April 30th, 2006, 1:04 pm
QuoteOriginally posted by: volareWell, it is very difficult to say :- Of course, in the market, a sales will only go from banks to banks whereas a trader can work in a bank, a hedge fund or a long-only fund.Thanks for your input Volare.Couple of remarks:At first, I was quite impressed to hear how hedge funds are now targeting sales people as well as traders. After a little thought it makes complete sense, so I guess we can add this one to your list of destinations for salespeopleQuoteDo you not feel - Don't forget that the word trader doesn't mean anything. Most of the traders are only market makers. When you are in that position, it is the seat that is worth something, not you. So basically, if the market is less interesting, that you do less customer flow, you are just in the average. Very few have the power to take real risk, being, as we could put speculators or investors. If you end up as a market maker (for a bank, on the floor, etc), you can earn a lot of money but you will basically don't have a lot of opportunities because nobody knows what you are worth.Well, once you start interviewing wouldn't people find out how good you are? Generally speaking, I am under the impression in most sales jobs you spend most of your time talking to/educating less knowledgeable clients in the hope of getting some of their business (with limited opportunities to learn yourself),whereas in trading you spend most of your time watching/trading the markets, ie. learning.