- Joined
- 4/20/23
- Messages
- 17
- Points
- 13
Hi all,
I'm currently pursuing becoming a (quant) trader.
I have a 3.5 and studying mathematics and economics with a minor in computer science. I've always wanted to get a higher education and don't really want to commit 6 years of my life to a PhD in math or econ, so I gravitated toward Financial Engineering programs.
Even though I go to a t20 school (UCLA), since my GPA is low (~3.5), I figured it would probably be best to pursue a higher education to maximize the likelihood of finding a top job (either at a BB Bank/HF/Prop shop), especially given the job market.
The schools I'm currently considering are MIT's MFin, NYU Courant Mathematics in Finance Masters, UChicago Financial Mathematics Masters, Stanford's MCF (in this order of preference), and possibly Haas MFE.
Do these programs look for any specific type of candidate? Thanks!
I was wondering what others would advise strengthening an application to these schools specifically. I have two relevant internships, and relevant quantitative Finance projects, and can probably score in this range for a GRE: Q=~165+, V=~165+, AW = ~4 (given my SAT).
Again my biggest fear is that I end up having a poor GPA (~3.2) and I am neither good enough to get into (quant trading) roles during the Winter2023/Spring2024 recruitment cycle, nor get into one of these prestigious programs. Any advice is appreciated. Thanks.
I'm currently pursuing becoming a (quant) trader.
I have a 3.5 and studying mathematics and economics with a minor in computer science. I've always wanted to get a higher education and don't really want to commit 6 years of my life to a PhD in math or econ, so I gravitated toward Financial Engineering programs.
Even though I go to a t20 school (UCLA), since my GPA is low (~3.5), I figured it would probably be best to pursue a higher education to maximize the likelihood of finding a top job (either at a BB Bank/HF/Prop shop), especially given the job market.
The schools I'm currently considering are MIT's MFin, NYU Courant Mathematics in Finance Masters, UChicago Financial Mathematics Masters, Stanford's MCF (in this order of preference), and possibly Haas MFE.
Do these programs look for any specific type of candidate? Thanks!
I was wondering what others would advise strengthening an application to these schools specifically. I have two relevant internships, and relevant quantitative Finance projects, and can probably score in this range for a GRE: Q=~165+, V=~165+, AW = ~4 (given my SAT).
Again my biggest fear is that I end up having a poor GPA (~3.2) and I am neither good enough to get into (quant trading) roles during the Winter2023/Spring2024 recruitment cycle, nor get into one of these prestigious programs. Any advice is appreciated. Thanks.
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