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Considering enrolling in DONGBEI UNIVERSITY OF FINANCE&ECONOMICS

Given my background ( outlined here: http://autoadmit.com/th...
Tantric Resort Goal In Life
  07/11/12
What is it exactly that you want to do in commodities?
Fuchsia seedy mexican
  07/11/12
Ultimately be on the buyside and invest globally in farmland...
Tantric Resort Goal In Life
  07/11/12
I am not familiar with physical commodity trading houses, bu...
Fuchsia seedy mexican
  07/11/12
Of course. I like energy a lot, but I am personally interest...
Tantric Resort Goal In Life
  07/11/12
That seems interesting. Do you have financial backers? Are y...
Fuchsia seedy mexican
  07/11/12
No financial backers yet. In theory yes, I have wealthy fami...
Tantric Resort Goal In Life
  07/11/12
This is the site to the National Grain and Feed Association:...
Fuchsia seedy mexican
  07/11/12
Oh that's awesome. I will check that out, looks to be very i...
Tantric Resort Goal In Life
  07/11/12
FWIW, Dalian also has a TON of Russian and Eastern European ...
Tantric Resort Goal In Life
  07/11/12
...
Tantric Resort Goal In Life
  07/11/12
...
Tantric Resort Goal In Life
  07/11/12
...
Tantric Resort Goal In Life
  07/11/12
Greetings, I'm not trying to be a jackass here I would love...
Amber appetizing windowlicker bawdyhouse
  07/11/12
My value add is far from an HYPSM degree. To be clear, I wou...
Tantric Resort Goal In Life
  07/11/12
Greetings, Brother, I think you have a better head on your ...
Amber appetizing windowlicker bawdyhouse
  07/11/12
TYVM for the tips. I will look into Anki. I will be in NYC f...
Tantric Resort Goal In Life
  07/11/12
Greetings, Anki uses "spaced learning repetition,"...
Amber appetizing windowlicker bawdyhouse
  07/11/12
Ah yes I am familiar with spaced repetition. Seems incredibl...
Tantric Resort Goal In Life
  07/11/12
Greetings, I studied for two years in formal classes before...
Amber appetizing windowlicker bawdyhouse
  07/11/12
Thank you for the kind words. I am also thinking long-ter...
Tantric Resort Goal In Life
  07/11/12
Greetings, Oh yeah brother, my kids are def growing up spea...
Amber appetizing windowlicker bawdyhouse
  07/11/12
...
Tantric Resort Goal In Life
  07/11/12
why do you want to work in china long-term? is it the appeal...
Shimmering laser beams
  07/11/12
No. See my response to Greetings above. Asia is the future...
Tantric Resort Goal In Life
  07/11/12
but how does that affect you as an individual? even if ch...
Shimmering laser beams
  07/11/12
I don't agree with your statement. I think crafty foreigners...
Tantric Resort Goal In Life
  07/11/12
Greetings, FWIW this is probably right. I have a super flam...
Amber appetizing windowlicker bawdyhouse
  07/11/12
tbf, this is an outdated view. nobody is going to "rule...
Orchid hospital
  07/11/12
Bro, don't do it: Northeastern is ranked 53rd out of the top...
Silver Property
  07/11/12
...
ebony violent people who are hurt
  09/12/18
180 plan.
Alcoholic carmine senate
  07/11/12
TY. Any thoughts/additions?
Tantric Resort Goal In Life
  07/11/12
...
Tantric Resort Goal In Life
  07/11/12
...
Tantric Resort Goal In Life
  07/12/12
Slept on this and I still think it's a good idea. I think I ...
Tantric Resort Goal In Life
  07/12/12
...
Tantric Resort Goal In Life
  07/12/12
Seriously? I know it sounds all fantastic and great in theor...
smoky passionate crackhouse
  07/12/12


Poast new message in this thread



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Date: July 11th, 2012 10:28 AM
Author: Tantric Resort Goal In Life

Given my background ( outlined here: http://autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=1976107&mc=141&forum_id=2#21060349 ) would this be a shrewd move to begin a career in Asia?

I am taking Mandarin lessons, weekly, and studying daily, but the program I'd initially enroll in is English language: http://english.dufe.edu.cn/admissions/undergraduate/english/

I would do the BSc in International Business Management.

Add'l considerations

*Tuition and living expenses are incredibly cheap and I already have enough money in the bank to do this without incurring any debt.

*I want to work in commodities and Dalian is the center of the commodity trade in Northeast China (has the Dailan Commodities Exchange, tons of businesses that operate out of the port, shipping/logistics center).

