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There are four ways to go if you want a Master's in Finance.

The first is to get an MBA with a concentration in finance, the second is to get an MS through a finance department in a B-School and the third is to get a degree through some other department. The fourth way is to get into a PhD program, and leave after you complete your written exams.

As for the first, an MBA with a concentration in finance from a top MBA program will open a lot of doors for you . It also offers a lot of flexibility in terms of what kinds of jobs you can get.

There are also several schools that offer a MS in Finance or in Financial Engineering (MFE). UC-Berkeley's Haas School probably has the premier MFE program. Some schools offer MS in Finance classes that are geared more towards those taking the CFA exams. Several schools are expanding into the MS in Finance arena. The University of Maryland, for example, is building a program.

The other area includes departments other than finance trying to make some money in this field. Several mathematics and engineering departments are offering courses or programs in asset pricing. The Economics department at Princeton (which doesn't have a B-School) offers one. So does the mathematics department at University of Chicago.

Many of these programs are good -- but I would suggest an MBA from a top school if you can get into one.

2007-04-03 09:08:15 · answer #1 · answered by Ranto 7 · 0 0

As suggested, they're 2 thoroughly diverse animals. keep in concepts, you more advantageous perfect be staggering at math once you're heavily thinking an MS in economic Engineering. maximum MSFE admits come style engineering, math, or workstation technology backgrounds.

2016-12-03 05:30:54 · answer #2 · answered by deamer 4 · 0 0

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