WHO HAVE BETTER OPPORTUNITY TO INVEST AND GAIN MORE PROFIT?

Is is loyal which people with financial/business/accounting preparation credentials similar to monetary journalists, mercantile analysts or accountants have improved event to deposit as well as benefit some-more distinction rsther than than people with engineering/science/literature preparation credentials similar to engineers, doctors or writers? What I do know is which they have improved bargain for finance.

{ 6 comments… read them below or add one }

radio80flyer January 8, 2011 at 10:37 pm

There is a theory called, “The common man theory”. Basically, no one has an investment edge in investing. One would think that stock brokers and investment analysts would only trade for themselves if they had a better opportunity for more profit. If you want investment tips, email me at radio80flyer@yahoo.com

robert w January 8, 2011 at 11:17 pm

not really .
read ‘the millionaire next door’
‘total money make over’
some people have all the b s of wealth and are broke too often.
many have not bling/flash and have the wealth.

Shake'n'bake January 9, 2011 at 12:11 am

If you’re specifically speaking about investing in the stock market, then investing acumen is more a function of aptitude, not education. A high school dropout can just as easily succeed at investing as someone with a PHD.

tiftiftac January 9, 2011 at 12:42 am

I accept your views but people with engineering/science/literature education background who are earning good money can simply take the services of financial consultant in investing their money & can further earn more money.

Dippin Dots of East Lansing January 9, 2011 at 1:16 am

think of it this way, if your in a career of engineering/science/literature, you presumeably dont have alot of time to study finance, stocks, bonds.. etc. But when you have a career in finance or business you are constantly studying those things and gives you more knowledge about it.

Giorgio R January 9, 2011 at 1:48 am

Found this i hope it helps.

Degree vs. investing experience
Do graduates of economics and similar courses have an edge over the layman?
September 2, 2003: 11:28 AM EDT
By Walter Updegrave, Money Magazine

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NEW YORK (CNN/Money) – In terms of investing prowess, do graduates of economics and similar courses have an edge over the layman? Or is what they’re teaching in school similar to what we get in investment management seminars and online in courses such as Money 101?

– Saffron Cheng, San Francisco, Calif.

Many years ago, when legendary value investor Michael Price was still running the Mutual Shares fund, I interviewed him for an investing story for Money. We spoke at length about his views on the market and specific stocks and, then, just to get some background information to work into the piece, I asked him whether he had an MBA, a graduate finance degree or a professional credential such as a CFA (chartered financial analyst). His answer: “No. All I’ve got is my track record.”

That experience taught me that one shouldn’t automatically equate academic degrees or a long alphabet string of credentials (MBA, CFA, CFP, ChFC) with investing acumen.
Investing success is a hard-to-define blend

That’s not to say that education, both in the hallowed halls of academe and through various professional organizations, isn’t valuable. I think it can help investors hone existing skills and learn new ones.

But in the final analysis it seems to me that investing success is a hard-to-define blend of knowledge about investments, an intuitive feel for how markets work and how other investors think — and having a healthy respect for one’s own limitations. All of which is to say that you can be a whiz kid when it comes to financial theory, but that doesn’t mean you’ll be a terrific investor.
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Indeed, I think that superior quantitative skills can sometimes create a climate of hubris that leads to costly mistakes in judgment, witness the 1998 blow-up of the Long-term Capital Management hedge fund that was run by two Nobel Laureates in Economics.

Based on my experiences as an economics student — though undergraduate only and even then back in the antediluvian days of the early 70’s — I found that most of the curriculum revolved around theory and had very little to do with practical applications such as actual investing. Nothing wrong with that. I think universities should focus on educating students about the fundamentals of economics and finance. They can always go to Wall Street and pick up the practical experience later.

When you go to online courses like Money 101 (which cover these and a few other simple but important fundamentals) or other sites that have educational material about investing, you’re going to get a lot less theory, if any, and a lot more in the way of practical advice.
Keep a few insights in mind

As to who is likely to be a better investor, one schooled in formal economics and finance courses versus a reasonably intelligent investor who picks up his or her knowledge online or through seminars or actual experience, I don’t think anyone can really say.

In the end, I think investing success requires only a relatively modest amount of specific knowledge about markets and investments. The more important thing, in my opinion, is that you arrive at a few key insights.

Insights like: It’s extremely difficult to outperform the market overall and maybe not worth trying (which is why I think some of the smartest investors go with index funds). And, the more moves you make in investing, the more likely you are to make mistakes (which is why I think the best investors focus on setting an appropriate mix of assets and then adhering to that mix rather than jumping from sector to sector or asset class to asset class).

And, finally, the higher your costs of investing, the lower your odds of success (which is why I believe the best investors keep trading and transaction costs down and stick to funds and other investments that have low annual expenses).

I don’t think how you arrive at such insights is that important. What counts is that one way or another — whether through studying economics in a classroom, checking out investing sites online or synthesizing it through first-hand experience — you do. Because unless you come to understand these and a few other simple but important fundamentals, I don’t think any form of education is going to be much help.

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