*I want to work in Asia, in agricultural commodities/physical commodities, long-term, and wish to cultivate connections there ASAP.

Any thoughts??

TYIA.

(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=1991212&forum_id=2#21061254)



Reply Favorite

Date: July 11th, 2012 10:30 AM
Author: Fuchsia seedy mexican

What is it exactly that you want to do in commodities?

(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=1991212&forum_id=2#21061260)



Reply Favorite

Date: July 11th, 2012 10:34 AM
Author: Tantric Resort Goal In Life

Ultimately be on the buyside and invest globally in farmland, water and businesses related to the cultivation/production of raw materials and various soft/hard commodities.

I would love to work for a physical commodity trading house now that does a lot of business in emerging markets, specifically in Asia and Africa.

(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=1991212&forum_id=2#21061273)



Reply Favorite

Date: July 11th, 2012 10:39 AM
Author: Fuchsia seedy mexican

I am not familiar with physical commodity trading houses, but I work a ton with FCMs, Pools, and a few producers that use futures to lock in their profits. It is a very interesting world, I find it more interesting than the securities side of the world. Any particular commodity that you prefer? Dealing with natural gas will be different from dealing with coffee.

Edit: It would seem cool to plant a few crops in South America or Asia, and just sell it off to middle men and use futures to protect against a loss. My firm has a client in S.America that has a ton of coffee crops. He has a pretty credited life.

(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=1991212&forum_id=2#21061279)



Reply Favorite

Date: July 11th, 2012 10:46 AM
Author: Tantric Resort Goal In Life

Of course. I like energy a lot, but I am personally interested in building a career in:

1) soft commodities (on the trading side), like agricultural products (corn, oats, rice, rapeseed, cotton, sugar), palm oil.

2) investing in arable land, working farmland and water.

That said, I'm open and opportunistic. I like metals, am big on precious metals personally, and find base metals trading to be interesting.

China just introduced petrochemical futures to their commodities exchanges a few years ago - that could be cool. And there are still a lot of high volume, relatively liquid physical commods that are not traded on any exchange (e.g. flowers, tomatoes, grapes, pine oil) that might be one day.

(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=1991212&forum_id=2#21061298)



Reply Favorite

Date: July 11th, 2012 11:04 AM
Author: Fuchsia seedy mexican

That seems interesting. Do you have financial backers? Are you going to try to not get involved in the US markets? I am not familiar with the Chinese futures/commodities industry, but there are a few developing countries with robust or growing industries (e.g., UAE, India, Brazil, etc.).

Do you have any real background in these industries (other than your economic know-how)? So, in other words, have you ever planted any crops? Worked on a farm?

(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=1991212&forum_id=2#21061413)



Reply Favorite

Date: July 11th, 2012 11:08 AM
Author: Tantric Resort Goal In Life

No financial backers yet. In theory yes, I have wealthy family friends and my dad has wealthy clients who could, upon being "sold" an idea, provide capital.

I would prefer to do business outside of the United States, but I am not averse to any domestic opportunity that should arise provided it is still international in nature.

No background whatsoever. Never worked on a farm.

(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=1991212&forum_id=2#21061436)



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Date: July 11th, 2012 11:15 AM
Author: Fuchsia seedy mexican

This is the site to the National Grain and Feed Association: http://www.ngfa.org/index.cfm

You may find some of the information on there useful, if you are considering taking the path you are talking about. It is only applicable in the US, but it does have some useful materials. Most buyers and sellers of physical commodities are required to comply with NFGA. So, a corn farmer in Ohio that sells his corn to an ethanol plant will be (more than likely) subject to NFGA rules, regulations, and oversight.

Some of the concerns that US parties may have, may be applicable to your future foreign business (e.g., margin, etc.).

(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=1991212&forum_id=2#21061471)



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Date: July 11th, 2012 11:17 AM
Author: Tantric Resort Goal In Life

Oh that's awesome. I will check that out, looks to be very informative. Thank you very much.

(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=1991212&forum_id=2#21061485)



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Date: July 11th, 2012 10:50 AM
Author: Tantric Resort Goal In Life

FWIW, Dalian also has a TON of Russian and Eastern European girls. This is reflected in all of the nightlife reviews I've read online AND in Dongbei's own online brochure: http://english.dufe.edu.cn/publish/2011/0705/content/521.html All the pics of international students have pretty cute girls.

