- Joined
- 12/6/15
- Messages
- 4
- Points
- 11
Hi everyone,
Just like to introduce myself real quick, my name's Jon. Undergraduate looking to quantitative portfolio management for a career.
The current concept I have is that once I reach the industry, I would be a quant researcher. Build factor models, develop systematic trading strategies based on papers, and help out with ad hoc tasks.
I would do this for maybe a 3-6 years before moving on to quantitative portfolio management where I'd be evaluating the different strategies that my researchers have to offer and then somehow combine them in an intelligent way that allows me to reduce risk, generate profits, avoid high turnover, have a low max drawdown, etc. I'd have my own book, determine how to allocate capital to my chosen strategies, etc.
I've been looking around at places like Two Sigma and AQR where I would assume that I'd best cultivate such skills starting out. However, are all of my expectations actually indicative of what I'd do in industry?
PS: I am pursuing a graduate degree and am considering pursuing a PhD. So, if possible, if someone could mention a hypothetical "MS" and a hypothetical "PhD" scenario, that would help so much!
Just like to introduce myself real quick, my name's Jon. Undergraduate looking to quantitative portfolio management for a career.
The current concept I have is that once I reach the industry, I would be a quant researcher. Build factor models, develop systematic trading strategies based on papers, and help out with ad hoc tasks.
I would do this for maybe a 3-6 years before moving on to quantitative portfolio management where I'd be evaluating the different strategies that my researchers have to offer and then somehow combine them in an intelligent way that allows me to reduce risk, generate profits, avoid high turnover, have a low max drawdown, etc. I'd have my own book, determine how to allocate capital to my chosen strategies, etc.
I've been looking around at places like Two Sigma and AQR where I would assume that I'd best cultivate such skills starting out. However, are all of my expectations actually indicative of what I'd do in industry?
PS: I am pursuing a graduate degree and am considering pursuing a PhD. So, if possible, if someone could mention a hypothetical "MS" and a hypothetical "PhD" scenario, that would help so much!