Philip, these are not easy questions as I don't know the US programs that well (apart from the one I graduated from, Princeton's MFin, which I definitely liked). I guess you could indeed compare Sussex to somewhere like Rutgers/Stevens, in that we aim to be top of the second tier, i.e. those with somewhat lesser known names. But one other thing I should point out is that we are really not a classical MFE. We are definitely still quant, but not pure quant, and in my view a nice balance that is not easy to find in many programs. So if your question about rigor of Berkeley/UCLA MFE is based on things like advanced coding and serious stochastic calculus, then no we can't compete. But that's not the aim and we teach a lot of useful markets knowledge and quant techniques especially geared towards risk management and investment management (hence the name FRIA). Probably the best way to get a feel for it is from the list of core modules/courses:
Essential Quantitative Finance • Advanced Quantitative Finance • Equity Investments and Foreign Exchange • Institutions in the Global Financial Market • Interest-Rate Sensitive Instruments • Commodities and Alternative Investments • Swaps, Futures and Options • Market and Credit Risk Analysis • Portfolio Management (note: the last two count double)
Finally, your question about stats on placement of international students… I honestly don't know. Overall (including home/EU), we definitely have some students getting competitive offers from top banks, etc, others doing something a bit less mainstream, but sample size for international is not so high anyway so far and I don't know about all of them (some have returned to their country), so I really wouldn't like to say. But generally I think our employment record is improving and certainly very respectable.
Anyway, thanks for your questions and interest! Hope it's helped catch a few others' attention.