Hello everybody,
I have been following this site a little bit
I am about to finish my undergrad studies in Economics and getting very interested in Quantitative Finance. With my current background I am pretty sure that I will have a hard time with a Master in Quantitative Finance.
Therefore, I would like to ask you guys if you have any tipps to improve the necessary knowledge, in particular, it´s mathematics, probability and programming (I saw the thread with the reading list recommendations, but I guess these are for those with a math background); for instance, to let you guy, what you are dealing with: I took as many "quantitative courses" as possible, in my case: 3 maths courses (for economists), 1 stat, 2 econometrics courses - and the first time I read about "martingales, measure and integration" was in the book of Jacod/Protter´s "Probability Essentials". (The whole book is a prerequesite for the MSc in Quantitative Finance at the ETH in Switzerland).
So, I hope you guys could recommend me some real basic stuff which (I can use for self-studying that and) will give a solid background in maths, probability and programming (I know a little bit of R and Matab).
Thank you very much for help!
Cheers, SwissEcon
I have been following this site a little bit
I am about to finish my undergrad studies in Economics and getting very interested in Quantitative Finance. With my current background I am pretty sure that I will have a hard time with a Master in Quantitative Finance.
Therefore, I would like to ask you guys if you have any tipps to improve the necessary knowledge, in particular, it´s mathematics, probability and programming (I saw the thread with the reading list recommendations, but I guess these are for those with a math background); for instance, to let you guy, what you are dealing with: I took as many "quantitative courses" as possible, in my case: 3 maths courses (for economists), 1 stat, 2 econometrics courses - and the first time I read about "martingales, measure and integration" was in the book of Jacod/Protter´s "Probability Essentials". (The whole book is a prerequesite for the MSc in Quantitative Finance at the ETH in Switzerland).
So, I hope you guys could recommend me some real basic stuff which (I can use for self-studying that and) will give a solid background in maths, probability and programming (I know a little bit of R and Matab).
Thank you very much for help!
Cheers, SwissEcon