I still think there is a case to make that the Cost benefit of
CMU is perhaps even better than UChicago. Yes cost is higher, but so is the benefit. The curriculum (at least to me) seems much more "future proof" in terms of my understanding of the buy side positions im exploring - more data science, more ML, more computational finance. This makes me think that what you will learn at
CMU will prepare you better and in turn make you perform better long-term at these positions, hence a higher benefit. This is hard to accurately gauge though of course. Also
CMU has a higher average starting salary, so the increased cost is somewhat dampened through your higher sign-on bonus and higher savings your first couple of years of working.
CMU also has a
5-year career report which looks very promising in terms of buy-side prospects salary progression for
CMU students. Also interesting is what alumni report as the most valuable skill for QF success: 1) 53% say programming, 2) 28% say data science, 3) 24% say softskills... exactly what the
CMU curriculum is centered around.
This is what puts me on the fence - Chicago is very obviously great value for money (and perhaps even a better overall brand name than
CMU), but I think
CMU, even with a higher price tag might be a better long-term investment for success in the industry.