I learned macro economics on my own then in my Ivy League school. They did not teach me anything I did not know.
Just pick up a book on general finance and economics to understand what affects markets, then watch the news, the movement of the indexes and gain an understanding of how it works (basically it goes up and down - buy low sell high).
If you want to trade for an extra income or a living (nowdays this may be the only option available for graduating students) do that and dont analyze too much. I find it is counterproductive to analyze too intensly, because all the analyzis could be ruined by some news that comes out. Patience and discipline vis a vis your trading system will bring you profits. I have to admit that I am not as profitable as I would like to be, because I am not executing my system with discipline. I get too emotional and loose it.
Understand that there are as many traders on NYSE that have HS education as the ones with MBA's and PhDs. Trading stock is not a matter of degrees, it is a matter of personality.
Just pick up a book on general finance and economics to understand what affects markets, then watch the news, the movement of the indexes and gain an understanding of how it works (basically it goes up and down - buy low sell high).
If you want to trade for an extra income or a living (nowdays this may be the only option available for graduating students) do that and dont analyze too much. I find it is counterproductive to analyze too intensly, because all the analyzis could be ruined by some news that comes out. Patience and discipline vis a vis your trading system will bring you profits. I have to admit that I am not as profitable as I would like to be, because I am not executing my system with discipline. I get too emotional and loose it.
Understand that there are as many traders on NYSE that have HS education as the ones with MBA's and PhDs. Trading stock is not a matter of degrees, it is a matter of personality.