<p>@PengPhils
My main point was, plenty of people major in CS, while Finance (or any specifically business related subjects) are left to Grad. Furthermore, unless the OP wants to become purely an investor of some sort, a specified skill set (such as CS) is preferred for a business career. You don’t get management positions straight away. </p>
<p>Even in investing, knowing a specific area can help you with investing in businesses regarding that area (although I’m not so sure this is true for CS). Overall, if investing is a hobby, self study a few useful concepts. If investing becomes a major part of your life, get a minor in it. If you want to be a businessman of some sort, take a MBA or MA in Finance after undergrad. In all situations, I believe taking CS is better.</p>
<p>ONE EXCEPTION. In fact, I am interested in the same areas as you, but my interests and experience lean towards business and finance than CS. While most of my college list is planned for a CS Major and some sort of business minor, my top college has a combined BA/MA Finance program, meaning I get a MA in Finance in 4 years. You should pursue this if you are extremely interested in getting a job in finance after undergrad, because this will help more than CS. (I do want such a job, and I hope to pursue a CS minor at the same time). </p>
<p>I did not mention this before and hesitate to do so now because, as I said, your interests and even if minimal experience leans towards CS rather than finance. If this is a changing point in your life, and you wholeheartedly want to get a job in finance, go for a BA/MA program in Finance. Good luck!</p>
<p>EDIT: Sorry, I just reread your post. It seems you have already been admitted to a college, in which case (unless your college happens to have a BA/MA program) you cannot take such a program. It would be insanely hard to do as a transfer due to the requirements. Final thought: stick with CS. Minor in finance. Best of luck to you.</p>