I am a current student at the University of Chicago's MSFM program. I will be graduating very soon in December 2021 and will be joining an asset management firm as a quantitative strat. I had noticed during my own application season back in 2019-2020 that many of the reviews about this program are quite old, dating back to the early 2010s. So, I thought to pen down my own experience, which I believe could be much more useful to the prospective students.
Short review:
Amazing program with relevant and rigorous courses. Instructors are helpful and industry experts within their respective domains of quant finance. Outstanding career services. An additional bonus of Chicago being an international hub for finance, especially for proprietary trading shops.
University of Chicago is renowned for its mathematics, economics, statistics and the Booth School. Hence, it has a solid brand value and great connections with reputed firms all over the land.
Detailed review:
Background- I’m an international student from Asia having an undergrad major in economics and statistics from a top-5 university in my country. Prior to coming to the US, I had worked for like 2 years, much more related to economics than quant finance. I wanted to work in the quant finance industry rather than just economics + statistics. I had applied to Financial Engineering programs in the US and received admits from UChicago and a few other good schools within the top-8 of the QuantNet rankings. In the hindsight, it has been a wonderful experience. No regrets at all.
Program- Before the program starts, there is a 3-week refresher session called ‘August Review’. Topics related to regression, probability, statistics, etc. are taught. It serves as a revision refresher for those who have studied these topics earlier and serves as a great learning toolkit for those students who don’t have much experience with these topics. Since many of the firms start their internship recruitment in late August, hence I believe ‘August Review” does a great job of brushing up important relevant topics for the internship interviews.
After the ‘August Review’ comes the ‘September Launch’, which is a 4-week long session in which modules related to python programming and financial markets are taught rigorously in quite a depth. Just to remind you, this is still a pre-program phase. I believe ‘September Launch’ is an amazing way to prepare the students for the main program, particularly those students who don’t have much prior experience with Python programming and financial markets. Technical interview labs with different professors are also held during ‘September Launch’ which explicitly train students for the crucial fall internship recruitment season.
So, ‘August Review’ and ‘September Launch’ together prepares students for the main program by equipping them with required skills in Python, financial markets, regression, statistics, etc., and also for the fall internship interviews. Without these two sessions, it would be much more overwhelming for the incoming students to handle any rigorous Financial Engineering program and also the internship interviews which start as early as September.
Courses- First quarter (fall) has three main important compulsory courses: Portfolio Theory and Risk Management taught by Mark Hendricks, Option Pricing by Roger Lee, and Python Programming by Sebastien. Portfolio Theory taught by Mark Hendricks is an amazing and quite important course. Mark has balanced it perfectly between theory and applied practice. There are many real-life quant finance case studies in homework and for discussions, which really help to understand the real-life applications of quantitative portfolio theory. Mark cares about his students and is quite dedicated to his course. There are instructor hours, instructor reviews, TA hours, extra hours, and other resources designed by Mark to ensure students understand the quantitative portfolio theory and risk management inside and out.
Option Pricing courses by Roger Lee are just outstanding. I simply don’t have enough words to do justice with how good his courses actually are.
Python and C++ courses taught by Sebastien are rigorous (as they should be) and the learning curve is very steep. There is simply so much to learn in his two courses, it’s amazing. I came into the program as a beginner in Python and C++ and at this point, I feel pretty comfortable in both of them.
The quantitative trading strategies course taught by Brian Boonstra is again a rigorous course that involves lots of assignments, handouts, and videos. You could be a trading novice prior to entering his class but if you do the class sincerely you will step out equipped with sufficient tools required to start constructing complex trading strategies.
Financial Time Series Analysis class taught by renowned statistician Rue Tsay from the Booth School is an amazing class and is quite important in the quant finance industry.
The program also offers classes in Forex and Fixed Income derivatives, machine learning, and deep learning, market microstructure, multivariate data analysis, etc. There are also the classes in probability and stochastic calculus taught by respected mathematician Gregory Lawler.
Career Services: The Career Development Office (CDO) at the UChicago MSFM is one of the strongest pillars and a big plus point of the program. I remember when I was applying to the Financial Engineering programs back in 2019-2020, I came across some reviews on the QuantNet which were skeptical of the career services at UChicago MSFM. Speaking as of 2021, trust me, the CDO at this program is WORLD-CLASS, amazing, and more than what a financial engineering student would ask for. Emily, Danny, and Alma work hard with students to ensure that the students land the jobs they want. My career advisor was Emily and she left no stone unturned to help me during the entire program. From helping me significantly improve my job search process, working on resumes and SOPs to multiple interview practices and feedback, Emily and CDO were always there to assist.
The Industry Perspective In-Residence (IPR) is a great initiative by the MSFM program, whereby a seasoned practitioner from the quant finance industry is available for technical interview practice and general consultation within the university.
In a nutshell: Great program, outstanding career services, rigorous and relevant courses, helpful and expert instructors. No regrets, just awesome memories!