It would depend on your beliefs. Many born agains or other fundamentalists of other faiths see every small detail of life as part of God's will. They look for reasons and purposes that aren't there. Also, these people tend to have a heightened view of their self- importance and free- will decision making prowess. Because they are committed to perfection, guided by the divine and above the common heathens, any bad outcomes are due to the devil, the specialist, Don Bright, etc. They tend to be experts in deluding themselves and believing in circular arguments. Faith is inherrently unscientific. They might take on way too much risk as their risk is insured by The Almighty (If they are vaguely Episcopalian or Catholic they might take minimal risks). They may view the market as evil and a den of iniquity after they get burned. They will seek redemption by preaching to others about the evils of usury in daytrading (even though they were the mark). Finally, they tend to be emotional and base decisions on gut feelings. These people get waxed as traders. They might make great system sellers though or salespeople hawking securities. They already have sales experience (proselytizing) and can hit pressure points that help the mark visualize the magnificent. People are attracted to their animated nature and the melodrama.
I knew of someone that was fire and brimstone from, I think, Mississippi. He is an extremely successful trader/ newsletter writer multi- millionaire that built up his net worth from a few thousand dollars starting in the early 90's. His religious beliefs are more examined than most other evangelicals, and he comes off as very humble. I have good evidence that he is a very successful trader even though he is a newsletter writer. I guess he has turned something that could have been a handicap into a strength. It is probably David v. Goliath for him.
Buddhists would probably make great quants. Everything flows from a common operating system, regression to the mean, stoicism, etc.
I knew of someone that was fire and brimstone from, I think, Mississippi. He is an extremely successful trader/ newsletter writer multi- millionaire that built up his net worth from a few thousand dollars starting in the early 90's. His religious beliefs are more examined than most other evangelicals, and he comes off as very humble. I have good evidence that he is a very successful trader even though he is a newsletter writer. I guess he has turned something that could have been a handicap into a strength. It is probably David v. Goliath for him.
Buddhists would probably make great quants. Everything flows from a common operating system, regression to the mean, stoicism, etc.
)))