Hello all,
I'm in need of some insightful career advice and this forum looks like the perfect place to get it. This might look a little long, but donât let it deter you - itâs a quick read and I need some advice!!! My immediate future hangs in the balance!
First, my background. I graduated from a top school 3 years ago and am now completing the Investment Banking Analyst program at one of the top 5 banks. Itâs been a long term goal of mine to become a prop trader and now is the right time to make the move. For reasons outside of my immediate control (timing, demand, etc) switching to a prop desk at my current bank isnât immediately feasible and after much deliberation Iâve decided to focus on alternative routes. To be brief, Iâll just quickly summarize the opportunities:
1. First New York Securities â Assistant Trader. Iâm sure many of you are well aware of this training program 18-24 months of a 55k salary + bonus with a prop seat if you complete the program. Iâm aware of the demand for one of these seats and am currently navigating the interview process. What is the earning potential at this place based on product focus? What is the work environment like? If anyone has any insights as to their culture, compensation arrangements, avg length of tenure, strengths/weaknesses, etc, I would really appreciate it. RECENT info on these guys is really hard to dig up.
2. ETF Market-Making on the floor of the AMEX â These guys are ETF market-makers on the floor of the AMEX. Theyâre offering a 40k salary with minimal bonus for the first year, during which I will be hedging the books of two floor traders who make markets in certain ETFâs and also trade their own books for a P&L split. After a year (or so) of doing this and learning about ETFâs I will have the opportunity to be a market-maker on the floor and trade my own book for a P&L split. The comp looks like it has tremendous upside potential if things work out, but there are a lot of ifs. The biggest one namely the future of the AMEX. Itâs been struggling with its options and equities businesses, but is at the forefront of ETFâs, which is what Iâd be trading. Another question is the earning potential as spreads decrease for AMEX floor market makers. One strong plus is that I will gain some good skill sets here: Market-making experience, index-hedging execution, and familiarity with algorithmic trading models and systems. Plus, since the firm is so small, thereâs A LOT of room to grow and lead new firm initiatives, i.e. actively managing ETF portfolioâs, or shaky ground to stand on given that the firm is an AMEX member â guess it depends on your perspective.
3. Daytrading at a reputable daytrading firm (Hold Bros, Schoenfeld, Prestige, etc) â We all know what this entails. Huge potential upside, but along with that is the 1 to 6 month learning curve before you can be consistently profitable (if you are still trading). During these 1 to 6 months you are making little to no money because of this learning curve. To top that all off, if I do this and it doesnât workout, Iâve gone and squandered the leverage I currently have on my resume (top-tier banking program). Daytrading for 6 months and then trying to get an A-list gig making good money is a risky venture and would require masterful weaving and spinning of a story and some intense scheming on my part. Basically, Iâm worried about it substantially reducing my resume leverage.
Those are the three opportunities. There are a few others out there, like energy trading at another large bank, etc, but these three are the ones I am focused on because of the lifestyle/upside combination. What do you think? Currently I am leaning towards the #2 opportunity (ETF market-making) mainly because of the valuable niche skill set. I would actually prefer FNYS, but my first interview was a pure pressure interview that was zero technical, all qualitative and pressure tactics, which I didnât really catch onto until I was right in the thick of it trying to explain myself. Chalk it up to rusty interview skills and lack of prep time due to heavy workload. They were ambiguous about what they thought about me, so I am going to aggressively re-approach but honestly have no idea as to whether they liked me or though I was a moron. Again, zero technical content.
Any thoughts? Where else on the EliteTrader forums should I post this for a better response? I noticed all of the diff categories and am not familiar. Maybe I should post this somewhere else?
Any insightful feedback from current/former traders or those with relevant experience would be appreciated. Sorry for the novel!
AC
I'm in need of some insightful career advice and this forum looks like the perfect place to get it. This might look a little long, but donât let it deter you - itâs a quick read and I need some advice!!! My immediate future hangs in the balance!
First, my background. I graduated from a top school 3 years ago and am now completing the Investment Banking Analyst program at one of the top 5 banks. Itâs been a long term goal of mine to become a prop trader and now is the right time to make the move. For reasons outside of my immediate control (timing, demand, etc) switching to a prop desk at my current bank isnât immediately feasible and after much deliberation Iâve decided to focus on alternative routes. To be brief, Iâll just quickly summarize the opportunities:
1. First New York Securities â Assistant Trader. Iâm sure many of you are well aware of this training program 18-24 months of a 55k salary + bonus with a prop seat if you complete the program. Iâm aware of the demand for one of these seats and am currently navigating the interview process. What is the earning potential at this place based on product focus? What is the work environment like? If anyone has any insights as to their culture, compensation arrangements, avg length of tenure, strengths/weaknesses, etc, I would really appreciate it. RECENT info on these guys is really hard to dig up.
2. ETF Market-Making on the floor of the AMEX â These guys are ETF market-makers on the floor of the AMEX. Theyâre offering a 40k salary with minimal bonus for the first year, during which I will be hedging the books of two floor traders who make markets in certain ETFâs and also trade their own books for a P&L split. After a year (or so) of doing this and learning about ETFâs I will have the opportunity to be a market-maker on the floor and trade my own book for a P&L split. The comp looks like it has tremendous upside potential if things work out, but there are a lot of ifs. The biggest one namely the future of the AMEX. Itâs been struggling with its options and equities businesses, but is at the forefront of ETFâs, which is what Iâd be trading. Another question is the earning potential as spreads decrease for AMEX floor market makers. One strong plus is that I will gain some good skill sets here: Market-making experience, index-hedging execution, and familiarity with algorithmic trading models and systems. Plus, since the firm is so small, thereâs A LOT of room to grow and lead new firm initiatives, i.e. actively managing ETF portfolioâs, or shaky ground to stand on given that the firm is an AMEX member â guess it depends on your perspective.
3. Daytrading at a reputable daytrading firm (Hold Bros, Schoenfeld, Prestige, etc) â We all know what this entails. Huge potential upside, but along with that is the 1 to 6 month learning curve before you can be consistently profitable (if you are still trading). During these 1 to 6 months you are making little to no money because of this learning curve. To top that all off, if I do this and it doesnât workout, Iâve gone and squandered the leverage I currently have on my resume (top-tier banking program). Daytrading for 6 months and then trying to get an A-list gig making good money is a risky venture and would require masterful weaving and spinning of a story and some intense scheming on my part. Basically, Iâm worried about it substantially reducing my resume leverage.
Those are the three opportunities. There are a few others out there, like energy trading at another large bank, etc, but these three are the ones I am focused on because of the lifestyle/upside combination. What do you think? Currently I am leaning towards the #2 opportunity (ETF market-making) mainly because of the valuable niche skill set. I would actually prefer FNYS, but my first interview was a pure pressure interview that was zero technical, all qualitative and pressure tactics, which I didnât really catch onto until I was right in the thick of it trying to explain myself. Chalk it up to rusty interview skills and lack of prep time due to heavy workload. They were ambiguous about what they thought about me, so I am going to aggressively re-approach but honestly have no idea as to whether they liked me or though I was a moron. Again, zero technical content.
Any thoughts? Where else on the EliteTrader forums should I post this for a better response? I noticed all of the diff categories and am not familiar. Maybe I should post this somewhere else?
Any insightful feedback from current/former traders or those with relevant experience would be appreciated. Sorry for the novel!
AC