(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=1991212&forum_id=2#21061311)



Reply Favorite

Date: July 11th, 2012 10:53 AM
Author: Tantric Resort Goal In Life



(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=1991212&forum_id=2#21061334)



Reply Favorite

Date: July 11th, 2012 11:02 AM
Author: Tantric Resort Goal In Life



(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=1991212&forum_id=2#21061394)



Reply Favorite

Date: July 11th, 2012 11:40 AM
Author: Tantric Resort Goal In Life



(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=1991212&forum_id=2#21061587)



Reply Favorite

Date: July 11th, 2012 11:44 AM
Author: Amber appetizing windowlicker bawdyhouse

Greetings,

I'm not trying to be a jackass here I would love it if you could do this because I like seeing people get what they want: Why would an employer recruiting out of Dongbei opt to hire a monolingual (or at least not bilingually literate) when there are presumably an assload of Chinese+English bilingual and literate people there?

Is your value add a HYPSM degree or something?

(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=1991212&forum_id=2#21061607)



Reply Favorite

Date: July 11th, 2012 11:58 AM
Author: Tantric Resort Goal In Life

My value add is far from an HYPSM degree. To be clear, I would be going there to earn an undergraduate degree.

For me, the experience wouldn't be for the purpose of securing a job. That said, it would be a vital part of the "journey". It would be more about having a platform to actually cultivate connections (through school, internships, networking) that could, in theory, land me a job - but more important and relevant to my interests, come in handy in an entrepreneurial capacity down the road.

I want to do business in Asia. I want to work in commodities. I don't know what better thing I can do than earn a degree from a Chinese university, make connections there, achieve fluency in the language and break into the business in any capacity.

A certain level of tenacity is required for this but I think my business experience and soft skills will come in handy. In the interim, I would plan on developing contacts with ex-pats, specifically Americas and English folk, living in Dalian, almost certainly working in finance and commodities.

Jim Rogers was quoted as saying that, if were young and mobile today, he would do that. Move to Northeast China, where living and education is very cheap, business is growing rapidly and start establishing roots, while maintaining his American citizenship. He actually said that he would try and get a job at the Dalian Commodity Exchange "even mopping the floors... do what you have to do, go drink beers with the guys after work."

That's appealing to me. Throughout history, successful people have always moved to where the capital is. Where the assets are. That isn't the west anymore, we're seeing that now. The trend will only continue as population growth exponentially increases in Asia, Africa and other frontier/emerging markets, and capital flows there, their middle class grows to 9 figures and they continue to save $$$ and grow as the world's biggest creditors while we continue the trend of being the world's biggest debtors.

(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=1991212&forum_id=2#21061711)



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Date: July 11th, 2012 12:07 PM
Author: Amber appetizing windowlicker bawdyhouse

Greetings,

Brother, I think you have a better head on your shoulders than nearly everyone on XO. I say go for it if you won't incur debt and don't have a baller job right now.

Worst case scenario is you end up back at square one, 0 debt, 0 savings, but are at least fluent in Chinese and can return to the US as one of the few white people who speak Chinese. I can affirm that skill in Chinese/Japanese/Korean is a very valuable asset for a white person in the US to have, even if it's just a soft skill that impresses employers but is not required for the job. People will just want to talk to you if you can speak one. Opens up so many doors. Plus you'll find when you're introduced to a new professional in the US, the introduction will almost invariably be something like "this is NYC Don, he does such and such, he's so smart he SPEAKS CHINESE."

As someone who has lived in Asia, let me tell you the worst part about your plan is probably that if you spend all day in English classes with English-speaking people, there's about a 95% chance you'll hang out with them outside of class, continuing to speak English, and you won't learn Chinese at all.

Your best bet is to get the FUCK off campus ASAP every day and be forced to speak Chinese. Go to bars, join clubs (uni and off-campus). Do whatever it takes to be in real situations with real people. Also, eventually you're likely going to hit a wall where your (lack of) literacy is what holds back your progress in the language. So from day 1, you need to be working your ass off learning as many hanzi as possible.

Don't worry: it does get easier after the first 1000. I remember around 1500 it got really easy for me. Anki (a flashcarding program that is hands down the best ever) will be your friend.

(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=1991212&forum_id=2#21061814)



Reply Favorite

Date: July 11th, 2012 12:15 PM
Author: Tantric Resort Goal In Life

TYVM for the tips. I will look into Anki. I will be in NYC for the next year or so, and plan on enrolling in this weekly course (http://www.fastlearningchinese.com) and spending 1-2 hours a day studying the language, so that - if I were to enroll in September 2013, or earlier in 2013, I would have some modicum of communicative capability that might make immersion a more reasonable thing to achieve while "hitting the ground running".

Part of what is making the decision so hard for me is that I do have an OK job. I'm a headhunter for Wall St. firms and am just edging into six figure territory now, sans college degree and 24 years old. That makes this decision a little bit more difficult, but like you said the worst case scenario is that I am back to square one, which wouldn't be so bad.

