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I just graduated 1 year. Applied to UBS but failed after doing the numerical test.
I still would like to work in an investment bank, in equities or wealth management. I'm planning to take an Masters course to better my chances. I have a 2nd "A" Bachelors' degree in Arts (BA). May I ask:

1) Does MFin / Msc in Finance / M Financial Engineering require you to be very good at maths? (I'm analytical , but not that numerical)
2) Which of the three would you recommend for a person like me?
3) Which school for MFin / Msc in Finance / M Financial Engineering , is renowned and accepted by the i-banking industry?

thanks a lot.

2006-12-18 20:15:40 · 2 answers · asked by thankstoyaall 2 in Business & Finance Other - Business & Finance

yo yo anyone home?

2006-12-18 22:12:29 · update #1

2 answers

Most of your choices are mathematical. Go for a straight MBA instead. Only the big schools get their students hired. Columbia, Stern, Harvard, ...

2006-12-19 09:19:53 · answer #1 · answered by NYC_Since_the_90s 6 · 0 0

i believe both will be recognized quite both in peoples eyes (the cases ranked Bristol seventh and Edinburgh eleventh in 2007), and that i have never heard of a potential employer who favor an English college over Edinburgh, really as they're all ranked as "uk universities". contained in the longer time period i do not imagine direction content cloth is actual that significant, so in this issue i imagine that is inexpensive to enable more beneficial peripheral elements help you opt for: the position may you want to stay (Edinburgh is a very effective city!)? the position may you opt for to artwork afterwards (it could be less demanding, to commence with a minimum of, to artwork interior the same city as you learn - really once you've benefited from adventure with businesses there)? the position are you buddies and kin, and could go back and forth worry you? To be truthful, in spite of the undeniable fact that, you're in a marginally surprising issue (even in spite of the undeniable fact that it may no longer experience like that!) having promises from 2 excellent uk Universities - i do not imagine you may "lose" whichever one you opt for.

2016-11-27 19:37:28 · answer #2 · answered by saleh 4 · 0 0

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