Quote from heiasafari:
Let me add a few words about prop trading for a canadian bank: yes it does exist - although, has someone mentioned, you never hear about it as banks keep this stuff very close to the vest.
A typical deal for a trader at the bank I used to work for was 75K base salary, buying power of 10 million, 1/3 of profits and a "desk" fee of 150k to pay IT, secretary, office, bloomberg and what not.
This is an extremely competitive environment and just to get in takes a great deal of luck on top of everything else. At the bank I used to work, they had what they called a "rotation" program that you had to do for 2 years in 4 different trading departments of the capital market division. After those 2 years only would a trader become prop trader if he as proven himself to management.
Now here are a few observations about this:
1) the guys and girls you are competing with just to get in the program have INSANE backgrounds! I have seen resumes of guys with 4.0 GPA from MIT, others who have been trading for big banks from around the world, computational finance geniuses and what not.
2) It is so hard to get in that when you are in you really dont want to mess up: if you have 2 loosing quarters, you are out. I can tell you for a fact that traders are so scared that they barely ever take risk and will finish the year basically flat (0-5% return). Of course that makes no sense for the bank but anyway thats the way it is.
3) For the prop trading desks, equities are for schmucks and if you hope to work for one of them, you better brush up on your fixed income knowledge. Smart money has and always will be in bonds, sorry if I break your bubble.
4) The really good traders eventually get their own hedge funds inside the banks with the banks seed money and may or may not be authorized to sollicit external clients. I know a few who have reached this holy grail and trust me they are not your average joe walking into a churn and burn prop shop!