- Joined
- 4/22/11
- Messages
- 10
- Points
- 13
In a few weeks I will be two thirds of the way through my MS in mathematical finance. I would like to inform prospective students about what a masters in financial engineering really means, and what it was intended for.
First, we need to think a bit about the history of the field, and how the MFE actually came about. Recall, the MFE is a degree which has been around for at most 30 years. Why was it invented? In the last half century, we have seen the birth and development of highly involved mathematical models of options pricing. It must have been very taxing for the physicists and mathematicians to try to convey these ideas to their co-workers who had only a basic high school working knowledge of mathematics. In fact, it was very troubling to them. It was so troubling that they began cooperating with universities to make it less of an annoyance -- the MFE was born. Read that again, the MFE was designed to improve the IQ of those beneath the quants. It was not designed to educate quants, but to improve their subservient coworkers. Those contemplating beginning an MFE really need to understand this point: YOU WILL NEVER BE A QUANT! If you want to become a quant, you absolutely have to have a phd in mathematics, physics, or computer science. On the other hand, if you are satisfied working "for" quants, and making a decent salary 60-100K, then an MFE is a good option. I just wanted to inform some of the prospective students, so they don't have the wrong impression of where the MFE will lead them.
First, we need to think a bit about the history of the field, and how the MFE actually came about. Recall, the MFE is a degree which has been around for at most 30 years. Why was it invented? In the last half century, we have seen the birth and development of highly involved mathematical models of options pricing. It must have been very taxing for the physicists and mathematicians to try to convey these ideas to their co-workers who had only a basic high school working knowledge of mathematics. In fact, it was very troubling to them. It was so troubling that they began cooperating with universities to make it less of an annoyance -- the MFE was born. Read that again, the MFE was designed to improve the IQ of those beneath the quants. It was not designed to educate quants, but to improve their subservient coworkers. Those contemplating beginning an MFE really need to understand this point: YOU WILL NEVER BE A QUANT! If you want to become a quant, you absolutely have to have a phd in mathematics, physics, or computer science. On the other hand, if you are satisfied working "for" quants, and making a decent salary 60-100K, then an MFE is a good option. I just wanted to inform some of the prospective students, so they don't have the wrong impression of where the MFE will lead them.
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