Sounds like a kind of ice cream! Sounds about right; your head is definately in the clouds. Come on Beau! Get real! Stop dreaming! _________________________________________ Oh my God! I just found a way to turn by tiny forex balance of $2423 into 44 million by Dec 27, 2013. Can I join you in the "cloud"???? Please, please, pretty please!
That's not dreaming, which shows how little you know about finance or economics and my field, financial economics. One class in micro and macro does not make you an expert in business, no matter how much you'd like to believe that.
Actually, first year micro/macro, 2nd year micro/macro, 4rth year micro, plus the Computer Math degree.
Yeah, that's all bullshit. There's no 3 year micro/macro curriculum that could compete with Centre College's Financial Econ majors.
Canadian degrees are 4 year programs. 20 full year math and computer courses + 2.5 full year courses of economics. Anyhow, all of this dick sizing is kind of silly. My focus is different than yours, but I have all of the tools I need. Actually, I forgot about the physics and geology course I took, so 18 credits of Math and Computer Science.
If you were really smart you'd have listened to at least talk to Schamp about getting his database. That much was worth the effort it took to get to know him. Nobody will ever make you that offer, so you may think fine for now, but when you realize you have no data to do real financial research then you might go to him at least for that info.
My apologies. I keep forgetting you are Canadian. No gen eds? Humanities? Religion? There's more to an education than math and computer sci, but maybe they figure you'll get all of your arts from the econ. Before pursuing the Computer Science major I'd made it through 3 classes, including discrete mathematics. Probability had DE and Mathemtical Modelling for Economics had DE as well. Straight DE I was told was more for Math and Physics majors.
Beau, I am just getting started. As you can tell from my education, I have a bunch of theoretical knowledge at my disposal, but very little applied experience that would be useful to trading. So let me develop those skills first. Once those skills are developed, I can apply them to any set of data that I may have at my disposal. In fact, for the immediate need, the data I have from FXCM is perfectly sufficient. I can expand from there as I become more knowledgeable.
General Arts were included and then excluded as a result of the extra courses I took. I started as a non-degree student at the age of 33 with a 1st year (Full year) micro/marco course, a PHIL course, and a physics course. The extra Economics courses pushed the PHIL off my degree requirement. Yes, I took all the pure math DE courses. I have a few discrete math courses, advanced abstract math, analysis, probability, statistics etc.