Great point.. I guess it is a difference between career oriented people and otherwise. For me, 'working' for anything less than a massive amount of money is like a death sentence compared to the freedom I have doing things on my own since Im capapable of building reliable trading systems with very low overhead from scratch.
Quote from trdwl:
The premise of the question seemed to turn on why highly talented people, educated at the most elite institutions of higher learning would be focused on employment opportunities at primarily highly capitalized, high profile hedge funds such as Citadel, SAC, etc.
The leap you make from the statement I made about a $10-15 billion dollar barrier to entry, to the assumption that I am making a claim that one can't make money trading with anything less than a $10 billion base of capital is a giant leap indeed.
My presumption is that most of those that have invested the time, effort and considerable money in an Ivy league education and are considering a career in finance, and more specifically at a hedge fund initially lack the startup financing to launch a major hedge fund operation.
This was the case in my own experience. I worked at two large funds before I was in a position to attract substantial institutional funds.
To answer the original question more directly: Anyone can connect to the internet and put together a few thousand dollars and test their skills in the markets. The PRIMARY reason that those with top tier educations seek out positions with elite hedge funds is for access to their very large sums of working capital.