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Thread started 05/14/09 7:31pm

Muse2NoPharaoh

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Business/ Finance majors inform within!

I have changed my major and although calculus scares the living soul out of me (almost) I'd love to hear your input on the field and the major.

Thanks in advance!

Well wishes and funeral attendees both welcome! lol
Well look whom I found dipping their toe in the murky waters! :eyeroll: At least offer me a damn cup of coffee!
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Reply #1 posted 05/14/09 7:41pm

PvMarchingStor
m05

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I'm a finance major. Calculus is bullshit in my opinion lol.
"What you lose in the fire, you will find in the ashes." -Creole Proverb
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Reply #2 posted 05/14/09 7:42pm

hokie

So what's up now? How much more schooling do you have to do for this? And what sort of job do you want to do?
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Reply #3 posted 05/14/09 7:48pm

Muse2NoPharaoh

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hokie said:

So what's up now? How much more schooling do you have to do for this? And what sort of job do you want to do?

Three ....I am open but I think I'd like to intern with a girlfriend who packages 401K's for fortune 500 companies for a substantial package per year. Gladly tapering down to the gentler end of the industry with the onset of years.
Well look whom I found dipping their toe in the murky waters! :eyeroll: At least offer me a damn cup of coffee!
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Reply #4 posted 05/14/09 7:49pm

Muse2NoPharaoh

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PvMarchingStorm05 said:

I'm a finance major. Calculus is bullshit in my opinion lol.

Anything you'd care to impart way either here and or in orgnote, would be very appreciated!
Well look whom I found dipping their toe in the murky waters! :eyeroll: At least offer me a damn cup of coffee!
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Reply #5 posted 05/14/09 7:50pm

Muse2NoPharaoh

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Also Jill, I can parlay this into my real estate license as a capable broker.
Well look whom I found dipping their toe in the murky waters! :eyeroll: At least offer me a damn cup of coffee!
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Reply #6 posted 05/14/09 7:51pm

PvMarchingStor
m05

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Monkey Business: Swinging Through the Wall Street Jungle

Two young MBA hopefuls, John Rolfe and Peter Troob, got sucked into Wall Street right out of Wharton and Harvard, respectively, soaked up the local color and left to tell all a short while later. The scenes are straight out of movies like Wall Street or The Boiler Room: The young associates nurse their supersize egos while their bosses try to crush them; they curse profusely and live large on four hours of sleep a night; they subsidize the strip clubs of Manhattan before Mayor Giuliani took the perk away from Wall Street.

But what do they really do for $200,000 a year? "It took our mothers six months to realize that we weren't stockbrokers, working the phones to sell crappy public offerings to unsuspecting investors," they write. "It took us another six months after that to realize that we were, in fact, selling crappy public offerings to investors." The only difference was that these two associates were shoveling the smelly deals to institutional investors, who then passed the bucket on.

Dave Barry couldn't have written a more schizophrenic tale. In a freewheeling narrative that alternates between the two men, Monkey Business lays out in exquisite detail how pitch books are developed (collaborative yet futile chaos dictated by hierarchy); how an investment bank arrives at a company's valuation (mostly guesswork driven by the desire to prove a company's march toward world domination); how to read a prospectus that an army of lawyers, bankers, accountants and managers have fought over in mind-numbing "drafting sessions" (skip everything except the financial statements). Then there's the story of a fruitless "due-diligence" trip for the junk-bond offering of an unnamed multinational wireless company, a wild goose chase over 12,000 miles through seven countries that yields little substance.

