- Joined
- 9/24/10
- Messages
- 2
- Points
- 11
Is it worth it to get an MFE at a non-tier 1 school straight out of undergrad if you have no prior (relevant) work experience, aren't well connected, and aren't some kind of rare genius?
I want to be a quant, but I realize that it's a competitive field. I'm currently a junior majoring in math and have good grades (3.8-3.9 without freshman year) at a state school and have taken or will take the relevant courses including a 5000 level math-finance course with stochastic processes (today we derived the black-scholes!), but unless I get some sweet finance internship or REU this summer, I won't stand out in the application process enough to get into, say Cornell or UChicago. Given that I can't take any finance courses till next year (I need to take an accounting prerequisite next semester), I think my chances of getting a finance internship this summer are slim.
I'm kind of deciding between grad school in math or an MFE. The only reason I want to go into quantitative finance (besides the fact that it's mentally stimulating and uses math/stat/cs) is the money, so I don't want to get an MFE if it means that I'll end up in some mediocre "analyst" position making the same money I'd be making at a scientific consulting company where I'd feel as though I'm actually benefiting society as opposed to just moving money around. Sorry if that sounds harsh.
Also feel free to give me any general postgrad advice.
I want to be a quant, but I realize that it's a competitive field. I'm currently a junior majoring in math and have good grades (3.8-3.9 without freshman year) at a state school and have taken or will take the relevant courses including a 5000 level math-finance course with stochastic processes (today we derived the black-scholes!), but unless I get some sweet finance internship or REU this summer, I won't stand out in the application process enough to get into, say Cornell or UChicago. Given that I can't take any finance courses till next year (I need to take an accounting prerequisite next semester), I think my chances of getting a finance internship this summer are slim.
I'm kind of deciding between grad school in math or an MFE. The only reason I want to go into quantitative finance (besides the fact that it's mentally stimulating and uses math/stat/cs) is the money, so I don't want to get an MFE if it means that I'll end up in some mediocre "analyst" position making the same money I'd be making at a scientific consulting company where I'd feel as though I'm actually benefiting society as opposed to just moving money around. Sorry if that sounds harsh.
Also feel free to give me any general postgrad advice.