Hi
I'm currently doing BSc Maths and Economics at the London School of Economics and Political Science (LSE). I am confused about what my chances are like for getting into the Masters of Finance courses at either MIT or Princeton.
The grading system is that 70% awards you the highest grade possible; First Class Honours. 60% is second highest, then 50% and then 40% is the lowest pass mark. My grades and courses so far:
1st year:
I have completed a summer internship at an investment bank in Trading. In particular, I was sat for 6 weeks on the sterling rates trading desk (so fixed income). I also did 3 weeks on equity derivatives; volatility trading.
Other:
I was Vice President of the LSE Finance Society (biggest society at LSE), helped to organise an Emerging Markets Conference and I am taking a 12 week C++ course.
I am sitting the GRE next week and I'm expecting to do very well on the maths section (close to full marks) and God knows what will happen in the verbal/writing sections.
Do you think I am a competitive applicant for the MIT and Princeton Masters of Finance programs? My issue is that I'm reading around and hearing about people who are in the top 1% of their university, where as I would probably place more around the top 10% - 15% at LSE. I have looked at the QuantNet Tracker but not found anyone from the UK, so I'm finding it difficult to compare myself with them.
In terms of the essays MIT asks you to write, do you have any guides as to what I should be writing about? I am currently treating it like an investment banking interview question, but am I supposed to make it more academic? If so, how?
I'm currently doing BSc Maths and Economics at the London School of Economics and Political Science (LSE). I am confused about what my chances are like for getting into the Masters of Finance courses at either MIT or Princeton.
The grading system is that 70% awards you the highest grade possible; First Class Honours. 60% is second highest, then 50% and then 40% is the lowest pass mark. My grades and courses so far:
1st year:
- Mathematical Methods (multivariate calculus and linear algebra): 81%
- Elementary Statistical Theory (joint distributions, regression, hypothesis testing, etc): 86%
- Economics B: 70%
- Introduction to Abstract Maths (some real analysis, groups, proofs, etc): 83%
- Macroeconomics Principles: 70%
- Microeconomics Principles II (very advanced micro course, a lot at the Masters level): 64%
- Real Analysis (topology in R^n, metric spaces, series, etc): 56% - a big let down
- Calculus (mainly integral calculus; multiple integrals, Leibniz rule, convolutions, etc): 89%
- Linear Algebra (complex matrices, Fourier series, special matrices like Hermitian, etc): 79%
- Differential Equations (solving linear, qualitative nature of non-linear systems, Poincare Bendixson, control theory, etc): 76%
- Probability for Finance (measure theory, Lebesgue integral, probability spaces, etc)
- Quantitative Finance (forecasting risk and then Hull type stuff, will learn Matlab)
- Complex Analysis
- Advanced Economic Analysis (topics from Masters level economics)
- Principles of Econometrics
I have completed a summer internship at an investment bank in Trading. In particular, I was sat for 6 weeks on the sterling rates trading desk (so fixed income). I also did 3 weeks on equity derivatives; volatility trading.
Other:
I was Vice President of the LSE Finance Society (biggest society at LSE), helped to organise an Emerging Markets Conference and I am taking a 12 week C++ course.
I am sitting the GRE next week and I'm expecting to do very well on the maths section (close to full marks) and God knows what will happen in the verbal/writing sections.
Do you think I am a competitive applicant for the MIT and Princeton Masters of Finance programs? My issue is that I'm reading around and hearing about people who are in the top 1% of their university, where as I would probably place more around the top 10% - 15% at LSE. I have looked at the QuantNet Tracker but not found anyone from the UK, so I'm finding it difficult to compare myself with them.
In terms of the essays MIT asks you to write, do you have any guides as to what I should be writing about? I am currently treating it like an investment banking interview question, but am I supposed to make it more academic? If so, how?