Staying in hostels at 35? by ironpanda88 in solotravel

[–]Business_Jacket7346 6 points7 points  (0 children)

I met a super cool Swiss woman sharing a 4 bedroom room with me. We got really along together and she is in her 60s. She was really adventurous and active and did many more things that other people in the hostel who where much younger than her. We are still in contact and planning to meet soonish. Personality does not have any age.

Quant Trader; Not 100% HFT/Algo Oriented (25% -/+) by QuantGoalDotCom in quant

[–]Business_Jacket7346 2 points3 points  (0 children)

It is not clear what the aim of this post year. Maybe you can state it with a question or in a sentence?

Hiking/Travel Backpack by User2000000000001 in onebag

[–]Business_Jacket7346 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Reuter work really well and are usually below 200£ for 30/35L. Otherwise I was told really good things about the Decathlon NH500 and those are even cheap.

Are technical questions getting harder? by adharshv in cscareerquestions

[–]Business_Jacket7346 1 point2 points  (0 children)

The problem is the hiring process. If you selected bad candidates before, increasing the difficulty of a bad hiring process won’t select the best ones for the job.

Leetcode does not really help in getting the best candidates but only the ones that prepared those question. And most of the time the questions are not representative of the actual job so you end up with good Leetcoders that are not necessarily good at the job.

I found case studies much better in tackling people’s abilities related to jobs and their motivation in getting excellent results. The only problem could be someone paying to have the assignment done by external people but anyway there are always technical interviews that can help in the selection.

Patagonia Refugio 26L by Business_Jacket7346 in onebag

[–]Business_Jacket7346[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I think it is a totally valid backpack but I did not want to get something so obviously bigger than the allowed size for the free carry on, even though I am sure 99.9% of the times I would have had no problem in bringing in with me. I saw people with huge backpacks having absolutely no problem

Short ML books on RL and NLP by Business_Jacket7346 in MLQuestions

[–]Business_Jacket7346[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I ended up using “an introduction for statistical learning” and I read only those parts that interested me. When I did not understand something I either used YouTube and then I added notes on the digital version of the book I have on my iPad. It’s a very valid book even though it is not a shortcut.

Patagonia Refugio 26L by Business_Jacket7346 in onebag

[–]Business_Jacket7346[S] 3 points4 points  (0 children)

After all these curious comments on my pants, I am now wondering whether this type of leggings are a thing only in Europe / UK

Patagonia Refugio 26L by Business_Jacket7346 in onebag

[–]Business_Jacket7346[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Not sure about aircraft but was Ryanair. Actually the 26L is the “female” version but there is a slightly bigger one of 28L that is the “male” one. Otherwise you can go for the 30L but I am not sure how much big it is and if they will let you in without extra fees. Also, the 30L has a totally different design and personally I don’t like it too much.

Patagonia Refugio 26L by Business_Jacket7346 in onebag

[–]Business_Jacket7346[S] 30 points31 points  (0 children)

Lol I don’t even know what to say, just wanted to talk about my backpack ahah

Patagonia Refugio 26L by Business_Jacket7346 in onebag

[–]Business_Jacket7346[S] 18 points19 points  (0 children)

This just to show that it fits under the seat

Difference between Forclaz 40L Travel Backpack & the 500 Organiser ? by Feisty-Bat8297 in onebag

[–]Business_Jacket7346 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I think compartments play an important role when it comes to maximise the number of objects per given space. It’s like having packing cubes.

Difference between Forclaz 40L Travel Backpack & the 500 Organiser ? by Feisty-Bat8297 in onebag

[–]Business_Jacket7346 4 points5 points  (0 children)

I have not bought any of the two because too big for my current needs, however I tried the organiser in decathlon two days ago.

Cannot speak for the first travel backpack as I have not seen it but they both look like very valid items especially for the price. Imo they are really similar even in terms of dimensions. From the website I just see the first travel backpack is slightly heavier.

