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given the career/academic access for poly students, its a no brainer...
While I appreciate you reaching out to me for advice, I strongly encourage you to compare the respective benefits of each program on your own as opposed to investing that time in hosting a popularity contest. Thank you and best of luck.
but NYU is hugely different from NYU-PolyAs an alumnus, I appreciate the respect for UIUC. I wish it were true that UIUC had a better program, but I'm not really sure that's the case.
UIUC will get you a job at a Chicago prop shop if you make an effort at recruiting and interview well. But I think NYU has the stronger brand. It will get you interviews at banks.
I have not yet seen a really good argument that UIUC is a better choice than NYU (there may be some points that I am missing). In the absence of such an argument, I think NYU has the stronger brand in finance, in the location where ~70% of the trading jobs in this country are (NJ, NYC, and CT).
I believe NYU officially merged the two schools this year. So you can call it NYU honestly, and nobody will be the wiser.but NYU is hugely different from NYU-Poly
but NYU is hugely different from NYU-Poly
I also tend to believe that FM program at Courant and FE program at engineering are different in a bunch of aspects including the strong mathematical focus which FM programs possesses.
I'd like to draw a bit more from what Gollini said. Yes, most finance jobs in quant and trading are in the tri-state area. One must understand that big names like MS, GS, Citi, etc. offer very few positions every year. And there are tons of other companies that you should be considering. And there are multiple roles too in tech, financial analytics, etc. I see that there is huge demand for Risk Mgmt professionals for example. So you should be clear about what you want. Look at curriculum of programs, see what fits the best for you and then make the decision. How do you do that? Google, Quantnet, etc. Understand what verticals are out there that hire FE grads. Read a lot about them and see where you think you'd be comfortable to work (can't stress on this enough). That last part is important because most of you are quitting jobs and coming for MS. The reason is that you did not like it there or you dint fit well. You wouldn't want that to happen again.
OP since UW is in the poll, can you please change the title of thread to include UW CFRM? That might be one reason why this thread is not getting reviews for UW... Thanks
I went down to UIUC yesterday (April 4) and spoke with the Assistant director. Unfortunately, I was not able to meet any student, because they do not have classes on Friday and some of them were in Chicago for the practicum. I believe that the program is improving and from talking to her it looks like it is getting some exposure to the big companies in Chicago. Apparently, recruiters are starting to come from Chicago specifically for the MSFE program to hire and find interns. I know that was one issue many past students were complaining about, that career services was not (maybe still isn't) geared enough towards the program for its caliber and price tag. They have a couple Bloomberg terminals in the computer lab and a Maxeler provided by one Chicago company (CME if I remember correctly) that is sponsoring a Practicum project. She mentioned that all domestic students are placed in either Chicago or NY with the vast majority in Chicago.
They are also starting to offer some classes in Chicago that are taught by practitioners, and they provide transportation and accommodations for students to take the classes in Chicago. They are starting to build those precious connections and getting recognition from the industry in Chicago. t also seems like a great place to leave.
Having said all of that, I still don't know if this program will put you in any better shape for your career than say UW or Poly. I know that Poly despite everything receives BB banks (namely GS, MS,...) that come to recruit Poly students. Also, the faculty at Poly is renowned in the field of Finance (Tapiero, Maymin, Taleb). For good independent students (i'd like to think myself as one) who given the huge variety of courses available at Poly can design their course of action with good advising, and in terms of career just need that first push with the opportunity to interview with those big names, I think this is a plus.
At the end of the day different factors count more than others for different people.