I'm in a similar situation, kinda but not really.
Instead of finishing my a-levels and going university, i decided to trade at home, i figured that in 3 years time, i'd be better at trading than anyone with an economics degree and i'd have the evidence to prove it, then i could get a job in a firm.
Well, going very good so far, my first months i turned £5k into £59k and now i'm doing even better!... Thinking of just applying now i think them results are good enough for a firm. In fact i'm talking to someone on this forum about maybe working for him during the summer/gap-year.
FunFun The people they 'hired' crashed the economy, in a lot of cases, with huge benefit to their companies. I know i'm made ALOT shorting this economic drop. I'm expecting a market reversal VERY soon though, i thought it would be today actually! So waiting for S&P500 close
Hi,
I am an aspiring undergrad reading Economics at a very good university in the UK. For the past several months I have been scrambling to find a summer internship in a bank to learn how professional traders work. But it seems my very average a-level grade is essentially preventing me to land even interviews. (i was lucky to get a place in this university and i am a high 2.1 student).
Having done almost all I could for my CV (extra-curri, part time jobs, volunteering), and still not succeeding in getting anywhere, I am nevertheless refusing to see this as a market signal that I should try something else. Because, I am very good at maths. all the numeracy tests they offer, I seem to pass very well (however easy it may be). and because the very people they hired crashed the economy, surely the HR is partly to blame (?).
So, as the recruiting season almost draws to an end my alternative would be to find a summer job in an accountancy firm or something else and learn to trade part time.
Or, based on what the banks are saying about me as a candidate, should i just give up ? What do you recommend i do to self-evaluate myself as a potentially successful trader ? are there any small firms i can join to learn during this summer ?
HELP !
have you found the job yet? if not, come work at my fx firm for free.. msg me for more info
have you found the job yet? if not, come work at my fx firm for free.. msg me for more info
Hi,
I am an aspiring undergrad reading Economics at a very good university in the UK. For the past several months I have been scrambling to find a summer internship in a bank to learn how professional traders work. But it seems my very average a-level grade is essentially preventing me to land even interviews. (i was lucky to get a place in this university and i am a high 2.1 student).
Having done almost all I could for my CV (extra-curri, part time jobs, volunteering), and still not succeeding in getting anywhere, I am nevertheless refusing to see this as a market signal that I should try something else. Because, I am very good at maths. all the numeracy tests they offer, I seem to pass very well (however easy it may be). and because the very people they hired crashed the economy, surely the HR is partly to blame (?).
So, as the recruiting season almost draws to an end my alternative would be to find a summer job in an accountancy firm or something else and learn to trade part time.
Or, based on what the banks are saying about me as a candidate, should i just give up ? What do you recommend i do to self-evaluate myself as a potentially successful trader ? are there any small firms i can join to learn during this summer ?
HELP !