Hi,
I am about to graduate with a BSc from a good university with a good subject (grade remains to be seen but I'm hoping 2.1). I don't have a graduate job lined up but I know my interest lies within the financial markets.
Over the last 18 months I've grown a very strong interest in the markets, I'm currently at the stage where I've found a strategy that I'm very comfortable with and I believe will give me strong results. Due to uni commitments I haven't been able to trade it during the day and have only seen the results in manual backtesting thus far so obviously I will trade demo or with small amounts of money for a month or two before investing any substantial amount.
Since I don't currently have a job I will have the time to test my strategy before any job comes my way, but, if the strategy turns out to be as good as I expect it to be I would like to trade it full time as I believe my potential earnings in the first few years will be quite a few times larger than any graduate job will offer me. Obviously this all depends on the viability of my trading method however I believe I have been pretty realistic (if not pessimistic) during my backtesting and the results do look promising. I will look for jobs alongside my trading so if it turns out I have major flaws in my plan that I have not foreseen, I will have already been on the job hunt for a while and can hopefully commence a career in a grad job.
The problem I am having is, assuming my strategy is as successful as I am currently led to believe, whether I should pursue trading or look for full time employment. With trading I am my own boss and have a lot of flexibility, my working hours would only be 9 hours a day, 4 days a week. I see trading as my passion and the only area of work I can see myself getting up early in the morning for. Being my own boss is important to me as I have learnt from that I gain no satisfaction or motivation from being just another employee.
However, a point my family and friends have raised as a serious concern is that if I do this I will not have much interaction with the outside world and will not be developing the skills that most graduates will begin to develop post degree. I agree that this is probably true but then I wonder, if I am following what I am passionate about then this is not a problem as I would not be intending to join a firm and so would not require such skills. So what they are regarding as a major issue is something that I believe would have no affect given what I would be doing. It would only be a problem if later down the line it turned out I could no longer trade for whatever reason and need to go into a full time job.
I could do with all the advice I can get, should I look to keep trading as something I do on the side? It's all I can see myself doing and the thought of working in some other job at a bank or accountancy/actuary seems almost like failure to me. I don't believe I stand a chance of getting a job in trading at a bank or hedge fund as I'm not Oxbridge and have no past trading internships or contacts. So I'm pretty sure I'd be working in some other field. Are these skills so important for me to develop that I can't pursue what I'm passionate about?
My heart is set on trading but I'm a rational person and open to advice or pointers that people can offer me.
Thanks!
I am about to graduate with a BSc from a good university with a good subject (grade remains to be seen but I'm hoping 2.1). I don't have a graduate job lined up but I know my interest lies within the financial markets.
Over the last 18 months I've grown a very strong interest in the markets, I'm currently at the stage where I've found a strategy that I'm very comfortable with and I believe will give me strong results. Due to uni commitments I haven't been able to trade it during the day and have only seen the results in manual backtesting thus far so obviously I will trade demo or with small amounts of money for a month or two before investing any substantial amount.
Since I don't currently have a job I will have the time to test my strategy before any job comes my way, but, if the strategy turns out to be as good as I expect it to be I would like to trade it full time as I believe my potential earnings in the first few years will be quite a few times larger than any graduate job will offer me. Obviously this all depends on the viability of my trading method however I believe I have been pretty realistic (if not pessimistic) during my backtesting and the results do look promising. I will look for jobs alongside my trading so if it turns out I have major flaws in my plan that I have not foreseen, I will have already been on the job hunt for a while and can hopefully commence a career in a grad job.
The problem I am having is, assuming my strategy is as successful as I am currently led to believe, whether I should pursue trading or look for full time employment. With trading I am my own boss and have a lot of flexibility, my working hours would only be 9 hours a day, 4 days a week. I see trading as my passion and the only area of work I can see myself getting up early in the morning for. Being my own boss is important to me as I have learnt from that I gain no satisfaction or motivation from being just another employee.
However, a point my family and friends have raised as a serious concern is that if I do this I will not have much interaction with the outside world and will not be developing the skills that most graduates will begin to develop post degree. I agree that this is probably true but then I wonder, if I am following what I am passionate about then this is not a problem as I would not be intending to join a firm and so would not require such skills. So what they are regarding as a major issue is something that I believe would have no affect given what I would be doing. It would only be a problem if later down the line it turned out I could no longer trade for whatever reason and need to go into a full time job.
I could do with all the advice I can get, should I look to keep trading as something I do on the side? It's all I can see myself doing and the thought of working in some other job at a bank or accountancy/actuary seems almost like failure to me. I don't believe I stand a chance of getting a job in trading at a bank or hedge fund as I'm not Oxbridge and have no past trading internships or contacts. So I'm pretty sure I'd be working in some other field. Are these skills so important for me to develop that I can't pursue what I'm passionate about?
My heart is set on trading but I'm a rational person and open to advice or pointers that people can offer me.
Thanks!