Anonymous wrote:How is Columbia on there? It’s a fake Ivy.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I didn't go to any of these schools and have had an incredibly lucrative and successful career on WS. If you have worked there you know its not your education.
For success once you get in, maybe, and even then it can matter when moving firms and even promotions.
To get in though? You better be at a target school because otherwise, you won't even get an interview without amazing connections.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:According to USNWR, UVA CS ranks equal to Rice, Northwestern, and UChicago. It ranks above Northeastern and VTech and .1 peer assessment point below Brown. Considering that there is some confidence interval about these results, there’s probably not much difference between those rated the same or slightly above/below. UVA may not be CMU, but for instate, it’s a solid, economically-efficient choice.
Northeastern's 2019 peer assessment undergraduate reputation score was 3.3![]()
Don't have the unlocked 2023 data but no reason to assume it's any different given NEU's ranking has not fluctuated much since then, unlike its ranking from 2009 to 2014 (ranked 96 to 49) and the ranking of Northwestern (NU) over all time
Anonymous wrote:According to USNWR, UVA CS ranks equal to Rice, Northwestern, and UChicago. It ranks above Northeastern and VTech and .1 peer assessment point below Brown. Considering that there is some confidence interval about these results, there’s probably not much difference between those rated the same or slightly above/below. UVA may not be CMU, but for instate, it’s a solid, economically-efficient choice.
Anonymous wrote:https://www.tower-research.com/open-positions/?gh_jid=4360111
CalTech, Carnegie-Mellon, Columbia, Cornell, Harvard, MIT, NYU, Princeton, Stanford, University of California (Berkeley), U Chicago, U Illinois, Yale
Anonymous wrote:I didn't go to any of these schools and have had an incredibly lucrative and successful career on WS. If you have worked there you know its not your education.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My kid was looking for a business program.
I've heard a lot about IB target or consulting target, but never heard of trading target lol
Trading is more meritocratic. Being a super-smart math wiz from MIT or Duke will only help a little compared to being the same caliber from UMD or UVA
Anonymous wrote:The form is pretty basic and there is no way they are not looking for representation beyond a few schools. Those schools likely just have on-campus initial interviews arranged by their recruiting team or have in the past (and they just changed the title and a few specifics on an old job post). I've heard quant, fintech, and big tech intern and new grad hiring is going to be down, so good luck to all the applicants!
Anonymous wrote:Definitely not representative of WS as a whole. Notably missing Dartmouth, Northwestern, Penn/Wharton.
Anonymous wrote:UVA actually places pretty well for D.E. Shaw, a famous NYC hedge fund (the one Bezos worked at before Amazon). It leads the pack of non-Tier 1 schools for these firms (roughly non-Brown/Dartmouth Ivies + MIT + Stanford + UC Berkeley + NYU solely due to location, same reason it's also on Tower's list). Per-capita metrics are irrelevant because these hedge funds only select the best of the best. T25 schools ranked by how many they feed into D.E. Shaw (LinkedIn data):
1. Harvard
2. Yale
3. Columbia
4. Stanford
5. Princeton
6. Tie between MIT and Cornell
7. UC Berkeley
8. Penn
9. NYU
massive drop-off
11. UVA
12. Tie between UMich, Carnegie Mellon, UChicago
13. Tie between Brown, Notre Dame, Duke
14. UCLA
15. Tie between Dartmouth, USC, Northwestern, Caltech
16. Georgetown
17. Vanderbilt
18. WashU St. Louis
19. Tie between Johns Hopkins and Rice
20. Emory
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, Tower Research is super random to pick out. Why not go with the big guns: RenTech, HRT, Jane Street, Citadel, Two Sig, etc.
RenTech is unique in that they mostly hire PhDs, and almost never undergrads. Maybe some geniuses from MIT get a call out of undergrad but that’s it. The rest are pretty standard with hiring: Ivies, Stanford, MIT, Duke, Caltech, and top CS/Math programs like Berkeley, CMU, UIUC, UT, NYU, UMich, Georgia Tech, etc.
Just look at the leadership of these top firms for your answer. RenTech is run by an MIT grad. HRT is potentially the most profitable firm, and they're run by an MIT grad, a Duke grad, and a Harvard grad. Citadel is run by a Harvard grad. Two Sig is run by a Princeton grad and a Stanford grad. Jane Street doesn't have a hierarchal structure so no clear leadership. But it's HPSM and Duke at the top leadership for all these firms, so you can bet they hire a lot out of those schools. And then you'll get other smart kids along the way from similar top schools.
+1 people act like this stuff changes... it's the same top schools for most industries