AN ALTERNATIVE JOB FOR POKERHEADS
27 November 2009
Harvard expert says succssful poker players
could make great Wall Street traders!
The business news publication Bloombergs carried an
encouraging article for top poker players this week,
reporting on a respected Harvard academic who believes
they would make great Wall Street traders.
Brandon Adams, who teaches behavioural finance at
Harvard University's Department of Economics, says some
of the best candidates for Wall Street trading jobs are
the professional online card players.
“They’ve
essentially been the survivors in the system, a very
difficult system where 95 percent of people lose money,”
the 30-year-old Adams, who himself plays online, told a
Bloombergs writer. “Anyone smart enough and disciplined
enough to survive that system is probably going to do
very well in the trading world.”
The article
reveals that an increasing number of hedge funds and
brokerages are exploring the world of professional poker
to find talent and analytical tools, according to
financial recruiters including Options Group, a New
York-based executive-search company.
And
Susquehanna International Group LLP, the Bala Cynwyd,
Pennsylvania-based options and equity trading company,
uses poker to teach strategic thinking.
“Someone
who has made a successful living as a poker player for a
few years would more likely be a good trader than
someone who hasn’t,” said Aaron Brown, a 53-year-old
former poker pro who is now a risk manager at AQR
Capital Management LLC in Greenwich, Connecticut, which
oversees $23 billion. “They know to push when they have
the edge and they know how not to bust, and that’s a
tough combination to find.”
The Bloombergs
article suggests that skills that define successful
traders include a rational approach to risk, fast
decision-making under pressure, personal discipline and
a well-trained memory - all elements found in top poker
players.
Options Group personnel recruiter Simon
Satanovsky told the Bloombergs writer that he recently
received an order from a hedge fund he declined to
identify for online poker players with no financial
experience.
“Before, we were asking about GPA or
the Math/Physics Olympiad,” Satanovsky, a former Russian
national bridge champion, said in a telephone interview.
“Now, we’re asking questions about poker successes.”
Harvard lecturer Adams said disciplined Internet
poker players can be spotted on websites waiting for
particular games, not tempted by those outside their
area of expertise or financial comfort level. Their
self-control and confidence would be useful in trading
where large profits are possible, the probability of
going broke high and the competition formidable, he
said.
“In poker, people are used to not sitting
back and waiting for the fat pitch,” Adams said.
“They’re used to skirting the edge of ruin and they
learn the tools of how to do that.”
Susquehanna
has been using poker to teach its new traders since it
was founded in 1987, Pat McCauley, who heads the
privately held firm’s trader-development program, told
Bloombergs. The company’s founders played the game as
college friends at the State University of New
York-Binghamton, and the firm has held in-house poker
tournaments to recruit traders and monitor
decision-making skills.
The trainees learn to
use information they see in the marketplace to infer
what motivates others, helping them make better prices.
It’s the same way poker pro Phil Ivey, considered among
the game’s greats, makes bets based on what he sees
among his opponents, McCauley said.
“What
professional poker players are really good at is taking
this information that’s relatively subjective,
quantifying it and making it objective, and that’s what
trading is about,” McCauley said.
The ability to
write complex poker algorithms, which either run poker
Web sites or try to beat them, will get hedge funds
interested, said Todd Fahey, a recruiter who specialises
in quantitative finance at New York-based Exemplar
Partners.
“There have been a few guys that I’ve
placed in the industry that come from the poker software
side of the house,” Fahey said in a telephone interview.
“Two Sigma, D.E. Shaw and any of your larger
computationally-based hedge funds are going to want to
see people like this.”
Online Casino News Courtesy of
Infopowa
More news here.
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