HI everyone,
I'm new to these forums and have found it to be a pretty dauting task to sort through all the info provided.
Right now I'm trying to decide between two programs I have been admitted to. A M.S. in Mathematics and Statistics at Georgetown, and a Masters in Financial Economics at Rotman, University of Toronto. I just finished my undergrad degree in economics and math.
I want to get into trading, and am wondering what you would recommend to be the better program? The cost and length of the programs are essentially equivalent. With the Rotman program, there is room for elective courses in the actuarial science/stats and the math department, along with some good applied courses (Risk Modelling and Trading) at Rotman, and an econometrics and financial econometrics sequence. At Georgetown though, there is only one elective at the business school, along with a course in financial mathematics. At the same time, the Georgetown program will provide the better quantitatve background, with PDE, probability, numerical analysis courses, etc. I was in contact with a student there and he says the grads with a finance interest have done well getting interviews with hedge funds in NYC. One actually interened at NASA too which is pretty sweet.
I guess another question that is (very) implicit in what I have written above, is wheter there is a career in trading for financial economics graduates, or in the next few years, will everything be algorithmic trading that requires a more quant background?
Thanks a lot, anything is appreciated.
I'm new to these forums and have found it to be a pretty dauting task to sort through all the info provided.
Right now I'm trying to decide between two programs I have been admitted to. A M.S. in Mathematics and Statistics at Georgetown, and a Masters in Financial Economics at Rotman, University of Toronto. I just finished my undergrad degree in economics and math.
I want to get into trading, and am wondering what you would recommend to be the better program? The cost and length of the programs are essentially equivalent. With the Rotman program, there is room for elective courses in the actuarial science/stats and the math department, along with some good applied courses (Risk Modelling and Trading) at Rotman, and an econometrics and financial econometrics sequence. At Georgetown though, there is only one elective at the business school, along with a course in financial mathematics. At the same time, the Georgetown program will provide the better quantitatve background, with PDE, probability, numerical analysis courses, etc. I was in contact with a student there and he says the grads with a finance interest have done well getting interviews with hedge funds in NYC. One actually interened at NASA too which is pretty sweet.
I guess another question that is (very) implicit in what I have written above, is wheter there is a career in trading for financial economics graduates, or in the next few years, will everything be algorithmic trading that requires a more quant background?
Thanks a lot, anything is appreciated.