BartInLA said:
I was wondering what the odds are of having a lucrative income as a stock professional? Sort of a second career. I have an MBA, and as a PhD I've taught statistics and have always excelled at math. No super significant grad classes in financial instruments but have enjoyed the field.
Series 7 then what?….
I'm over 60, (A&M engineering degree but long out of the field) and love to learn, but is it worth it at this point in my career to begin another career?
I know that nobody can answer such a specific personal question but what stories have you heard and what opinions, if any, do you want to share?
I envy your knowledge and skills.
The advice given above is probably good, but there are lots of mathematicians who've used statistics to find pricing anomalies and made billions off of them. Today, Wall Street hires them in droves and labels them quants.
Exhibit A is James Simons of Renaissance Technologies. He hired only mathematicians and PhDs from the hard sciences, but wouldn't let "traders" or MBAs in the front door. Renaissance has had perhaps the highest return to investors of all hedge funds even though its fees were also the highest, perhaps by at least one order of magnitude. Simons pioneered high frequency trading in order to take advantage of the pricing anomalies (often only fractions of a penny) that he found. His salary at Renaissance was 2-3 billion per year.
Another mathematician made billions after discovering that warrants were mispriced. In order to determine their "correct" price, he independently developed a formula that was simultaneously developed by Black and Scholes. Their formula, known as the Black-Scholes formula, is now used universally to price options.
A client of mine made billions by discovering that many bonds were mispriced. Until he discovered the anomaly, many junk bonds were priced as junk bonds, even though some were secured by first mortgages on real estate. He realized that they should have been priced as first mortgages despite the lack of credit worthiness of the borrower.
Your knowledge of statistics might enable you to discover and take advantage of other pricing anomalies. Of course, every shop on Wall Street is doing it now, and it requires a statistical analysis of vast amounts of data. What you learned in your MBA classes may be completely irrelevant to that approach.