The Path to Heaven or Hell

Discussion in 'Religion and Spirituality' started by emg, Feb 13, 2012.

  1. emg

    emg



    Dodd-Frank Act does not apply in london which will maximize traders earning
     
    #121     Oct 11, 2012
  2. emg

    emg

    #122     Apr 19, 2013
  3. I disagree. Unless someone is going to have a good practically guaranteed job, I wouldn't recommend it. I have undergrad + MBA and what am I doing? Trading and passing [wasting] time in forums. Seems like everybody nowadays has at least a college degree. Who is really benefitting? The schools. Actually, some vocational areas pay better than traditional degrees anyway.

    Ditto for the military. I spent 6 years in the military and all that does is set you up for major cash-withdrawal symptoms when you leave. They give you everything. It's sorta like welfare. When you leave, you have to face the reality that the paycheck isn't coming automatically anymore.

    Education where I live is complete crap. Do I care? Not really. As soon as my kid is old enough to understand things, I'm going to show him how to trade his own account. My wife's reservation to this is she's afraid he'll make a lot of money and then run off to live on his own very early (something that's not common here until 24-25 or even a little later).
     
    #123     Apr 19, 2013
  4. emg

    emg

    #124     Apr 19, 2013
  5. emg

    emg


    Math and Computer science is what the house is looking for. MBA is for salesmen/women cold calling or sales presentation
     
    #125     Apr 19, 2013
  6. Handle123

    Handle123

    I believe education makes one think a little harder, but certainly don't need a degree if one immerces oneself into trading. I didn't finish my degrees before I started trading, it wasn't until 10-15 years after I started. Actually went to school as something new to do as I was doing long term stocks for first nine years. And I did three years in military, was so bored, I started learning about stocks and saved enough to buy 100 shares. I went on to do short term and day trading, NOTHING I learned in college made me be able to learn how to trade one minute bars. And I learned how to program and backtest on my own. Again, if you immerce yourself into your field of study, you can make it, but takes huge amounts of work.

    But for those who don't succeed, having a degree to write a book on trading, or sell stocks, a degree allows you to have a foot into the shop.
     
    #126     Apr 20, 2013
  7. emg

    emg

    #127     Apr 23, 2013
  8. calculating odds of bond default????? LOL

    typical morons at a university. years after people make millions on inefficient CDS, they think they are learning an edge. this edge has been closed for a long time.

    might be interesting, but completely worthless.

    might as well do a class on recognizing stocks like Enron.

    teach something totally new......oh wait, that's impossible.
     
    #128     Apr 23, 2013
  9. emg

    emg

    the old school will teach the calculation on default method. the new school will teach HFT methods.
     
    #129     Apr 23, 2013
  10. emg

    emg

    http://business.illinois.edu/marketinfolab/softwareResources.html

    [​IMG]




    University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign uses X-trader platform for their trading room LAB. They do not use the tools on what small traders are using because there is no value. The school uses what the pros (institutional) are using to educate the future HFT programmers/traders. The non profit universities are the real deal.




    Higher Education is the key to become a successful traders!

    Higher Education
     
    #130     Apr 26, 2013