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How Can A Student Of Investment Banking Start Practicing About Investment?

I was told that A student of investment banking can begin practicing investment by first building a solid understanding of financial markets, asset valuation, and portfolio management before investing small amounts of capital in diversified assets such as stocks, ETFs, or cryptocurrencies. Using virtual trading platforms or paper trading accounts is an excellent way to gain hands-on experience without financial risk, while regularly following market news, analyzing company financial statements, and tracking economic trends helps develop informed decision-making skills. Maintaining a disciplined investment strategy, documenting each investment decision, and reviewing outcomes over time are valuable habits that strengthen analytical thinking and practical investing experience.


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Mark’s Answer

Hello!

Disclaimer: I am an IT professional, not an investment banker.

> A student of investment banking can begin practicing investment...

Are you already pursuing formal training/degree in investment banking? I'd think that some sort of specific training would be a job requirement.
Practicing: Yes there are sites that allow you to mock trade sample portfolios without investing actual monies. That can build experience with various financial instruments and investment strategies. Keep in mind that an investment banker would likely need proficiencies with multiple strategies. High growth can be tantalizing, but the bankers must constrain risk to acceptable limits. Target gaining hands-on (mock) experience with multiple financial instruments (equities, bonds, MOCK derivatives, etc.) and understand how each performs throughout various economic cycles (growth, recession, deep recession). I presume that research and analysis is an important precursor to trading, so learn that too.

Best of luck!
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Jason’s Answer

Yes. That is good advice. If you're looking for a start; here's what I'd suggest:
1. Learn more
2. Examine details
3. Practice scenarios

Jason recommends the following next steps:

Identify the basics and work to gain a firm understanding of them and how/when they overlap. Things like risk/return, accounting, diversification, construction of balanced portfolios. Generally accounting and finance are good focus areas.
Look for sites that let you perform simulated trading. You can "practice" and get a feel for how to execute and track trades.
Perform research on potential investments. Real research should result in a Thesis. Develop theses based on your research.
Review your thesis. Record results. Identify what went well, and what didn't. What lessons did you learn? What could you have done differently?
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