His perspective seems perfectly reasonable to me, in the sense that if someone's primary ambition is to get a job and be an employee, programming clearly offers more opportunities than trading.
That's a limited perspective, though: it's limited by the reality that he's only comparing overall prospects of "getting a job trading" with those "getting a job programming". That's a very different thing from comparing the prospects of "earning a living trading" and "earning a living programming" (in that one comparison specifically excludes all consideration of self-employment possibilities while the other doesn't).
I'm "just saying" ...