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You're invited to apply to Jane Street’s First-year Trading and Technology Program!
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Who:
First-year undergraduate students
When:
March 24 - March 28, 2025
Where:
Jane Street’s NYC Office
250 Vesey Street, 3rd Floor, New York, NY, 10281
Deadline to apply:
Sunday, February 2nd, 11:59pm EDT
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This March, Jane Street is excited to host our First-year Trading and Technology Program (FTTP). We are inviting current first-year undergraduates to learn more about what we do and how we do it through a series of talks, games, activities, and events.
This is an incredible opportunity for first-year students planning to study math, physics, computer science, or other STEM-related majors. No prior knowledge of finance is necessary — if you like solving problems, have a curious mind, and want to see what a career at Jane Street might look like — this program is for you.
Attendees will arrive in New York City on the evening of March 24th and depart the morning of March 28th. Jane Street will cover all travel expenses to and from NYC, including housing and meals.
Interested in attending FTTP? Submit your application here.
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APPLY
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The deadline to apply for FTTP is Sunday, February 2nd, 11:59pm ET. All applicants will receive an update on their application on Monday, February 11th, regardless of when you submitted your application.
Have questions? Feel free to reach out to FTTP@janestreet.com, and someone from our team will get back to you.
We hope to meet you soon!
Jane Street
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Jane Street works differently. We are a quantitative trading firm active
on more than 200 trading venues across 45 countries. As a liquidity provider
and market maker, we help form the backbone of global markets. Our approach
is rooted in technology and rigorous quantitative analysis, but our success
is driven by our people.
We are always recruiting top students and we invest heavily in teaching and
training. The environment at Jane Street is open, informal, intellectual,
and fun. People grow into long careers at Jane Street because there are
always new and interesting problems to solve, systems to build, and theories
to test. More than twenty years after our founding, it still feels like
we're just getting started.
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