Andy, I respect your opinions, but your logic in this matter is a bit tenous.

A simple calculation:
No one can predict the future 100% correctly, but assume there is an expert analyst, who can get the direction of interest rate, currency rate, stock price etc. predicted correctly 70% of the time. (Remember a coin can do it 50% of the time)
Now, if anyone is this good (without influencing investors and thus self-fulfilling the prophecy), why not simply be a trader - get rich and retire early?
Let's say you place your wealth in a prediction that can either gain you 20% or lose you 20%. If you are correct 70% of the time, you will, on average gain 8% each time you make a trade. You only need to make about 60 of these types of trades to 100x your wealth (1.08^60 = 101.3).
And please don't be cheeky and say that investments don't pay fixed amounts etc. I'm sure you still get the point: being able to predict future directions of economic variables even 60-70% of the time is a major advantage and if someone can do that, why would they work as an analyst wasting their skill?
I want to thank people participating in this discussion, it's been interesting.
Isn't an analyst's job essentially about trying to predict futureWho has the ability to predict future? No one. That's why most of us needs to get a job.

A simple calculation:
No one can predict the future 100% correctly, but assume there is an expert analyst, who can get the direction of interest rate, currency rate, stock price etc. predicted correctly 70% of the time. (Remember a coin can do it 50% of the time)
Now, if anyone is this good (without influencing investors and thus self-fulfilling the prophecy), why not simply be a trader - get rich and retire early?
Let's say you place your wealth in a prediction that can either gain you 20% or lose you 20%. If you are correct 70% of the time, you will, on average gain 8% each time you make a trade. You only need to make about 60 of these types of trades to 100x your wealth (1.08^60 = 101.3).
And please don't be cheeky and say that investments don't pay fixed amounts etc. I'm sure you still get the point: being able to predict future directions of economic variables even 60-70% of the time is a major advantage and if someone can do that, why would they work as an analyst wasting their skill?
I want to thank people participating in this discussion, it's been interesting.