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Channel: Wall Street Oasis - Comments for "Imperial MSc Finance VS LSE MSc Economic History"
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Guys, I'm in a similar

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Guys, I'm in a similar situation, but I have to choose between LSE MSc Finance and Economics and Imperial MSc Finance? What can you say about the "wow-factors" of LSE and Imperial, which one of them will look better on my resume? Which one will give me more chances to find a job in equity research in London given that I am an international student?


skoobatank: LSE Pros - Less

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skoobatank:

LSE
Pros
- Less demanding than Imperial Finance

lol you have no fucking clue.....

Gerfalcon: Guys, I'm in a

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Gerfalcon:

Guys, I'm in a similar situation, but I have to choose between LSE MSc Finance and Economics and Imperial MSc Finance? What can you say about the "wow-factors" of LSE and Imperial, which one of them will look better on my resume? Which one will give me more chances to find a job in equity research in London given that I am an international student?

msc f&e is pretty quant oriented, it's a top course within the lse at the msc level, f&e students will occasionally get exclusive job postings from f&e alumni

mezz2012: skoobatank: LSE P

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mezz2012:
skoobatank:

LSE
Pros
- Less demanding than Imperial Finance

lol you have no fucking clue.....

Could you please elaborate that? Are you saying the EH Msc is really demanding itself?
Interested because I am also considering it :)

.

roguemonkey: mezz2012: sk

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roguemonkey:
mezz2012:
skoobatank:

LSE
Pros
- Less demanding than Imperial Finance

lol you have no fucking clue.....

Could you please elaborate that? Are you saying the EH Msc is really demanding itself?
Interested because I am also considering it :)

no fucking clue in the sense that Imperial finance really is ridiculous, or that LSE EH is much more demanding that I make it out to be?

i ended up appyling to

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i ended up appyling to imperial for finance and lse for f&e. hoping to end up in either ER or a phd finance program.

I've got friends in both

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I've got friends in both programmes and both are basically not worth their money - you are paying for the brand name.

That said, I'd still go with Imperial if these are your only two choices, because it's at least relevant.
Grades don't matter anyway, since you are interviewing for full time before you have received the majority of your grades and I have not heard of anyone who needed sth. higher than a pass in their contracts.

And why the MSc Finance at the LSE is so highly sought-after by applicants is beyond my recognition.


in your view then, which

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in your view then, which uni/courses are worth their money ?

I'd say that all the finance

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I'd say that all the finance courses at LSE and Imperial are cash cows. If you are looking for trading, Imperial has more interesting courses on offer though, also taught by practitioners.

I guess that you will get interviews in any case though, no matter if you go to LSE or Imperial - it more depends on your background, i.e. relevant prior experience, especially in this market.

I don't know about Warwick's MSc Finance, but I would not want to live there. Oxford's Financial Economics MSc is even more expensive than Imperial's, but you got a more widely recognised brand name. It is very hard to get in though and I guess it is very theoretical. Other than that, there are no good options in the UK in my opinion, if you haven't worked before.

I thought the selling point

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I thought the selling point of MSc Finance at Imperial is its mathematical rigour? If your interest is in Mathematics, you should go for IC. If not LSE definitely provides a better name at a better price!

skoobatank: LSE Pros - Less

$
0
0
skoobatank:

LSE
Pros
- Less demanding than Imperial Finance

lol you have no fucking clue.....

Gerfalcon: Guys, I'm in a

$
0
0
Gerfalcon:

Guys, I'm in a similar situation, but I have to choose between LSE MSc Finance and Economics and Imperial MSc Finance? What can you say about the "wow-factors" of LSE and Imperial, which one of them will look better on my resume? Which one will give me more chances to find a job in equity research in London given that I am an international student?

msc f&e is pretty quant oriented, it's a top course within the lse at the msc level, f&e students will occasionally get exclusive job postings from f&e alumni

mezz2012: skoobatank: LSE P

$
0
0
mezz2012:
skoobatank:

LSE
Pros
- Less demanding than Imperial Finance

lol you have no fucking clue.....

Could you please elaborate that? Are you saying the EH Msc is really demanding itself?
Interested because I am also considering it :)

.


roguemonkey: mezz2012: sk

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0
0
roguemonkey:
mezz2012:
skoobatank:

LSE
Pros
- Less demanding than Imperial Finance

lol you have no fucking clue.....

Could you please elaborate that? Are you saying the EH Msc is really demanding itself?
Interested because I am also considering it :)

no fucking clue in the sense that Imperial finance really is ridiculous, or that LSE EH is much more demanding that I make it out to be?

i ended up appyling to

$
0
0

i ended up appyling to imperial for finance and lse for f&e. hoping to end up in either ER or a phd finance program.

I've got friends in both

$
0
0

I've got friends in both programmes and both are basically not worth their money - you are paying for the brand name.

That said, I'd still go with Imperial if these are your only two choices, because it's at least relevant.
Grades don't matter anyway, since you are interviewing for full time before you have received the majority of your grades and I have not heard of anyone who needed sth. higher than a pass in their contracts.

And why the MSc Finance at the LSE is so highly sought-after by applicants is beyond my recognition.

in your view then, which

$
0
0

in your view then, which uni/courses are worth their money ?

I'd say that all the finance

$
0
0

I'd say that all the finance courses at LSE and Imperial are cash cows. If you are looking for trading, Imperial has more interesting courses on offer though, also taught by practitioners.

I guess that you will get interviews in any case though, no matter if you go to LSE or Imperial - it more depends on your background, i.e. relevant prior experience, especially in this market.

I don't know about Warwick's MSc Finance, but I would not want to live there. Oxford's Financial Economics MSc is even more expensive than Imperial's, but you got a more widely recognised brand name. It is very hard to get in though and I guess it is very theoretical. Other than that, there are no good options in the UK in my opinion, if you haven't worked before.

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