- Headline
- Instructors with practical experience, how much you learn is entirely up to you
- Graduation Class
- 2025
Reviewed by Verified Member
SMU MQF program covers a wide range of topics essential to being a quant, from Stochastic Calculus to Derivatives to Portfolio Management. Many of the courses involves some assignments and/or projects in Python, so even if you are a complete beginner, you will have plenty of chances to practice your Python and work on projects that you can put on your Github.
The professors are good, with many of them currently still working at various hedge funds and banks during the day, and coming to teach during the night/weekends.
That being said, how much you take away from this course is a direct function of how much effort you put in. If you barely attend classes and simply leech off your course mates for projects and assignments, rest assured you will still get that piece of paper with "Master of Science in Quantitative Finance" and your name on it in return for the SGD60k you paid. As mentioned, the lecturers are full-time working professionals themselves, there is no incentive for them to fail students as that usually involves more paperwork on their part.
As suggested by the paragraph above, student quality is a mixed bag. You will find enthusiastic people trying their best to learn something useful and get a job, and you will find people treating the course as a 1 year holiday. Which group you want to be in is up to you.
On job prospects, admittedly most students are unlikely to work in pure quant related roles. Practically speaking, SMU/NTU/NUS probably churn out over 500 MQF/MFE students a year combined and there is nowhere near that many quant jobs in Singapore. A lot will end up in asset management, risk or discretionary trading which a normal Masters in Finance or Bachelors in Business student can do. That being said, having a mix of finance and coding skills will help you stand out in this difficult job market and if you come from a non-finance or non-coding background, this program will help you learn a lot.
As for career service support, they do help with resume preparation and basic interview preparation but please manage your expectations, they can't be expected to give you an interview for Jane Street or Goldman Sachs... Anyway, if you are hoping for a quant role, you should be practicing leetcode/hackerrank on your own, as well as practicing the interview questions from "Heard on the Street" and the other interview prep books. The alumni network of the MQF program is strong, and the school is within walking distance of the CBD, so some alumni do turn up from time to time for events, and you can learn more about the various kinds of jobs available out there.
- Recommend
- Yes, I would recommend this program
- Students Quality
-
3.00 star(s)
- Courses/Instructors
-
5.00 star(s)
- Career Services
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4.00 star(s)