Personally I think that getting an internship in trading with GS is a great achievement and really strengthens your profile. After all, I guess that kind of internship is what even MFEs would consider themselves fortunate to get.
Not saying you're a sure fire for top programme's just because of your internship at GS, but it is a VERY strong positive indicator for future employment (let alone the fact that you have someone willing to write a LoR for you). As you can probably figure out yourselves, any top programme wants their candidates to go to the top firms.
- LSE (safety, b/c it's rolling & from what I've seen, not to hard to get in but still has a decent rep in Europe)
Are you serious? LSE is arguably the best eco/fin school in europe but undoubtably best connected to top banks in London.
It has a selection rate of 4%
@Freakonometrics: Where do you get the info that the selection rate of LSE is 4%. I heard that the admission rate was around 10% and acceptance rate around 20%?
http://www2.lse.ac.uk/study/graduate/taughtProgrammes2012/MScFinancialMathematics.aspx
Intake/applications in 2010:26/641
I'm not that sure that LSE is a safe bet. If you look at the programming courses at LSE than there are only few Java courses for MSc in Applicable Mathematics and C++ for MSc in Financial Mathematics and that's all. Hence, I very doubt that if you are not a CS major with some hardcore low-level programming skills or have some experience than this will help you to do a real world quantitative development in C++ (debug, fix bugs, enhance peformance, work with legacy code etc.).
This information can be a bit outdated though, so take it with a grain of salt.
so the admission rate is 4%. Any info on the acceptance rate?
Also i think ahe based his/her opinion after looking at the trackers at quantnet. I also have feeling that LSE is a very safe bet for a good candidate.
Basing anything of the tracker is just downright silly and naive.
(1) For anyone who wants to get into finance in London, he/she will pick LSE above any other grad school
(2) Yield will probably be high because of (1)
(3) Admissions rate is only 4% and because of the high yield, acceptance rate will not be much higher
Funny enough people seem to think that because a school is not located in the U.S., it can't be elite/hard to get in to. You'd be wrong.