By Charlie Clarke
As student studying abroad asks me how to learn the course I'm teaching next fall "Investments" independently. Someone told him it was "near impossible." I know that's not true, because I did it! Here's my advice:
I don't agree that Investments is a difficult subject to learn independently. You must remember that wall street is filled with Mathematicians, Statisticians, Physicists and Engineers that have no formal Finance training. That said, it requires some hard work, and more than that, a passion for the material, which makes it not feel like work at all. Additionally, it's never been easier in the history of the world to learn something on your own as there is a tremendous amount of material available from top institutions.
As student studying abroad asks me how to learn the course I'm teaching next fall "Investments" independently. Someone told him it was "near impossible." I know that's not true, because I did it! Here's my advice:
I don't agree that Investments is a difficult subject to learn independently. You must remember that wall street is filled with Mathematicians, Statisticians, Physicists and Engineers that have no formal Finance training. That said, it requires some hard work, and more than that, a passion for the material, which makes it not feel like work at all. Additionally, it's never been easier in the history of the world to learn something on your own as there is a tremendous amount of material available from top institutions.
The textbook we use is
Bodie, Kane and Marcus. Here is an MIT
course syllabus with lecture notes.
Coursera offers free
online classes with videos, practice problems as well as certificates of
completion if you end up taking it for credit. I would probably start there.
None of the courses really replicate 3302, as they are probably more
quantitative, but if you want to do investments as a career, that is not a bad
thing.
Bob Shiller's Financial Markets
course at Yale is online and has a lot of overlap with the Investments
course. This course is not that quantitative and pretty interested.
Here are some more
quantitative courses. I don't know your level of commitment and math
background, but there is a lot of info about professional investing in these
courses:
Computational Investing,
Part I
Financial Engineering and Risk
Management (this is the most mathematical/advanced)
For outside reading, I'd
start with "Random Walk Down Wall Street" by Burton Malkiel.
That's the book that got me interested in Investments. Check out
what's available and follow your interests. You don't have to follow any
particular order. You can learn a lot.
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