- Joined
- 3/23/23
- Messages
- 14
- Points
- 13
Hello everyone,
Would appreciate some advice from people currently enrolled in MFE or other QF programs on this. If you recently graduated your advice would be appreciated as well. I want to break into quant trading, quant portfolio management, regular sales and trading, or quant risk management.
My background:
Is my profile good enough to be competitive for Top MFE programs like Baruch, Columbia, Cornell, NYU, Princeton, CMU, etc? My safety schools that I definitely know I would get into are Boston University, Stony Brook University, and Fordham. Their programs are good, but not target school material for applying to quant jobs at banks and hedge funds. I would also consider a Master's in Statistics, Applied Math, or Computer Science but I think it's best to keep my master's relevant to Quantitative Finance and Financial Engineering.
Please let me know if there's anything missing anything in my profile that would give me an upper edge to compensate for only having a ~3.7ish GPA
Thank you for taking the time to read this and provide advice!
-Mike
Would appreciate some advice from people currently enrolled in MFE or other QF programs on this. If you recently graduated your advice would be appreciated as well. I want to break into quant trading, quant portfolio management, regular sales and trading, or quant risk management.
My background:
-Applied Math & Statistics (quant finance concentration) and Econ double major at a top public university in the USA for Applied Mathematics (going into junior year)
-President of my university's Investment Club
-Current GPA: 3.69 but I am aiming to have it in the mid-to-upper 3.7s by the time I apply to graduate MFE programs since my most difficult classes are behind me. Ideally I could have a 3.82 max when I graduate but that could be wishful thinking.
-Relevant Experience: Teaching Assistant for Intermediate Macroeconomics, Summer PE intern, Summer intern at a regional Federal Reserve bank, aiming to get a quant or other finance internship next summer (not guaranteed though since they're competitive)
-Programming Languages/Technical Skills: Python, C++, Java, R, MATLAB, Excel, Bloomberg Terminal
-Coursework: Calc I-IV, Statistics, Calculus-based Probability Theory, Linear Algebra, Numerical Linear Algebra, Principles of Comp Sci (Python), Discrete Math, Data Analysis, Time Series Analysis, Lin Regression Analysis, Financial Mathematics, Quant Finance, Game Theory, Data Mining, Scientific Programming in C++, Fundamentals of Computing (Python, MATLAB, C++), Principles of Finance, Corporate Finance, Investment Analysis, Financial Analysis w Excel, Financial Management, Object-Oriented Programming (Java), Intermediate Micro/Macro, Econometrics, Data Science & ML in Econ, Money & Banking
-I got mostly B+s in the hard math classes I've taken so far but anticipate As and A-s in future ones based on prior grading distributions. I get all As in my econ classes.
Is my profile good enough to be competitive for Top MFE programs like Baruch, Columbia, Cornell, NYU, Princeton, CMU, etc? My safety schools that I definitely know I would get into are Boston University, Stony Brook University, and Fordham. Their programs are good, but not target school material for applying to quant jobs at banks and hedge funds. I would also consider a Master's in Statistics, Applied Math, or Computer Science but I think it's best to keep my master's relevant to Quantitative Finance and Financial Engineering.
Please let me know if there's anything missing anything in my profile that would give me an upper edge to compensate for only having a ~3.7ish GPA
Thank you for taking the time to read this and provide advice!
-Mike
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