Hi folks,
First time poster, long time reader. I'm dropping this into the Career Advice section but it could just as easily sit in Education advice, so happy to move it across if forum mods would suggest as much.
Bit of background on me – I’ve been a buy side PM (implementation, risk management, trading) for ~6 years having graduated from a top undergrad school in an unrelated non STEM subject. I’ve mostly focused on fundamental strategies with a quant leaning with institutional client base in my career to date. What this has left me with is a solid foundation in market microstructure (particularly in fixed income) and some good hands on experience.
I’m looking to move across into a more research-focused role (either hybrid implementation / research or pure research) and take a step away from the fundamental world ideally into the quant space.
Given my experience so far I’m a little cautious about the idea of resigning to pursue an MFE. I definitely recognize the value but I’m torn as to whether studying on the side (to pick up the numerical methods and related quant skills) would be sufficient to make this sort of transition rather than the MFE direction. I'm generally well respected at my firm, so have a decent amount of goodwill that I don't want to give up unnecessarily!
Curious to hear general thoughts on this question (which at its core I realize has been asked / answered a few times on these forums) and open to any suggestions for third party learning that can be pursued part time that would help me make this transition. I’m based on the west coast so Baruch part time (for example) wouldn’t work.
Thanks in advance!
First time poster, long time reader. I'm dropping this into the Career Advice section but it could just as easily sit in Education advice, so happy to move it across if forum mods would suggest as much.
Bit of background on me – I’ve been a buy side PM (implementation, risk management, trading) for ~6 years having graduated from a top undergrad school in an unrelated non STEM subject. I’ve mostly focused on fundamental strategies with a quant leaning with institutional client base in my career to date. What this has left me with is a solid foundation in market microstructure (particularly in fixed income) and some good hands on experience.
I’m looking to move across into a more research-focused role (either hybrid implementation / research or pure research) and take a step away from the fundamental world ideally into the quant space.
Given my experience so far I’m a little cautious about the idea of resigning to pursue an MFE. I definitely recognize the value but I’m torn as to whether studying on the side (to pick up the numerical methods and related quant skills) would be sufficient to make this sort of transition rather than the MFE direction. I'm generally well respected at my firm, so have a decent amount of goodwill that I don't want to give up unnecessarily!
Curious to hear general thoughts on this question (which at its core I realize has been asked / answered a few times on these forums) and open to any suggestions for third party learning that can be pursued part time that would help me make this transition. I’m based on the west coast so Baruch part time (for example) wouldn’t work.
Thanks in advance!