, they asked more psychological questions, attempting to guage my personality (whether I was aggresive, a team player and tolerance for risk). Nevertheless, they also questioned some aspects of my education (I was a political science major), my internships (one of which was at Merrill and they asked me to describe my roles and experience there) and also about life experiences (i.e biggest challenge in my life). They also wanted someone that was very determined and interested in the markets, the stock market in this case, but experience was not necessary. They made it known that the training was very intense... Series 7 is not required, unless you get moved to Global Markets (Access Securities: where the real players trade thebig money).
So from my short experience, it seems like a good place. They're in the process of selecting about 24 candidates apparently, and the start date is only July 7th so just take my account as one opinion. In terms of other prop firms, it surely appears respectable. I'm not sure of your experience with prop firms, but there are many sketchy places that basically fool young traders and just hire them to profit from their commisions. The commissions at Genesis were decent (can't recall exact figures though). More importantly, there is no initial contribution. Perhaps the most significant aspect is that they provide three months worth of training for free. Only if you are profitable will you be able to trade with their money, so theorytically only then will you pay commissions to them. A somewhat disappointing aspect is that it is initially a 50:50 payout, but increases with consistency. This is rather low in the industry, but on a better note, it somewhat signifies that this firm is respectable because the sketchy firms are generally the ones that advertise high (95%) payout rates.
To the question whether you are willing to change careers, thats a tough call. I just graduated from a liberal arts college less than a month ago, so I basically have no money. Although I live on Long Island and the firm is 50 miles away, I will have to move to CT so I have time to focus on the training and I will be too exhausted from studying the market to travel in traffic five times a week and pay $10 on tolls (daily) + gas, so my parents are going to have to support me and pay for my apartment and other expenses. My point is that there will be expenditures and if you don't have the money or the luxury of relatives from funding this venture, I would stay with your other finance job. You can always get a prop position later in the future when you are more financially stable. Also, you must remember that the majority of traders fail. On the other hand, the upside is that you can eventually become extremely profitable at a very young age (well in the 6 figures) if you are a consistently successful trader. Also, in this job, there is also no office politics; performance is based on the money you make. You also have freedom to work whenever you want, and what you trade... This is all true as long as you are profitable!
About their trading strategy, you can develop your own (provided that you are profitable and don't take stupid risks) but in the beginning its all day trading. In training they teach conservative methods (chose market leaders and trade on momentum type stuff; hold positions for 10 seconds, 10 minutes, several hours) and I believe this is how they will like the traders to work long-term.
Well I hope that helped and I didn't bore you too much... I have had several people e-mail me with similar questions, so I was able to copy/paste some of the text...
P.S. Don't expect a salary at any prop firm. I have only known of two or three places that offer a salary (i.e Shaw, First Securities). These places generally hire IVY league and sometimes candidates must possess their MBAs... If you are relatively new to the industry, check out the following site to see how prop firms operate:
http://www.tradersnarrative.com/lis...-firms-735.html
In my opinion, Genesis provides a good deal (no initial contribution, free training for three months, affiliation to legit firm, no tech fees, etc.)... If I fail to become a profitable trader, I think the training is worth the experience nevertheless. You'll have access to market technology and experienced individuals. In sum, I view all the expenditures as an investment with a good risk/reward ratio.
Good luck!