I have seen quants I respect say grads from the program are probably the best well-rounded quants mathematical quants in the world - except they are a little deficient in machine learning compared to their other areas. I'm not sure what the perception in the US is though. The rule of thumb is that if you want to work in the US you should just go to a US program.
You're on QN right now, we all pay more attention to the QN rankings. People here mention it, but it doesn't get the attention on this forum of other top programs. I agree that it should. However, it requires more mathematical depth than most QN people can pretend to have, so we won't get as much random Econ or finance people who get calc III and a first linear algebra course and want opinions on their chances. The website is clear about real analysis, numerics, and other prerequisites.