Did you enjoy your time in Asia? What brought you back here?

(Assume you are in the States)

(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=1991212&forum_id=2#21061882)



Reply Favorite

Date: July 11th, 2012 12:32 PM
Author: Amber appetizing windowlicker bawdyhouse

Greetings,

Anki uses "spaced learning repetition," which basically is this: Instead of going "did you get it right or wrong?" and re-sorting based on that, it asks you to select how hard you found it to answer the card (instantaneous, thought a few seconds, thought quite a while, got it wrong) and re-shuffles based on that. The next time you see the card is a function of your past performance on the card (e.g., if it was easy the past four times you saw it, you probably won't see the card again for a year, but if you got it wrong last time, you'll see it again pretty soon, like maybe before you even stop the current session).

It works incredibly. I focused hard on just reading (who the fuck cares about handwriting that shit when a computer does it all for you?) and went from struggling through simple shit to reading full-blown literary essays pretty quickly before I even moved to Asia.

Re your job, if you go abroad for a four-year degree, you're giving up 400K of pre-tax income plus all your savings that go to tuition. Say a total of half a mil. Are you really prepared to give that up? Is the upside that big when factoring in risk? Most of the time I think bschool is overrated for this same reason. People tryna cop dat preftigious sheepskin to the detriment of retirement savings often.

Re my time in Asia, fucking yes brother, it was awesome. I came back because I'm an American and love America. I was over there for university years ago.

I am in the states now, married to a hot surgeon from a politically prominent Asian family, am GC of a tech startup, and live within three hours of almost all my family. I made the right decision.

I don't know what your right decision is, but you're clearly thinking hard about this and not just being a retard.

GL brother!

(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=1991212&forum_id=2#21061976)



Reply Favorite

Date: July 11th, 2012 1:21 PM
Author: Tantric Resort Goal In Life

Ah yes I am familiar with spaced repetition. Seems incredibly effective and efficient. How long did you spend studying the language before you moved to Asia and achieved enough capability to read literary essays?

Yeah, the opportunity cost is what makes my decision so hard. It's a risk with reward that is not quite tangible, but still there and I believe in it.

Sounds like you've got it great here. Think you'll ever move back?

(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=1991212&forum_id=2#21062230)



Reply Favorite

Date: July 11th, 2012 3:17 PM
Author: Amber appetizing windowlicker bawdyhouse

Greetings,

I studied for two years in formal classes before going. Moved to Asia and was already conversant and semi-literate. After two more years I was coppin dat literary shittt.

TBF I have a knack for languages due to who knows what, my musical training or being exposed to Spanish, French, and German at a very young age through family?

I will never move back to Asia unless my wife's hands become deformed and she can't be a surgeon anymore or unless the US economy becomes so bad that even a lawyer and doctor can't hack it here.

I would consider a temporary posting in any of China, Japan, or Korea if I worked for a company that needed me there for a year or two, though.

I agree with you about my fortunes here. I never really think about it, but I was at my HS reunion a few weeks back, and talking to the couple other successful people I knew back then, I realized how truly blessed I am.

(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=1991212&forum_id=2#21062722)



Reply Favorite

Date: July 11th, 2012 1:25 PM
Author: Tantric Resort Goal In Life

Thank you for the kind words.

I am also thinking long-term and that I like Jim Rogers' school of thought ("if you were smart in 1807, you went to London, if you were smart in 1907, you went to New York, and if you are smart in 2007, you go to Asia.") Dude moved his wife and daughters there because he wants his daughters to grow up in a society that is motivated, hopeful for the future, building and the collective consciousness is anticipation for long-term growth and global ascension. Basically everything that America was in the 20th century and England was in the 19th century.

Would be pretty cool to have my kids (Americans) speaking fluent Mandarin and living between two worlds like that.

(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=1991212&forum_id=2#21062249)



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Date: July 11th, 2012 3:19 PM
Author: Amber appetizing windowlicker bawdyhouse

Greetings,

Oh yeah brother, my kids are def growing up speaking multiple globally important languages. Between my wife and I, we speak a few.

(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=1991212&forum_id=2#21062725)



Reply Favorite

Date: July 11th, 2012 12:01 PM
Author: Tantric Resort Goal In Life



(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=1991212&forum_id=2#21061752)



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Date: July 11th, 2012 12:25 PM
Author: Shimmering laser beams

why do you want to work in china long-term? is it the appeal of ordering around an army of asians in their own language?

