- Joined
- 9/4/18
- Messages
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Hi! I currently have admits in the above places. About my background- I'm a CS + Econ major from India with internship experience as a quant dev at a BB. I wanted to list down my thoughts about the following places and was hoping to know if I'm looking at the picture correctly.
Firstly, what options am I considering after grad school-
1) Quant Trading (seems fun but heard about the work pressure aspect. Also very selective at least among MFEs . So it's a dream role of sorts.) {Preferable}
2) Quant Research (heard there's a Ph.D. preference in the most competitive roles. Again, dream role of sorts) {Preferable}
3) Quant Development (given my CS background, this seems like a viable option provided I brush up on my coding (Leet, Hackerrank, etc) and stick to the finance coursework diligently. Also, realize that I need to work on the nitty-gritty of C++/Python beyond just the DSA aspects.) {Possible if I focus on this track ASAP}
4) Quant Portfolio Management (from my research so far, it seems like this role requires the standard Interview Prep (the Green Book) plus a diligent selection of coursework in the MFE programs. While this certainly seems like a great option, I'd like to take some more time soaking in the MFE curriculum before I prioritize this accordingly). {Possible if I focus on this track ASAP}
Given my preferences, from a pure financial engineering curriculum point of view, plus reputation metrics in general-- it seems like the consensus is Cornell > NYU Tandon > Georgia.
1) Georgia does have the option to add on a CS curriculum which makes it very appealing. How much does a CS degree matter if I already have an undergrad CS degree and just code on Leet and stuff on my own (for quant dev roles in particular)? (Also, Georgia is significantly cheaper.)
2) Is the Cornell > NYU Tandon thing accurate if priorities are course structure and career services? It'd be great if someone could give me a better comparison because I do have a scholarship from NYU which makes that an attractive option. Also, why does Cornell typically have a low employment rate at graduation? (based on the ranking stats over the past few years).
3) Lastly, while I do really, really want to work in the quant finance field, in the off-case that I do not get into the field post-MFE, is venturing out into other non-quant development roles post-MFE viable?
Please do feel free to correct me if I'm looking at this the wrong way. Or, just give me free advice in general. Thanks a ton!
Firstly, what options am I considering after grad school-
1) Quant Trading (seems fun but heard about the work pressure aspect. Also very selective at least among MFEs . So it's a dream role of sorts.) {Preferable}
2) Quant Research (heard there's a Ph.D. preference in the most competitive roles. Again, dream role of sorts) {Preferable}
3) Quant Development (given my CS background, this seems like a viable option provided I brush up on my coding (Leet, Hackerrank, etc) and stick to the finance coursework diligently. Also, realize that I need to work on the nitty-gritty of C++/Python beyond just the DSA aspects.) {Possible if I focus on this track ASAP}
4) Quant Portfolio Management (from my research so far, it seems like this role requires the standard Interview Prep (the Green Book) plus a diligent selection of coursework in the MFE programs. While this certainly seems like a great option, I'd like to take some more time soaking in the MFE curriculum before I prioritize this accordingly). {Possible if I focus on this track ASAP}
Given my preferences, from a pure financial engineering curriculum point of view, plus reputation metrics in general-- it seems like the consensus is Cornell > NYU Tandon > Georgia.
1) Georgia does have the option to add on a CS curriculum which makes it very appealing. How much does a CS degree matter if I already have an undergrad CS degree and just code on Leet and stuff on my own (for quant dev roles in particular)? (Also, Georgia is significantly cheaper.)
2) Is the Cornell > NYU Tandon thing accurate if priorities are course structure and career services? It'd be great if someone could give me a better comparison because I do have a scholarship from NYU which makes that an attractive option. Also, why does Cornell typically have a low employment rate at graduation? (based on the ranking stats over the past few years).
3) Lastly, while I do really, really want to work in the quant finance field, in the off-case that I do not get into the field post-MFE, is venturing out into other non-quant development roles post-MFE viable?
Please do feel free to correct me if I'm looking at this the wrong way. Or, just give me free advice in general. Thanks a ton!