- Joined
- 10/15/12
- Messages
- 1
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- 11
Hi! At first I wish to say sorry for my English, I will try to be as understandable as I can. So, I've just recently become interested in the whole quantitative finance sphere, got pretty excited by it, and now I am facing the problem of selecting a sector of this sphere for learning in the first place. I am a graduate in applied mathematics, I love beautiful theoretical constructs and, honestly, attraction that I felt is of I think purely mathematical nature. I also work as a software developer. So I guess I could relatively easily learn at least some aspects of the 'quant science', in theory and practice.
A natural idea that comes into mind is that I should choose first those aspects that I could apply on practice. Now, I think I won't ever be working as a market analyst or someone like that. So becoming an individual trader is the only option. Now, trying to trade derivatives (futures/options) is, due to different technical reasons, is what I can't do (at least for some time). It's a pity, because at the first glimpse it seems to me that quantitative finance and its wonderful theory is all about derivatives, and the entire financial world is trading them day and night. OK, but there is another hobby that I got - I like playing with the spot Forex market from time to time, and I have no problems getting some money into it (and maybe a little into stocks), even for learning purposes.
So the main question is: What parts of the quantitative finance theoretical conglomerate I could apply to spot Forex trading and simple stocks trading? What should I learn first - financial econometrics? Time series analysis? Stochastic calculus? Portfolio theory and risk management? Anything else?
I'm fully aware that my understanding of what the quantitative finance is and what it is for, can be very distant from reality, so I'll appreciate any answers and any crititism. Thanks in advance!
A natural idea that comes into mind is that I should choose first those aspects that I could apply on practice. Now, I think I won't ever be working as a market analyst or someone like that. So becoming an individual trader is the only option. Now, trying to trade derivatives (futures/options) is, due to different technical reasons, is what I can't do (at least for some time). It's a pity, because at the first glimpse it seems to me that quantitative finance and its wonderful theory is all about derivatives, and the entire financial world is trading them day and night. OK, but there is another hobby that I got - I like playing with the spot Forex market from time to time, and I have no problems getting some money into it (and maybe a little into stocks), even for learning purposes.
So the main question is: What parts of the quantitative finance theoretical conglomerate I could apply to spot Forex trading and simple stocks trading? What should I learn first - financial econometrics? Time series analysis? Stochastic calculus? Portfolio theory and risk management? Anything else?
I'm fully aware that my understanding of what the quantitative finance is and what it is for, can be very distant from reality, so I'll appreciate any answers and any crititism. Thanks in advance!