"Where do you guys think the best salary and/or overall job opportunities in finance exist for a current physics student? A PhD, possibly in mathematical finance, or an MBA."
It's funny that polpolik and only a few others understood the framework of the original poster's question, which was asking which degree would offer the best salary and/or overall job opportunities in the market.
The OP doesn't even seem to care about which route will make him the best trader. He's obviously more concerned about landing a high paying job and getting fat bonuses than trading his own money.
And then it's so amusing to observe FXScalper come in expressing so much insecure frustration and crying in here that there's A TON of hope for high school drop-outs without GEDs. In fact, he's even making absurd suggestions that there's more hope for drop-outs without GEDs than people with higher education while also regarding PhDs as foolish chumps.
Well, that's a common self-comforting role in ET, and FXScalper, the high school drop-out, quintessentially embodies that element to the full degree. Look. Acquiring a PhD or MBA won't necessarily make you a top trader. That's a given. However, it will offer the candidate supreme opportunities in the working world and more financial security in life.
But if you don't even have a simple GED, you don't really have too many roads to take and trading a small account for retail Oanda is really the only rope you can grab since you're not even qualified to be in a low paying back-office role. I'm not even sure if Best Buy hires people without high school diplomas.
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