Dear all,
I will get a PhD in mathematical physics in France in about one year (more precisely, conformal field theory and its relations to pure mathematics). Prior to my PhD, I studied theoretical physics in a top 3 school in France. Today, I feel like I need new (and concrete) challenges, and working as a quant in an investment bank sounds challenging and exciting to me. I read several stories from PhD people in statistics or experimental particle physics who got a quant job, but my case is different. I will try to list some good and bad points about me.
(Huge) Bad points: Right now, I do not have most of the tools required for a quant. I didn't do any proba/stats/stochastic processes during my PhD. I also didn't do any programming (I use Mathematica every day for computations, though). Before my PhD, I did some projects using C++/Python, and I did an undergrad internship in particle physics doing data analysis at the LHC. I still have some basic notions, but I forgot a lot of stuff.
(Subjective) Good points:
I'm quite confident about the other maths (linear algebra, analysis, etc). I am not afraid about working a lot to progress on the other domains, and I think I can learn quickly. I also teached maths and physics during the PhD, which gave me some communication skills. I don't really care about where will I work in the future.
Questions:
1) Do I really have a chance to get a quant job, compared to the people who have a huge statistics/programming background ?
2) How would you prepare yourself to get a quant job in my situation? I am thinking to work by solving exercises given in interviews (I bought the book "Frequently asked questions in Quantitative Finance"), and probably buying a book dealing with finance in general, for the culture. Do you have other advices to be well prepared?
3) Let's say I have my chances, and that I have to start working September 2019. When would you start applying?
Any advice would be highly appreciated!
I will get a PhD in mathematical physics in France in about one year (more precisely, conformal field theory and its relations to pure mathematics). Prior to my PhD, I studied theoretical physics in a top 3 school in France. Today, I feel like I need new (and concrete) challenges, and working as a quant in an investment bank sounds challenging and exciting to me. I read several stories from PhD people in statistics or experimental particle physics who got a quant job, but my case is different. I will try to list some good and bad points about me.
(Huge) Bad points: Right now, I do not have most of the tools required for a quant. I didn't do any proba/stats/stochastic processes during my PhD. I also didn't do any programming (I use Mathematica every day for computations, though). Before my PhD, I did some projects using C++/Python, and I did an undergrad internship in particle physics doing data analysis at the LHC. I still have some basic notions, but I forgot a lot of stuff.
(Subjective) Good points:
I'm quite confident about the other maths (linear algebra, analysis, etc). I am not afraid about working a lot to progress on the other domains, and I think I can learn quickly. I also teached maths and physics during the PhD, which gave me some communication skills. I don't really care about where will I work in the future.
Questions:
1) Do I really have a chance to get a quant job, compared to the people who have a huge statistics/programming background ?
2) How would you prepare yourself to get a quant job in my situation? I am thinking to work by solving exercises given in interviews (I bought the book "Frequently asked questions in Quantitative Finance"), and probably buying a book dealing with finance in general, for the culture. Do you have other advices to be well prepared?
3) Let's say I have my chances, and that I have to start working September 2019. When would you start applying?
Any advice would be highly appreciated!