Greetings,
Lately I've been thinking on joining a good quant programme. Looking at Quant.net's list I see that CMU, Princeton, Columbia, Baruch and Berkeley are amongst the best options, all of them having their respective strengths and weaknesses, depending on what exactly you want to do and where exactly you want to work.
Recently I've noticed an increasing interest in behavioural finance - I just learned there was even a new field called "Quantitative Behavioural Finance" - so, I was wondering if any of those programmes had strong bases on this particular field.
I've checked some of those programmes curriculum and I've noticed not all of them have a course on Behavioural Finance - or, at least, not specifically named that way. For example, neither CMU or Princeton have a specific course for Behavioural Finance, but Baruch does have one course named "Behavioral Finance".
Of course, perhaps, in the other programmes there might not be a course named "Behavioral Finance" as in Baruch, but maybe that topic is covered all over the programme. And that's my inquiry. How solid are any of these programmes (or any other that might be good) in terms of behavioural finance?
Thanks in advance.
Lately I've been thinking on joining a good quant programme. Looking at Quant.net's list I see that CMU, Princeton, Columbia, Baruch and Berkeley are amongst the best options, all of them having their respective strengths and weaknesses, depending on what exactly you want to do and where exactly you want to work.
Recently I've noticed an increasing interest in behavioural finance - I just learned there was even a new field called "Quantitative Behavioural Finance" - so, I was wondering if any of those programmes had strong bases on this particular field.
I've checked some of those programmes curriculum and I've noticed not all of them have a course on Behavioural Finance - or, at least, not specifically named that way. For example, neither CMU or Princeton have a specific course for Behavioural Finance, but Baruch does have one course named "Behavioral Finance".
Of course, perhaps, in the other programmes there might not be a course named "Behavioral Finance" as in Baruch, but maybe that topic is covered all over the programme. And that's my inquiry. How solid are any of these programmes (or any other that might be good) in terms of behavioural finance?
Thanks in advance.