My internships became a meaningful way for me to explore potential career paths and understand how academic interests translate into real-world work. Rather than viewing them as short-term experiences, I approached each one as an opportunity to test my interests, build perspective, and gain clarity about the future I was working toward.
During my internship with Henley & Partners, I conducted research on citizenship-by-investment programs in the United States, the United Kingdom, and Australia, while also analyzing the financial structures of public and private college tuition across these countries. This project required me to compare economic systems, education models, and long-term financial implications, helping me understand how policy and finance intersect at a global level. More personally, the research gave me clarity about which country aligned best with my academic and financial goals, grounding my future decisions in informed analysis rather than assumption.
My internship in the stock market further strengthened this applied approach to learning. After completing an investor-focused course with Zerodha, I interned at Ena Stock Broking, where I observed how financial knowledge is implemented in real market conditions. This experience moved me beyond theory—teaching me how decisions are made under uncertainty, how mistakes become learning opportunities, and how disciplined analysis matters more than speculation.
That exposure directly inspired me to create my own financial news platform, designed to consolidate the information an investor needs before conducting fundamental analysis—including company financials, operational changes, and leadership developments. Together, these internships helped me connect structured learning with practical execution, reinforcing my interest in finance as a field rooted in responsibility, analysis, and long-term thinking.
Here is my Research Paper -
My Letter of Recommendation from Mr Bhairav Desai, Director -