Some of the advice here has been spot on. Blowing your years just out of college at a prop firm, which is one your best shots at getting entry into a decent financial firm is all in all a very bad idea. How are your grades? Do you play sports? The elite firms like elite students who are active outside of the classroom.. People who have proven they are focused on being the best and succeeding where they currently are.
I love the comments, "but traders want to be their own boss...â âtrading the dream, sitting in bath robe at home all day" My god, what a joke! Its fantasy island. Itâs not about that. Itâs not about being "your own boss" or not. Itâs about having skills, experience, knowledge, and that particular combination of risk appetite and control that typically take many years to hone and develop.
Trading "trainers?" ha ha. thatâs an old joke, isn't it? I have seen these guys literally crying over beer, feeling guilty about how they can't teach their crop of young fresh faced recruits to make a dime.. Yet they cant come be honest, because then they would be out of a job and behind on mortgage payments. many I have met are scared to death of the markets. The only times such training works⦠you are better off still by just leveraging long!
With a very few exceptions, Prop trading is not a serious route, and is a very very poor choice for one looking to break into the elite ranks. Serious prop firms (they do exist) want guys who are ALREADY successful or have VALUABLE skills like programming statistical pattern analysis, or a high sharpe ratio private trading record. They help you hone and lever up what you are doing already.
If one is unable to get into a good firm out of school, Id suggest getting the best job u can otherwise, work your ass off, trade own account for longer holding period, and look to get into a top MBA or MSQF program, which can open doors to a decent hedge fund/trading department/bank. If during this time u do succeed in bootstrapping your account to 7 figures, then at THAT POINT consider going on your own.
It is much easier to succeed in trading when u have ALREADY succeeded. when one has real, valuable, relevant life skills, and when one is able to build confidence by attaining a high income in a more conventional career. One is 1000 times better off approaching the mkts from a position of strength. A newbie college grad with no career experience, no valuable life skills, no savings, No Viable high income alternatives, etc is not in a great position to break into the game.
People who claim otherwise in are literally selling the dream to suckers. If u want to do that then buy a lottery ticket every week and limit it to that⦠It will do much less damage to your career.
PS. Texas has an active hedge fund community. Oil and power companies often have active energy trading desks. Might be good places to start researching for jobs.