- Joined
- 2/10/21
- Messages
- 2
- Points
- 11
Hi,
I am currently doing a quant rotation program in a big bank and I am trying to decide what would be best to choose for my last rotation. Thinking about this has led me to consider various buzzwords and I realized I don't understand the differences very well:
1)quantitative trading
2)algorithmic trading
3)e trading
4)electronic market making
5)automated market making
6)Execution
My understanding is that e-trading is the general concept of having an electronic platform where clients can trade (vs e.g. voice trading), but the trading decision itself may or may not be automated, thus 2 is a subset of 3. I know execution is about deciding how to split large orders to reduce market impact. Is this all there is to 2 as far as banks are concerned? Do banks actually have algorithmic pricers for deciding a mid price and a spread? Do 4/5/2 refer to the same thing? And what exactly does 1 involve? Is it an umbrella term referring to any type of quant work?
Some follow up questions:
- ML is all the buzz these days. Is it actually used in any way directly related to trading and P&L (ie not document analysis via NLP for instance)?
- Is there any type of quant that does something similar to what hedge funds do?
- What is the best type of quant if you aim, in the future, to try to get into a shop like Citadel?
- What is the best type of quant if you aim, in the future, to try to get into a shop like Citadel Securities?
I am currently doing a quant rotation program in a big bank and I am trying to decide what would be best to choose for my last rotation. Thinking about this has led me to consider various buzzwords and I realized I don't understand the differences very well:
1)quantitative trading
2)algorithmic trading
3)e trading
4)electronic market making
5)automated market making
6)Execution
My understanding is that e-trading is the general concept of having an electronic platform where clients can trade (vs e.g. voice trading), but the trading decision itself may or may not be automated, thus 2 is a subset of 3. I know execution is about deciding how to split large orders to reduce market impact. Is this all there is to 2 as far as banks are concerned? Do banks actually have algorithmic pricers for deciding a mid price and a spread? Do 4/5/2 refer to the same thing? And what exactly does 1 involve? Is it an umbrella term referring to any type of quant work?
Some follow up questions:
- ML is all the buzz these days. Is it actually used in any way directly related to trading and P&L (ie not document analysis via NLP for instance)?
- Is there any type of quant that does something similar to what hedge funds do?
- What is the best type of quant if you aim, in the future, to try to get into a shop like Citadel?
- What is the best type of quant if you aim, in the future, to try to get into a shop like Citadel Securities?