Hey,
I'm an undergrad right now set to graduate in Dec09 (I'm staying one semester past four years because I am a dual degree student here so it takes a bit longer). I am extremely interested in quant finance, but have pretty much been trolling the hell out of admissions profiles for all the top MFE programs and most of them actually seem sort of terrifying: "Math PhDs from Beijing University," "3.7 gpa in computer science from Brown undergrad plus a Masters," and not many people at all seeming to apply directly out of undergrad.
It seems like no one in this forum is all that willing to give opinions on admissions chances based on applicants' profiles, but can anyone tell me if I have a shot like essentially anywhere, or if you think it would be wiser for me to get some work in the industry for a few years as opposed to applying directly out of undergrad?
Profile
UPenn Class of 2009
-Dual Degree: BS Wharton Finance, BAS Computer Science at Penn Engineering, Minor in Math
-GPA: will probably settle around a 3.3 or so (not exactly "stellar", and has pretty much been going straight down since freshman year which is what scares the hell out of me in terms of my chances anywhere. I know downward gpa trends don't look good at all, and this semester has actually been a total catastrophe in terms of grades. Will try to pull it back up next semester, but it won't be easy).
-Haven't taken the GRE yet. Pretty sure I'll butcher the verbal, but reasonably confident I can probably get 780+ on the quant if I study enough.
-Internship last summer at Allstate Investments in Chicago as a quant on the Structured Finance desk, returning this summer as an analyst in the Quantitative Portfolio Management Group for 12 weeks.
-Engineering Senior Design Project: Writing a VBA program that calculates value-at-risk for diversified portfolios, using generalized pareto distributions, copulas, and a monte carlo simulation.
Considering that I literally haven't seen a single person apply directly out of undergrad and get in essentially with anything lower than a 3.7, do you think I should try to work for a few years before applying? If the answer is "you might as well just apply anyway and see what happens," I'm kind of reluctant to do this because undergrad admissions pretty much took over my life for a long time in HS, and admissions processes seem time consuming and expensive for application fees and I would only be down for all this if I'm sure I actually have a legitimate chance to get in somewhere...
Thanks for any advice!
I'm an undergrad right now set to graduate in Dec09 (I'm staying one semester past four years because I am a dual degree student here so it takes a bit longer). I am extremely interested in quant finance, but have pretty much been trolling the hell out of admissions profiles for all the top MFE programs and most of them actually seem sort of terrifying: "Math PhDs from Beijing University," "3.7 gpa in computer science from Brown undergrad plus a Masters," and not many people at all seeming to apply directly out of undergrad.
It seems like no one in this forum is all that willing to give opinions on admissions chances based on applicants' profiles, but can anyone tell me if I have a shot like essentially anywhere, or if you think it would be wiser for me to get some work in the industry for a few years as opposed to applying directly out of undergrad?
Profile
UPenn Class of 2009
-Dual Degree: BS Wharton Finance, BAS Computer Science at Penn Engineering, Minor in Math
-GPA: will probably settle around a 3.3 or so (not exactly "stellar", and has pretty much been going straight down since freshman year which is what scares the hell out of me in terms of my chances anywhere. I know downward gpa trends don't look good at all, and this semester has actually been a total catastrophe in terms of grades. Will try to pull it back up next semester, but it won't be easy).
-Haven't taken the GRE yet. Pretty sure I'll butcher the verbal, but reasonably confident I can probably get 780+ on the quant if I study enough.
-Internship last summer at Allstate Investments in Chicago as a quant on the Structured Finance desk, returning this summer as an analyst in the Quantitative Portfolio Management Group for 12 weeks.
-Engineering Senior Design Project: Writing a VBA program that calculates value-at-risk for diversified portfolios, using generalized pareto distributions, copulas, and a monte carlo simulation.
Considering that I literally haven't seen a single person apply directly out of undergrad and get in essentially with anything lower than a 3.7, do you think I should try to work for a few years before applying? If the answer is "you might as well just apply anyway and see what happens," I'm kind of reluctant to do this because undergrad admissions pretty much took over my life for a long time in HS, and admissions processes seem time consuming and expensive for application fees and I would only be down for all this if I'm sure I actually have a legitimate chance to get in somewhere...
Thanks for any advice!