What to do with my life? - College senior at a large university in the Southeastern Conference

I'm going to be a college senior this year at a large university in the Southeastern Conference. The school itself is average, however we have a top 20 Accounting program in which I am currently enrolled. I'll graduate with only about a 3.4, as I did poorly my first year of college and have been forced to pull my GPA back up.

I really want to get into trading but the problem is my school is definitely not a target and my GPA isn't great. I read EVERYTHING I can get my hands onto about technical analysis and have been trading forex on a micro account for the past 6 months or so successfully.

What are my options here? I would actually RATHER work in city such as Houston, Dallas, or Atlanta and I've heard these cities are far less competitive than NYC?

Another option would be for me to go Big 4 Accounting (they recruit heavily from my school) and try and move to a bank after that? However, I don't feel like my odds of accomplishing this are great and the absolute last thing I want to be is an accountant.

Thanks for the help guys.

10 Comments
 
Best Response

...if u really want to be a trader and its in your blood then dont be an accountant. I was in virtually the same spot as you and i got a job in the middle office of large asset manager, traded on my own at night in asian markets with my own money, learned as much as i could at work and on my own, and eventually made some transitions such that i ended up trading on the buy side at a fairly young age. Not easy and it will take time and you will spend a few years listening to stories of people that are more sucessful/making more money then you, but if you are anything like i was (and am) accounting just isnt a real option.

 

I just don't want to make the same mistake my father did in that he's an electrical engineer for Dell but all he wants to do is trade. He trades options at his desk while at work but hates the Dell job. If I'm an accountant I'm going to run into the same problem.

I like learning about accounting, but the only reason I really majored in it was because it is the best program at my university.

How did you get your first job?

 

Southernstunna, definitely pursue trading if that's your passion. Both of your posts illustrate the fact that you know what you want to do, so you should pursue it. Does your school have an alumni directory? I'm sure it does - I would go into that and search for alumni at firms in Houston, Dallas, Atlanta and e-mail / cold call them. Since your school isn't a target school like mine, you'll have to be more proactive and assertive in order to land a job. Connections help significantly. When you contact these people, give them a quick sales pitch about your passion in trading and how you'd like to break into the industry. The key is to let them know that you're willing to start anywhere in the firm and will do whatever it takes to make your way up (this will show them that you really want it).

Do you have any family members / family friends that work at a firm w/ S&T? Maybe someone you know, knows someone who knows someone. You never know until you ask around. Good Luck in the search.

 

I don't know ANYBODY who works as a trader or in sales, which is obviously an enormous disadvantage.

I appreciate the advice, and I'm definitely going to check out the alumni directory. I've never heard of anything like that before, but I gotta think that we must have one somewhere.

Can anyone comment on the competitiveness of trading jobs in Houston/Dallas vs. NYC? Am I correct in my assumption that they are less competitive?

 
southernstunnaI don't know ANYBODY who works as a trader or in sales, which is obviously an enormous disadvantage.

I appreciate the advice, and I'm definitely going to check out the alumni directory. I've never heard of anything like that before, but I gotta think that we must have one somewhere.

Can anyone comment on the competitiveness of trading jobs in Houston/Dallas vs. NYC? Am I correct in my assumption that they are less competitive?

I'm not expert, but my first reaction would be not necessarily. If you're trading energy, I'd say it would be at the very least on par to be in Texas as NY, if not more beneficial.

Jack: They’re all former investment bankers who were laid off from that economic crisis that Nancy Pelosi caused. They have zero real world skills, but God they work hard. -30 Rock
 
southernstunnaI'm going to be a college senior this year at a large university in the Southeastern Conference. The school itself is average, however we have a top 20 Accounting program in which I am currently enrolled. I'll graduate with only about a 3.4, as I did poorly my first year of college and have been forced to pull my GPA back up.

I really want to get into trading but the problem is my school is definitely not a target and my GPA isn't great. I read EVERYTHING I can get my hands onto about technical analysis and have been trading forex on a micro account for the past 6 months or so successfully.

What are my options here? I would actually RATHER work in city such as Houston, Dallas, or Atlanta and I've heard these cities are far less competitive than NYC?

Another option would be for me to go Big 4 Accounting (they recruit heavily from my school) and try and move to a bank after that? However, I don't feel like my odds of accomplishing this are great and the absolute last thing I want to be is an accountant.

Thanks for the help guys.

if you likes trading and would like pursue that career, go straight ahead for that.

 

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