Hi!
I am a Hungarian student in my final year of undergrad study. My BSc is Economic and Financial Analysis, which is a hybrid of rigorous mathematics, and economics and finance from a quantitative/mathematical approach. I wish to study Financial Mathematics or a similar degree in the UK the next year. Could you help me if I stand a chance to getting into some of the good ones?
Since I do not come from a Mathematics bachelor, or an engineering/physics one, I am not certain my mathematics background will be enough. Here are the courses I took during my first two years, with my results. (We have a grading system 1-5, with 1 failing, 2-5 passing, 5 being the best.)
Algebra 1 (5), Analysis 1 (3), Algebra 2 (5), Analysis 2 (5), Statistics (5), Operations Research Models 1 (5), Probability (4), Game Theory (5), Econometrics (5), Dynamical Systems [ODEs, no PDEs] 4, Operations Research Models 2 (5).
I am going to take Measure Theory and Stochastics in my final year, and have Functional Analysis as an elective.
I have a GPA of 4.68/5 or 3.74/4, and I expect to maintain at least 4.5/5 in my last year.
Unfortunately, there was a comprehensive exam in Mathematics last year, consisting of Analysis, Algebra and Probability where I scored a 2. (Still passing.)
I have been a teacher's assistant for two years at the Department of Mathematical Economics, and I work for a charity organization that prepares high schoolers for their mathematics exams.
I, unfortunately, do not have any professional experience.
My background in Finance is quite solid, with a comprehensive result of 4.
Do you think that I stand a chance with this profile to get into a good Financial Mathematics programme?
I was mainly considering Imperial's Maths+Finance and Risk Management programmes, as well as Warwick's, UCL's and KCL's Financial Mathematics programmes. I've heard Oxford's Mathematical and Computational Finance, and LSE's Financial Mathematics programmes are extremely competitive, so I should maybe skip on those. Do you have any advice, on which schools to apply to? Do I stand a chance with this background?
Thanks for your answers!
I am a Hungarian student in my final year of undergrad study. My BSc is Economic and Financial Analysis, which is a hybrid of rigorous mathematics, and economics and finance from a quantitative/mathematical approach. I wish to study Financial Mathematics or a similar degree in the UK the next year. Could you help me if I stand a chance to getting into some of the good ones?
Since I do not come from a Mathematics bachelor, or an engineering/physics one, I am not certain my mathematics background will be enough. Here are the courses I took during my first two years, with my results. (We have a grading system 1-5, with 1 failing, 2-5 passing, 5 being the best.)
Algebra 1 (5), Analysis 1 (3), Algebra 2 (5), Analysis 2 (5), Statistics (5), Operations Research Models 1 (5), Probability (4), Game Theory (5), Econometrics (5), Dynamical Systems [ODEs, no PDEs] 4, Operations Research Models 2 (5).
I am going to take Measure Theory and Stochastics in my final year, and have Functional Analysis as an elective.
I have a GPA of 4.68/5 or 3.74/4, and I expect to maintain at least 4.5/5 in my last year.
Unfortunately, there was a comprehensive exam in Mathematics last year, consisting of Analysis, Algebra and Probability where I scored a 2. (Still passing.)
I have been a teacher's assistant for two years at the Department of Mathematical Economics, and I work for a charity organization that prepares high schoolers for their mathematics exams.
I, unfortunately, do not have any professional experience.
My background in Finance is quite solid, with a comprehensive result of 4.
Do you think that I stand a chance with this profile to get into a good Financial Mathematics programme?
I was mainly considering Imperial's Maths+Finance and Risk Management programmes, as well as Warwick's, UCL's and KCL's Financial Mathematics programmes. I've heard Oxford's Mathematical and Computational Finance, and LSE's Financial Mathematics programmes are extremely competitive, so I should maybe skip on those. Do you have any advice, on which schools to apply to? Do I stand a chance with this background?
Thanks for your answers!