Quote from ljyoung:
IMO, the most important thing for a trader to possess in order to be successful in the long term (consistently make money) is brutal self-honesty. If you don't practice this, be assured that Mr. Market will abuse you until you do or until, for whatever reasons, you quit.
lj
Quote from ljyoung:
Possibly BASE jumping could be incorporated into the business school curriculum. Say a leap from El Capitan on a crisp Fall morning. This prerequisite would have the dual benefit of winnowing the number of applicants and reducing the number of crappers who managed to slip by the screening committee.
Prescient thinking Spanky.
Regards
lj
Quote from Cutten:
Literacy and numeracy are all you really need. Not even that if you plan to become a floor trader
Other useful skills: logic, epistemology, statistics, economics.
If you plan on going to work for a trading/investment/finance company first (the most common route, and probably easiest to eventually turn into trading success), then it's more important to go to a top university and have strong extra-curricular activities on your CV than exactly which degree you do. Although some kind of quantitative degree e.g. maths/physics, or one in finance/economics, will probably give you an edge over other applicants, and obscure arts degrees will count against you.
But playing the CV/interview game is entirely different to succeeding at trading. 95% of Goldman employees who went to its prop desk ended up blowing out, and they had top educations just to be able to step in the door. Trading success (pure directional trading) has almost nothing to do with normal measures of educational achievement. It's more about a certain mentality and personality, along with high intelligence - those things can't easily be learned or taught.