- Joined
- 6/15/13
- Messages
- 16
- Points
- 13
Hello everyone, I am a long time lurker around the forums and I never really found a thread that addresses this question specifically. I found numerous mfe vs phd threads which is not what this is. I am very 'possibly' interested in working for a hedge fund or financial institution as some sort of a quantitative person down the road, it seems like quite a fascinating career for someone with a PhD in a scientific field.
Anyways before I ask my question, let me introduce myself. I am a rising undergraduate senior this fall at UC Berkeley majoring in Engineering Physics and minoring in Nuclear Engineering. All of my classes are heavily math based - even some PDE experience from neutron transport and other nuclear engineering topics, etc. I have worked real science internships both last summer and this summer. I have programming experience in C from my part time job over the last year working at Berkeley National Lab, and much Matlab experience as I have been using it for 3 years + and every day this summer for 8 hours a day heavily. I love physics enough to pursue a doctorate in it, and thus here is my dilemma...
My question is, if I wanted to pursue a hedge fund job upon graduation with a PhD, are certain PhD candidates valued more than others? For example, would a candidate holding an astrophysics PhD be more sought after than a physics PhD or a math PhD or cs doctorate?
I would love to hear from people that are in my shoes right now with a decision like this, as well as people that have been through this already or people in industry.
If all the PhD's are equal - My follow up question would be: Does where you get the PhD matter more than what it is in? (Assuming it is quantitative) I am looking at applying to MIT, Stanford, Cal Tech, Princeton, etc in the fall.
Anyways before I ask my question, let me introduce myself. I am a rising undergraduate senior this fall at UC Berkeley majoring in Engineering Physics and minoring in Nuclear Engineering. All of my classes are heavily math based - even some PDE experience from neutron transport and other nuclear engineering topics, etc. I have worked real science internships both last summer and this summer. I have programming experience in C from my part time job over the last year working at Berkeley National Lab, and much Matlab experience as I have been using it for 3 years + and every day this summer for 8 hours a day heavily. I love physics enough to pursue a doctorate in it, and thus here is my dilemma...
My question is, if I wanted to pursue a hedge fund job upon graduation with a PhD, are certain PhD candidates valued more than others? For example, would a candidate holding an astrophysics PhD be more sought after than a physics PhD or a math PhD or cs doctorate?
I would love to hear from people that are in my shoes right now with a decision like this, as well as people that have been through this already or people in industry.
If all the PhD's are equal - My follow up question would be: Does where you get the PhD matter more than what it is in? (Assuming it is quantitative) I am looking at applying to MIT, Stanford, Cal Tech, Princeton, etc in the fall.