(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=1991212&forum_id=2#21061933)



Reply Favorite

Date: July 11th, 2012 12:33 PM
Author: Tantric Resort Goal In Life

No. See my response to Greetings above.

Asia is the future. I believe China will rule the world in our lifetime. I think there will be some setbacks along the way, but their global supremacy is inevitable. Anytime in history where you have a nation or region accumulating assets while the prevailing powers-that-be are incurring debt, a shift occurs. I believe we are in the midst of that transference of wealth now, where all of the creditor countries (those without external debt) are growing, building, expanding and having increased immigration and capital investment. The debtor countries, like the US, Western European countries, UK, Australia - will be OK, but we won't be running things anymore, we won't have the largest middle class and we won't have the dominant global currency, which I believe will be the renminbi by default because... let's face it, what other currency is as viable?

(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=1991212&forum_id=2#21061983)



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Date: July 11th, 2012 12:38 PM
Author: Shimmering laser beams

but how does that affect you as an individual?

even if china becomes the superpower, whatever prestige or economic benefits that might confer to the individual will surely be offset by your status as a foreigner (which will weigh more and more against you, ironically, as china grows).

(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=1991212&forum_id=2#21062020)



Reply Favorite

Date: July 11th, 2012 1:18 PM
Author: Tantric Resort Goal In Life

I don't agree with your statement. I think crafty foreigners can stand to benefit tremendously by positioning themselves strategically within Asia, especially as an entrepreneur.

(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=1991212&forum_id=2#21062218)



Reply Favorite

Date: July 11th, 2012 3:21 PM
Author: Amber appetizing windowlicker bawdyhouse

Greetings,

FWIW this is probably right. I have a super flameout friend from UG who went to a TTT LS. He moved to China on a whim when he couldn't cop JERB thanks to ITE.

He's now rolling in the dough as an associate over there at a boutique firm where his status as American helps. Married a Chinese girl, too, so he can even penetrate the culture, too.

(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=1991212&forum_id=2#21062739)



Reply Favorite

Date: July 11th, 2012 4:35 PM
Author: Orchid hospital

tbf, this is an outdated view. nobody is going to "rule the world" anymore--in fact, the only reason america was able to do so for several decades in modern society is because WWII absolutely assraped every other major power and set them year and years back in progress.

of course chinese is still the best language to learn due the very fact that china is obviously going to have the biggest economy pretty soon. but people who suggest there will be another america style overwhelmingly dominant economic superpower are full of shit and just throwing out soundbytes--we were lucky enough to benefit from the rest of the world being in ruins . i seriously doubt china will be so fortunate as to sit back and have everyone blow themselves up in WWIII

(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=1991212&forum_id=2#21063171)



Reply Favorite

Date: July 11th, 2012 1:06 PM
Author: Silver Property

Bro, don't do it: Northeastern is ranked 53rd out of the top MBA programs.

(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=1991212&forum_id=2#21062143)



Reply Favorite

Date: September 12th, 2018 3:43 PM
Author: ebony violent people who are hurt



(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=1991212&forum_id=2#36795640)



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Date: July 11th, 2012 4:24 PM
Author: Alcoholic carmine senate

180 plan.

(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=1991212&forum_id=2#21063104)



Reply Favorite

Date: July 11th, 2012 5:19 PM
Author: Tantric Resort Goal In Life

TY. Any thoughts/additions?

(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=1991212&forum_id=2#21063475)



Reply Favorite

Date: July 11th, 2012 5:39 PM
Author: Tantric Resort Goal In Life



(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=1991212&forum_id=2#21063568)



Reply Favorite

Date: July 12th, 2012 12:44 AM
Author: Tantric Resort Goal In Life



(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=1991212&forum_id=2#21067010)



Reply Favorite

Date: July 12th, 2012 8:57 AM
Author: Tantric Resort Goal In Life

Slept on this and I still think it's a good idea. I think I want to wait a year and save as much money as possible before pulling the trigger and try to learn as much of the language as I can.

Also tough to leave my girlfriend and family. I may have to have them move with me.

(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=1991212&forum_id=2#21067945)



Reply Favorite

Date: July 12th, 2012 10:26 AM
Author: Tantric Resort Goal In Life



(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=1991212&forum_id=2#21068112)



Reply Favorite

Date: July 12th, 2012 12:19 PM
Author: smoky passionate crackhouse

Seriously? I know it sounds all fantastic and great in theory, but maybe do your research first. China is great and all, but the best jobs in China are still given to graduates of top western schools, and the locals with degrees from local schools do not consistently get the same opportunities.

And we are not even talking quality of education/network yet...

(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=1991212&forum_id=2#21068543)