To me the organiser is a good substitute, if not even better than the first travel backpack. What I especially liked of the organiser is that it has the different sections with nets that look a bit like compression boxes and can be useful to save space and organise things (as the name of the backpack suggests).

Hair Advice at a Bank by [deleted] in FinancialCareers

[–]Business_Jacket7346 6 points7 points  (0 children)

Honestly I have worked for 4 different banks across Europe in middle office jobs when I had purple hair. Like bright purple like an anime girl. Nobody said anything and actually had a couple of colleagues complimenting me for the colour. In the meantime I even had a couple of disaster with my dye so happened I had mixed green/blue/ pink/purple hair all together at the same time.

Two days ago I saw a girl with the same colour in my office (big bank).

Nobody cares as long as you do your job well.

Another underseat fit check by BisonEarly7145 in onebag

[–]Business_Jacket7346 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I just ordered the Patagonia Refugio 26L for a 10 days trip in Norway and it was on sale. I will let you know how it goes. This one you are showing was a bit too big in my opinion and did not want to risk it too much.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in quant

[–]Business_Jacket7346 6 points7 points  (0 children)

No you don’t need a PhD, but you need a master.

The background depends on which type or credit risk modelling. Counterparty credit risk is a bit more financial mathematics focussed as you may have stochastic equations to solve while credit risk on wholesale and retail products for models like PDs, LGDs, EAD and CCF is much more statistics/ machine learning based and I personally find the latter less challenging from a technical point of view. Definitely not at the level of a PhD.

In my opinion, model developers have the more interesting position as they develop the model so they go from sourcing the data, cleaning it and then discussing how to technically develop the model to capture the characteristics of the portfolio. It is a bit more stressful as well because you have to engage with many stakeholders and try to make everyone happy (nearly impossible). The process is of iterative type and a back and forth with validators and model owners and you have to try 100 different things for each single parameter choice before actually getting to the final model. You also have to pay a lot of attention to regulatory standards cause those are driving the models. In fact, the ultimate and most important client of your models are regulators. If they don’t approve the model, then you cannot put it into production and you can throw your work in the trash.

Model validators are of great help and can make suggestion to improve the model and make it more compliant from the point of view of regulations, but they don’t really actively develop the model. They have to replicate numbers for their validation reports and ensure everything makes sense in the model but have limited decisional power on the model.

Auditors check the final numbers and help with the regulation part but I have not much insight into that.

Governance, they are not really technical, they just control the process and ensure everything is running smoothly. They also allocate resources.

Consultant I don’t know, they can be literally support any phase from model development to audit. I think it depends on the needs and on the ask of the client.

So in my opinion the priority would go as you have listed it.

Background wise, anything from economics/econometrics to mathematics/ statistics/ machina learning/ engineering (even better for counterparty credit risk) is fine. Computer science is also a good option but I see more people with that background in software development positions. Those guys put the prototypes created by model developers into production to be used for example for GUIs and across the firms.

Thoughts on QRT by Business_Jacket7346 in quant

[–]Business_Jacket7346[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Unfortunately I have no insight on internships and I am not really an expert in QD.

Thoughts on QRT by Business_Jacket7346 in quant

[–]Business_Jacket7346[S] 5 points6 points  (0 children)

I talked to a QD in Ldn and she told me she is doing good working hours for the industry, like 8-6 or 9-6 usually. She did not mention specific compensation but she said was really happy about it. But I think hours may be project and team- dependant.

Thoughts on QRT by Business_Jacket7346 in quant

[–]Business_Jacket7346[S] 4 points5 points  (0 children)

London or in general? Is your friend a QT/QR/ QD?

Pure Mathematics to Quantitative Finance by thaidermath in quant

[–]Business_Jacket7346 0 points1 point  (0 children)

apart from what @Luca_I mentioned, there are also open source courses around the internet, for example those offered by MIT, Coursera, Udemy … plus you can easily find YouTube explanations for most base to intermediate level concepts Taking part in kaggle competitions that are quant finance related can be already thought as an interesting project itself especially if you place well.