Hi guys,
I'm currently a UK undergraduate in my final year at the University of Manchester. I study Mathematics with Financial Mathematics and I have an offer from Imperial College for their MSc in Risk Management and Financial Engineering.
This is the only program I've applied to in the UK and I want to know how Imperial weighs up against LSE and Oxford and Cass Business School. The only opinions I've been able to read are as at 2011/2012 and I feel these are outdated.
I've heard that the RMFE at Imperial teaches you more quantitative aspects and practical applications than LSE but LSE has better career prospects. And apparently Oxford has better career prospects but a much more intensive course. The Imperial MathFin course is also supposed to be harder to get in than the RMFE and this makes me think that it is better suited for a career in Quantitative Analysis/Trading.
I would like some insight into how Imperial's RMFE is ranked in 2015 as opposed to the other courses with respect to prestige, career prospects and thoroughness of course.
Many thanks!
I'm currently a UK undergraduate in my final year at the University of Manchester. I study Mathematics with Financial Mathematics and I have an offer from Imperial College for their MSc in Risk Management and Financial Engineering.
This is the only program I've applied to in the UK and I want to know how Imperial weighs up against LSE and Oxford and Cass Business School. The only opinions I've been able to read are as at 2011/2012 and I feel these are outdated.
I've heard that the RMFE at Imperial teaches you more quantitative aspects and practical applications than LSE but LSE has better career prospects. And apparently Oxford has better career prospects but a much more intensive course. The Imperial MathFin course is also supposed to be harder to get in than the RMFE and this makes me think that it is better suited for a career in Quantitative Analysis/Trading.
I would like some insight into how Imperial's RMFE is ranked in 2015 as opposed to the other courses with respect to prestige, career prospects and thoroughness of course.
Many thanks!