Lengalicious said:
You say its not a career, I understand your motive but if you really want it to be is it possible?
No idea. It depends how history moves.
What I was told when I was an undergraduate was that the world in which you worked for a company for the rest of your life was gone. In the late-1990's, it thought that people would move from company to company and field to field that would be a good thing. The "free market" would make sure that everyone would get the job at which they would be most productive, and we'd all live happily ever after.
The problem was that there was this assumption that if you lost a job in field A, that you'd find one quickly in field B. Since 2008, it's a big question about whether that is going to work.
Hypothetically in today's economy, not 2018. Surely having had quant experience behind you for a number of years gives you access to other branches of finance with higher pay? I can't imagine you would be stuck there your whole life (in the case that you weren't made redundant), opportunities must arise?
If the world blows up, then I'm selling apples, and I saw the world almost blow up.
Imagine waking up one morning, going off to the ATM and finding that didn't work, and all of your credit and debit cards also stopped working. We were probably days maybe even hours away in a situation in which *no one's* ATM's, credit, debit cards would work. There's a reason I keep some of my wealth in physical gold.
The other thing about finance (and physics) is that you end up meeting people who came from countries which *did* blow up. In some cases, very recently.
I made a scary amount of money the last few years. I really don't see much point in making more money. My interest is to keep the job that I have, and learn more about how the world works.
EDIT: Also I noticed in some of the other threads that you say to others not to get an MBA if they already have a PHD in physics? Why is this?
Because there is no marginal use. An MBA is valuable. A Ph.D. is valuable. MBA + Ph.D. doesn't add much value above a Ph.D. and it might have negative value. The big concern for a Ph.D. is that you can't work outside of school, so if you have a Ph.D. and work as a dog groomer that probably has more value than Ph.D. + MBA.
Surely if you just said forget the Physics degree and go for an MBA the MBA must hold some pretty big value in the eyes of the financial employers?
Nope. Think of it this way. You want a box of nails, you go to a hardware store. You want a gallon of milk, you go to a supermarket. You want a bunch of corporate bureaucrats, you go to a "brain store" (i.e. a university). It's not that the gallon of milk you get at a supermarket is better than a gallon of milk you get somewhere else, it's that if you go to the supermarket, you can fill up your shopping cart quickly and easily.
One good thing about getting a Ph.D. over an MBA is that most physics Ph.D.'s don't want to work at an investment bank whereas most MBA's do. So if you get an MBA you are crawling over other MBA's to get a shot at a bank. If you get a Ph.D., you have to offer a lot of incentives to get people to switch. However, if you try to outguess the system, it won't work, because if you try to game the system so will everyone else.
I imagine you get quite different jobs from a PHD physicist if you now hold and MBA or MFE?
If you have an MBA/MFE with no Ph.D., the jobs are different. I think the jobs that you get if you get an MBA are awful. But people are different. I'm pretty sure that there are lot's of MBA's that see me doing math all day and it would be hell for them. People are different.
In that sense yeh the Physics degree was pointless, but then surely your opportunities are now DOUBLE as you could potentially make 2 resumes, thus increasing your survivability/stability?
Nope. If you have too many degrees, people assume that you can't operate outside of school, and your marketability goes *down*. Also I have two resumes. One is my finance resume and one is my computer programmer resume.
The other thing is that if you have a Ph.D. you can get more than the equivalent of an MBA with work experience.
AND why would a background in those particular liberal arts be of any use whatsoever? o.0
What job I will have in 2020 will depend a lot on "future history". Reading "past history" will help you figure out "future history." Also philosophy and literature is useful? What is the meaning of life? Why *do* I want a job? Poetry is useful because it keeps you sane in an insane world.
Looking for a job is a brutal, humiliating experience. Reading Kafka and Tom Stoppard let's you laugh at the situation. The other thing is that doing a job interview is like acting. It helped me a lot to think of an interview as an acting role.
EDIT: One more thing, I take it you have lived in NYC? Does/did whatever salary you made from this give you a comfortable life style?
Yes, but my life wasn't that much different than when I was in graduate school. I
One thing about working in finance, you *will* feel poor. The problem is that if you live in NYC or work in finance, you will be constantly running into people that make more money (and sometimes a *LOT* more money than you do). Once you make it to the 1%, you realize that there is a 0.1% and a 0.01% and a 0.001%.
What I did when I was in graduate school was that I wrote down a number, made a list of things that I wanted to buy, and I promised myself that once I made that salary and could buy everything on the list, I declare victory and consider myself rich.
Comfortable is relative. Anyone that is lucky enough to be a US citizen will live a life that most people in the world would seriously envy. In some ways going into finance will make your life much less comfortable. If you live outside of NYC, you hear about mega-rich people buying stuff that you will never be able to afford, but once you get their, you will *see* it, and you will be at the mercy of people whose job and profession it is to make you miserable so that you hand over money to them.