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What Kind Of Jobs Are There At Wall Street I

How to get a job at Wall Street?

Oh just swim over and expect free health care - that's what our friends to the south of us do.

What kind of jobs can you get on Wall Street with degrees in business and not finance?

At the end of the day, Wall Street firms are businesses and they will probably need assistance with a variety of business-related duties so your business degree should not automatically vote you out of Wall Street. There are plenty of business related roles on Wall Street -- from marketing to general management and, of course, finance. Don't hesitate to apply to a role if you think you have the right skills, but make sure you customize your resume to suit the job description. A one-size resume will not help you get very far.However, if your interest is in a financial role, then it would be a good idea to start with entry level finance jobs. This way, you will be building your experience, knowledge base, and network. Don't hesitate to take classes related to your area of interest. Knowledge acquisition is a continuous process that doesn't end with your first degree.

How hard is it to get a job working wall street?

No Wall Street firm would hire a 17 year old "trader", especially one without any "street" experience.

Wall Street firms do not hire "traders" unless they have been trading with other broker/dealers or have floor experience.

Your "personal" trading is meaningless to a brokerage firm, it is not a selling point in getting your foot into the door.

It would be in your best interest to get yourself a formal education . And no you do not need an Ivy League school education (most traders on the street are not from Ivy League schools, but most do have a formal education.
Or if this is too much for you, try beating the bushes and visiting brokerage firms and taking any job that gets you into the industry

You never worry about "what they will pay you", if it means getting in the door, you take the job, any job.

What was Jacob Moore's job title in Wall Street 2?

He's a proprietary trader.

trader for when a firm trades stocks, bonds, currencies, commodities, their derivatives, or other financial instruments, with the firm's own money as opposed to its customers' money, so as to make a profit for itself.

What kinds of certifications work in Wall Street?

The CFA is commonly a part of the Research Analyst / Portfolio Manager career track. Outside of that, it’s helpful, but not a standard part of Wall Street’s curriculum. Advisory investment bankers rarely pursue the qualification.Professions of the Newest Charterholders The certifications that you mentioned do cover relevant subjects, but other variables (networking, university, etc.) are likely more useful investments of time for pursuing a career on Wall Street.If you look closely at the US CFA data, ~4% of charterholders are unemployed, only slightly better than the American average.A Better PlanC++ has >2x the demand as the CFA - learn to code, it’ll increase your chances.Search Results / Search Results

What does it mean to work on Wall Street?

Taking this question at face value, ‘working on Wall Street’ refers to working in the New York-based finance and investment industry. Classically, this refers to investment banking firms but in more recent years has come to refer to a wider array of asset managers, hedge funds and similar firms - who generally describe themselves as part of Wall Street when it suits them and not when it doesn’t.While Wall Street is a physical location in Lower Manhattan, the label has become almost purely a synecdoche - since very few firms are actually still located on Wall Street proper today. Among well-known firms, only Deutsche Bank (to the best of my recollection) has its US headquarters in that location, at the iconic 60 Wall Street building. Goldman Sachs is the only other major firm still to have its headquarters in lower Manhattan, although they are half a mile or so from Wall Street, at 200 West Street.Today, the true center of gravity for New York’s finance industry is further uptown, in an area spanning from approximately 50th Street at the southern end to about 58th Street, with the east-west span stretching from roughly Lexington Avenue to the east over to 6th Avenue to the west. Within this area of a few blocks can be found the headquarters of most of the world’s leading investment banks, asset managers, hedge funds and private equity firms.

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