A year into their banking careers, both authors decide to chuck it all and get a life, leaving behind what they call a jungle full of commandeering baboons, dung beetles and busy monkeys. These days they work for a hedge fund, go home at 8 p.m. and toy with a Web site (www.streetmonkey.com) that pokes fun at anything Wall Street, from the relaxed dress code at Goldman Sachs to the demise of the Tiger Management hedge fund. The duo isn't working on a pitch book to take themselves public - yet.


http://www.amazon.com/Mon...0446676950

Great book. If you ever want to go into investment banking, that book will give you a little peek into the daily life of a banker on Wall Street.
"What you lose in the fire, you will find in the ashes." -Creole Proverb
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Reply #7 posted 05/14/09 7:51pm

hokie

Muse2NoPharaoh said:

Also Jill, I can parlay this into my real estate license as a capable broker.



smile

I'm glad you are happy.
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Reply #8 posted 05/16/09 8:01pm

Imago


[Edited 5/16/09 21:01pm]
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Reply #9 posted 05/16/09 8:38pm

Muse2NoPharaoh

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PvMarchingStorm05 said:

Monkey Business: Swinging Through the Wall Street Jungle

Two young MBA hopefuls, John Rolfe and Peter Troob, got sucked into Wall Street right out of Wharton and Harvard, respectively, soaked up the local color and left to tell all a short while later. The scenes are straight out of movies like Wall Street or The Boiler Room: The young associates nurse their supersize egos while their bosses try to crush them; they curse profusely and live large on four hours of sleep a night; they subsidize the strip clubs of Manhattan before Mayor Giuliani took the perk away from Wall Street.

But what do they really do for $200,000 a year? "It took our mothers six months to realize that we weren't stockbrokers, working the phones to sell crappy public offerings to unsuspecting investors," they write. "It took us another six months after that to realize that we were, in fact, selling crappy public offerings to investors." The only difference was that these two associates were shoveling the smelly deals to institutional investors, who then passed the bucket on.

Dave Barry couldn't have written a more schizophrenic tale. In a freewheeling narrative that alternates between the two men, Monkey Business lays out in exquisite detail how pitch books are developed (collaborative yet futile chaos dictated by hierarchy); how an investment bank arrives at a company's valuation (mostly guesswork driven by the desire to prove a company's march toward world domination); how to read a prospectus that an army of lawyers, bankers, accountants and managers have fought over in mind-numbing "drafting sessions" (skip everything except the financial statements). Then there's the story of a fruitless "due-diligence" trip for the junk-bond offering of an unnamed multinational wireless company, a wild goose chase over 12,000 miles through seven countries that yields little substance.

A year into their banking careers, both authors decide to chuck it all and get a life, leaving behind what they call a jungle full of commandeering baboons, dung beetles and busy monkeys. These days they work for a hedge fund, go home at 8 p.m. and toy with a Web site (www.streetmonkey.com) that pokes fun at anything Wall Street, from the relaxed dress code at Goldman Sachs to the demise of the Tiger Management hedge fund. The duo isn't working on a pitch book to take themselves public - yet.


http://www.amazon.com/Mon...0446676950

Great book. If you ever want to go into investment banking, that book will give you a little peek into the daily life of a banker on Wall Street.


ROFLMAO! "dung beetles" It doesn't take an MBA from an Ivy league school to guess that out, huh? lol lol Great read.

Anything you can note my way that may make the educational journey easier would be much appreciated!
Well look whom I found dipping their toe in the murky waters! :eyeroll: At least offer me a damn cup of coffee!
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Reply #10 posted 05/16/09 8:42pm

Muse2NoPharaoh

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DANIEL! Get the crap off my thread!!!!!

whofarted
Well look whom I found dipping their toe in the murky waters! :eyeroll: At least offer me a damn cup of coffee!
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Reply #11 posted 05/16/09 8:44pm

Muse2NoPharaoh

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hokie said:

Muse2NoPharaoh said:

Also Jill, I can parlay this into my real estate license as a capable broker.



smile

I'm glad you are happy.


At this point all I have is a headache. I am debating over 2-3 classes for the summer break!
Well look whom I found dipping their toe in the murky waters! :eyeroll: At least offer me a damn cup of coffee!
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Reply #12 posted 05/16/09 9:28pm

Muse2NoPharaoh

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Imago said:


[Edited 5/16/09 21:01pm]

That looks very disconected but none the less, better then the last shot... buddy, ol pal, ol friend of mine!

P.S. you have a one tract mind my friend, anything I said about you being a switch hitter is pure malarky! wink
Well look whom I found dipping their toe in the murky waters! :eyeroll: At least offer me a damn cup of coffee!
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