From Wikiversity - Reading time: 5 min
These pages are a rough draft for the wiki at www.astrobetter.com
Astronomy Ph.D.'s are highly sought after in banking and finance. The jobs that they do are a mix of the following...
Finance Ph.D.'s and MBA's are very heavily employed by the financial industry, but they generally do not do the jobs that physics Ph.D.'s do because:
1) Except for some hard core econometricians, they usually do not have the hard core mathematical and computer skills. And lots of finance majors don't like math, whereas if you've spend five to seven years getting a physics Ph.D., we can assume that you don't hate math.
2) They do not have research experience. MBA students learn equations and concepts from a textbook and courses. They do not have experience in situations where the textbook is wrong, and no one knows what is going on.
One thing to remember is that for research positions, banks specifically want physics Ph.D.'s. If they wanted a finance masters or an MBA or an economics Ph.D. (and there are lots of jobs for those people), they will hire one.
Self study. Go to Amazon and on the web, download material, do research. There are a few "core concepts"
One thing about textbooks, is that you need to read them knowing that a textbook is likely to be 70-80% wrong or irrelevant. Also there are a lot of academic papers that are also either wrong or irrelevant. If you aren't working in the industry, you have no real way of knowing if a paper is useful or nonsense, but the important thing is to understand the language.
The way you should read a textbook on mathematical finance from five years ago should be like reading an astronomy textbook from 1960. There is a lot of stuff that's wrong, but at least you can understand the basic language. If you study a book from 1960, much if not most of it is wrong, but you can have a conversation about why it's wrong.
You will need to be able to program C++. If you aren't an expert in C++, you aren't going to be one in two months, but the more you can pick up, the better it will be.
Math contest books are useful. Also, if you have a chance to audit hard-core statistics and probability, do it.
If you have a physics/astronomy Ph.D., then a MFE degree is a total waste of your time and money. MFE's might be worth considering if you have a bachelors.
The most important thing that you can do if you are currently a Ph.D. student is write a high quality dissertation and finish your degree. Also study hard math and do lots of computer programming. An internship would be helpful, but it doesn't have to be at a bank. Working as a programmer at a high tech firm will make you attractive to banks.
It's a bad idea to focus too much on finance, because no one knows what the market will be like in 2+ years. If there are no jobs in finance, then it was a waste of your time. If there are jobs in finance, then you should be able to get something based on your Ph.D. work alone.
Again, remember that point that for a certain type of job, banks want science Ph.D.'s. Don't turn yourself into an economist (unless you want to be an economist), because the types of jobs that banks hire physics Ph.D.'s for, use physics skills.
The other thing is that Ph.D.'s are not weak in intelligence. The thing that is difficult is social skills (i.e. how do you handle the situation in which someone says something you think is obviously stupid)
Companies will not post directly, but there are dozens of recruiting firms that will try to get you a job. Note that headhunters are like used car salesman. The quality can vary a lot.
All of this is with the caveat that much of the information provided is wildly outdated.