Of course, it comes at a price –
$26,000 plus a $1500 registration fee – and is wholly online.
Mr Nojin said the course content was originally developed in 2009 by himself and Matthew Brooks, a friend from his days at Bankers Trust, who was now Macquarie Bank’s Australian equity strategist. It has been refined over the years and has now been accredited by the vocational education regulator, the Australian Skills and Quality Agency.
While diplomas usually take a year to complete, Mr Nojin said the course would be “an immersive experience” and that the 1200 hours of content could be undertaken in six months.
“And if you are good at maths, then you will probably do it in 900 hours, and you will probably do it in 600 hours if you are one of the very top students,” Mr Nojin said.
“My mentors are Richard Farley and Ivan Ritossa – these are the guys I listened to every day talk about how to beat the market. And now I’m going to grab these young people and teach them the same stuff,” Mr Nojin said.
“My goal and focus is, of course, making money and being successful. And the fact that India has a goal of 50 per cent of school leavers entering higher education by 2035. Australia is second only to the UK as an international education destination.”
Mr Nojin said the
university sector was in decline and therefore organisations that were “new, nimble and ready to seize the day” would be ready to education a new generation of investment analysts