Just to clarify one thing about Baruch, which I guess many would ask why would I personally rank closer to Cornell than Princeton. I have no doubt they have one of the best programs education wise out there and the location is a great advantage.
1) Look at any university/college rank besides QuantNet and Risk.net (ex, THE, QS, US…). You can find GATech, CMU, etc., but where is Baruch? If you’re are not from the US, ask anyone if they know GATech, UCLA, NYU… they would definitely say they know or have already heard of them; they will almost certainly highly regard you if you say you’re going for a masters there. Now, tell them you are considering joining “Baruch”. What do you think they will say or think? (I’m pretty sure it is not that different in the US). So, apart from the quant finance industry in US, which KNOWS Baruch, I’m sorry, but reputation wise, it is behind Georgia Tech and UCLA, which are great schools too. And brand name MATTERS, especially if you decide not to continue in quant finance some day in the future, ascend to a more managerial or client facing role or return to your home country.
2) If UChicago, CMU, Columbia or Berkeley were to reduce their number of accepted students from 100-200ish to 40, so that to have 20-30 students in class while maintaining/improving their teaching and CDO quality. I have no doubt that, give it 3-5 years to achieve “stationary stage” and you will have all of them delivering the same stats parameters as Baruch and Princeton in QuantNet and RiskNet rankings (simply because of less students approved mathematically improves several parameters and also because selective acceptance increases yield, brings the best students, and the best students get the best career placement themselves (period). This, ranking placement demands strategy, and Baruch is doing absolutely great (I’m not saying this is wrong or unethical, because I don’t think it is, I just think that it is a strategy that worked for them and even brought good placement results). They just don’t do it because (i) money matters more (they are doing great as is and decreasing the number of acceptants would decrease revenue), and (ii) they know rankings are subjective (parameters and weights) and are only one part of the program’s success.