Many students who are studying investment now have not taken the time to learn the knowledge of investment when they apply for the college entrance examination. So I was admitted to the investment major of the university without knowing what courses to study, what job I can find after graduation and the employment prospect of the investment major.
After I really entered the university classroom, I found that I really didn't have any interest in investing, so I naturally had the idea of regretting learning to invest.
Some students volunteered to fill in the form, but they were transferred to the investment major although they did not fill in the investment major. In the face of a major you don't like, it is natural to regret investing in learning. Seeing this, students should understand that online saying that investment science regrets death does not represent the voice of all candidates.
In fact, the investment major is not a tiankeng major. After graduation, college students can be bank accountants/tellers, civil servants (central state organs), civil servants (provincial organs), civil servants (prefecture-level organs) and civil servants (county-level and below organs).
Securities analysis/financial research, investment/wealth management services, bank customer service, personnel of public institutions, securities/futures/foreign exchange brokers, corporate business and other occupations. For those students who have the ability to work hard, the future employment prospects and development space of investment major are relatively good.
Why don't you learn to invest?
Some college entrance examination volunteers clearly want to learn investment science, but after reading it, they tell everyone never to learn investment science. Why don't they recommend senior three candidates to study and invest?
In fact, the main reason is that these students found it a bit difficult for them to study investment-related courses when they started to contact investment majors in universities. In this case, it is easy for students to feel tired of learning, and naturally they have the idea of never learning to invest.