The road to managing huge sums of money starts with a
few bucks
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[October 31, 2018]
By Chris Taylor
NEW YORK(Reuters) - Every human being
manages money, at least a tiny little bit of it. But there are a handful
of people whose job is to handle massive, titanic, mind-blowing sums of
it.
Vanguard Group’s Rodney Comegys, for instance, oversees a cool $3.1
trillion. To put that number into perspective, only four nations on the
planet have a GDP bigger than that.
But how exactly do you get started, on the road to managing such massive
wealth? We talked to a few prominent money managers about their career
beginnings, very far indeed from the executive suites of Wall Street.
Rodney Comegys
Global Head of Vanguard’s Equity Index Group
First job: Junior officer on a nuclear submarine
It was an enormous amount of training. For the first 18 months you go to
school to learn about nuclear theory. Then you have shore-based training
to learn how to run a nuclear reactor. Then you go to submarine school
to learn how to drive a sub.
After all that, I reported on board the USS Archerfish. You are
underwater for months at a time, so you are really disconnected from the
world. Career-wise there are two things going on: You are leading
people, and you run operations. So I helped lead a team of seven that
took care of reactor chemistry. At the same time I had responsibility
standing watch, and having oversight of the reactor while at sea.
I didn’t really get claustrophobic, because those ships are bigger than
people think. They are three stories high, so it’s like working in a
factory environment. There was not a lot of communication – we were only
allowed to receive 50-word “family-grams.” Thankfully there were never
any crises like in "The Hunt for Red October" or "Crimson Tide."
I think about three things from my time on the sub. I learned about
great leadership. I learned about relationships, because you have to get
along with everyone. And I learned the technical aspects of running a
sub, how to break problems apart and solve them. After all, you are
being given the keys to a $1 billion ship with torpedoes and a nuclear
reactor. That’s a lot of responsibility for a 22-year-old.
Omar Aguilar
CIO of Equities, Charles Schwab Investment Management
First job: Fixing Volkswagen Beetles
I grew up in Mexico City, and as a high schooler with no money, I had to
figure out a way to get a car. All of my friends had started to get
cars, and I was jealous because I wanted to be one of the cool kids.
Mexico City was actually a big hub for Volkswagen Beetles back then. A
big percentage of the worldwide production was made in Mexico, for
Mexicans. They were everywhere. So a gentlemen told me if I helped him
fix up some old Beetles, eventually he would give me one. That was my
incentive. After about a year of working as a mechanic, I got my own
20-year-old Beetle with a leaky roof.
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A U.S. five dollar note is seen in this illustration photo June 1,
2017. REUTERS/Thomas White/Illustration/File Photo
Back then there were no YouTube tutorials or anything, so you had to learn
everything from older mechanics. It was very mathematical, being able to
understand all the different engine parts and how they worked together. My
biggest takeaway was trial and error: You try something, and it may work out or
it may not. But it both cases you learn something, and move on to the next
challenge.
I developed a pretty good intuition. If you gave me a 1968 Beetle right now, I
would probably be able to fix it. But something like a Tesla, where everything
is electronic, I wouldn’t even know where to start. I have no clue.
Ramona Persaud
Portfolio Manager, Fidelity Investments
First job: Answering phones
The first job I actually wanted was at a dry cleaner’s around the corner from
our house in Queens. I had just turned 14 and I wanted to make my own money. But
I had prototypical immigrant parents for whom school is everything, so I wasn’t
able to do that.
It wasn’t until my third year of college that I got a job for Morgan Stanley,
which was just down the road. They needed someone to answer phones, and paid $10
an hour, which in 1996 seemed like a lot of money. I liked it because I could
make money for textbooks, and get some studying done at the same time.
I noticed they were doing all their trade clearing and settlement on paper. As
an engineering student, I offered to digitize their paper system into software
applications that were easy to use and would reduce mistakes. I figured I would
just learn how to code. My manager said go for it, and that was my introduction
to the world of financial services.
Immigrant parents are famous for telling their kids what to do, and my dad
really wanted me to be an engineer. But plot twists are what make life
interesting, and I found that investing was what made my brain happy. I worked
on my dad over the years, but before he passed away, he would still look at me
with a raised eyebrow.
(The writer is a Reuters contributor. The opinions expressed are his own.)
(Editing by Beth Pinsker and David Gregorio)
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