COMPARE UCB MFE vs UCLA MFE vs University of Chicago MSFM

Rank
Program
Total Score
Peer Score
% Employed at Graduation
% Employed at 3 months
% Employed in the US
Compensation
Cohort Size
Acceptance Rate
Avg Undergrad GPA
Tuition
Rank
4
University of California, Berkeley Berkeley, CA 94720
4.17 star(s) 41 reviews
4
University of California, Berkeley
88 3.6 79 92 83 168.2K 86 17.96 82.90K
Rank
6
University of Chicago Chicago, IL 60637
4.70 star(s) 50 reviews
6
University of Chicago
85 3.4 78 95 79 134.2K 130 20.86 96.82K
Rank
17
University of California, Los Angeles Los Angeles, CA 90095
4.43 star(s) 42 reviews
17
University of California, Los Angeles
61 3.1 48 67 61 113.6K 97 32.95 93.12K
Joined
4/8/22
Messages
1
Points
11
'UChicago MSFM vs UCLA MFE vs waitlist at UCB MFE' was merged into this thread.
I have been admitted to the following programs and would greatly appreciate any insight on which one would be the best option: UChicago MSFM (30% scholarship), UCLA MFE, Boston MSMFT ($12K scholarship), USC MFE. Of these, I have mainly narrowed it down to UChicago vs UCLA. I have also been waitlisted by UCB MFE, but I'm not as keen on it given the lack of guarantee of admission after completing a list of pre-requisites and potentially declining other offers given the Spring start date.

Background: US Top 20 undergrad (Financial Math & Econ & Computing) + 3 years of work experience in risk management at one of JPM/GS/MS
Career Interest: Strategist / Quant Trading
 
If I was you, I would choose Chicago. All things equal in Chicago you would be closer to a financial center. I also think Chicago is better so…
 
I have been accepted into the following programs. I would highly appreciate any advice on which one would be the best option:

UChicago MSFM (30% scholarship),
UCB MFE (conditional offer - need to complete some pre-req courses before Nov + pre-MFE courses after Nov)
UCLA MFE (scholarship)

In case of UCB, I am confident that I would be able to complete all the pre-reqs given by them. However, I am concerned that if something goes wrong at that time (for example, during the Visa process or if I don't get the final offer even after completing the pre-reqs), I will be left with no choice as the program starts in March.

After my master's, I'd like to work in quantitative research area, but I'm open to other opportunities as well. I wish to work in the United States after the program.

Background: Engineering degree from a top university, and 3 years of experience in the financial industry (finance + a little coding)
 
Definitely UCB. It's a top one that can secure you a quant job in the US. I think you don't need to worry about the issues you mentioned. If you complete all the prereqs, why would they not give you the offer? And the risk from other things like Visa is equal for all these choices.
 
I have been accepted into the following programs. I would highly appreciate any advice on which one would be the best option:

UChicago MSFM (30% scholarship)
UCB MFE (conditional offer - need to complete some pre-req courses before Nov + pre-MFE courses after Nov)
UCLA MFE (scholarship)

In case of UCB, I am confident that I would be able to complete all the pre-reqs given by them. However, I am concerned that if something goes wrong at that time (for example, during the Visa process or if I don't get the final offer even after completing the pre-reqs), I will be left with no choice as the program starts in March.

After my master's, I'd like to work in quantitative research area, but I'm open to other opportunities as well. I wish to work in the United States after the program.

Background: Engineering degree from a top university, and 3 years of experience in the financial industry (finance + a little coding)
I used to think I could go to a competing program (read top 10) and still do well enough. I didn't think the Berkeley program was as good as everyone made it out to be. Boy, was I wrong.
Hands down the one of the best career services you'll find in an MFE program. The class is incredibly competitive; the professors are amazing and there is a nice mix of companies that recruit from here. Quant research, data science and machine learning, crypto; you'll find a good fit with a company no matter how diverse your interests.
Even with no financial aid, I think you should choose the Berkeley MFE as it's going to provide the best opportunities career-wise.
It's a long-term investment to be part of an incredible university and a very smart group of MFE alumni.

Visa won't be an issue, just complete the prerequisites and you should be fine :)
 
I used to think I could go to a competing program (read top 10) and still do well enough. I didn't think the Berkeley program was as good as everyone made it out to be. Boy, was I wrong.
Hands down the one of the best career services you'll find in an MFE program. The class is incredibly competitive; the professors are amazing and there is a nice mix of companies that recruit from here. Quant research, data science and machine learning, crypto; you'll find a good fit with a company no matter how diverse your interests.
Even with no financial aid, I think you should choose the Berkeley MFE as it's going to provide the best opportunities career-wise.
It's a long-term investment to be part of an incredible university and a very smart group of MFE alumni.

Visa won't be an issue, just complete the prerequisites and you should be fine :)
completely agree with this; i was actually very seriously considering a couple of other programs too (top 5 according to quantnet) because of things like location and scholarships but i can very confidently say i'm glad i chose berkeley mfe
 
I have been admitted to the following programs and would greatly appreciate any insight on which one would be the best option: UChicago MSFM (30% scholarship), UCLA MFE, Boston MSMFT ($12K scholarship), USC MFE. Of these, I have mainly narrowed it down to UChicago vs UCLA. I have also been waitlisted by UCB MFE, but I'm not as keen on it given the lack of guarantee of admission after completing a list of pre-requisites and potentially declining other offers given the Spring start date.

Background: US Top 20 undergrad (Financial Math & Econ & Computing) + 3 years of work experience in risk management at one of JPM/GS/MS
Career Interest: Strategist / Quant Trading
Hi, can I ask what prompt did you get for your recorded video essay (Berkeley MFE)? Thank you!
 
UCB vs Baruch college vs Princeton ... from the top three, which one would be best? Thx.
Princeton and Baruch are practically neck a neck but Princeton has that Ivy shine if you care about that and on average they do earn more on average based on the metrics given by quant.net.
 
Back
Top Bottom