Best master of finance in Germany
Hi everyone,
Im very interested in getting my master in finance in Germany. Im from the EU, Croatia, and speak English and German. My GPA is 3.6 and ill be taking the GMAT in about a month.
I would like to work in Germany one day and was looking which school would be best for my master in finance. Out of all schools, I think FSFM (Frankfurt school of finance and management) would be best. However, i dont have too many information about any of the schools there so could someone give me a second opinon about a school for master in finance in germany or say something about FSFM?
Thx in advance
I would consider simply going for WHU Master program. They have the best placement by far out of all german schools. Frankfurt School is good for finance as well. If both of these don't work out you can think about EBS as well. It used to be a great school but I feel they are on a downward trend (as opposed to Frankfurt School which is on the rise)
In Germany WHU. Outside of Germany, University of St. Gallen in Switzerland. Both have the strongest networks and strongest placements from what I've looked at.
Master in Finance Ideas for placement in Hamburg, Germany (non-finance business background) (Originally Posted: 07/25/2017)
Hi guys,
I'm Greek and I'm about to graduate from the Maritime Studies Department of the University of Piraeus. Basically this is Business Administration for shipping, however I, later into my Bachelors, realised two things: a) I like finance and not shipping and b) the quality of finance classes at my uni were unsatisfactory (we spent an entire semester learning, in Maritime Finance, what NPV, Future Value, WACC, IRR, cash sweep, and Baloon payments were. Nothing about Islamic Finance, the German KG Funds, types of Bonds etc. That's as far as my finance background in my non-finance business degree entails. So, I want to do a Masters in Finance.
At the moment I am interning at a Greek bank at the Maritime Finance Department thereof and I am quite satisfied with what finance is about. I also took a course on Coursera on Finance. After I complete my internship I will graduate in December.
I have not sat neither the IELTS nor the GMAT tests yet, however the point of this post is to ascertain which business schools to target. I want to know whether I should target universities like Bocconi, RSM, or St. Gallen, whose applications start in October, or German universities (Mannheim, FSFM etc), whose applications start in March.
Here are the universities I have been considering. Bear in mind, I eventually want to live in Germany and, specifically, in Hamburg. Given that I want to place in Germany, which of the universities I will list below would you recommend? - Bocconi - St. Gallen - Frankfurt School - Mannheim (yes, I know, it has a Master in Management, but it also has Finance classes there - I do not know just how good they are and how well this uni places) - Goethe University (it has a Money and Finance Master, I heard it's good, but I want to see what you guys think of that) - RSM (I know, it's a Dutch university, but there are lots of Germans that study there) - Maastricht University (many German alumni on Linkedin)
I am aware of the existence of WHU but I am not sure of what kind of reputation it enjoys. And while I want to live in Hamburg I have checked some German forums and people criticise the business administration (BWL) department of the University of Hamburg so I don't know if it's worth studying there.
Now, this question is important for me for another reason as well. In Greece we have compulsory national service in the Armed Forces and hence I have the choice to either serve as a Private for 9 months or as a Reserve Second Lieutenant for 14. I want to cut my deferment for studies that I already have so that I get drafted in January. As a Private, therefore, I will be discharged in September, as an Officer, on the other hand, I would be discharged in March. I have no idea whether I can make applications to universities whilst in the Army, my national service as an officer will however prevent me from taking CFA courses or foreign language courses or even attend a coding bootcamp for the heck of it (quite a dumb idea, given that I want to go into finance, but whatever). If I get discharged in September, up until I get admitted and actually attend the Masters I will have a year in the interim.
And therein lie my other questions: - Do Germans view service as an officer in the military, as part of national service, in a positive light? - In case I serve as a simple soldier and get discharged early, should I do the CFA in the gap year? Is it worth it, given my lack of specialised finance knowledge? - What else should I do in that gap year? A second internship at a bank? Volunteering?
Now here's my profile, internship aside: - GPA (pending internship): 8.39/10 - Fluent in Greek, English, and German (passed the C1 of the Goethe Institut with 85/100); speak elementary Turkish as well - AIESECer for 17 months - Attended a German language summer school in Hamburg last summer on a DAAD Scholarship, completed it with a 1.0/7.0 (very good on the German scale). - Attended the Greek Parliament Model, i.e. a Greek Parliament Simulation. As a Member of Parliament in a specific committee (Public Order, Civil Administration, and Justice Committee - our topic was actually the Refugee Crisis, which I knew very little about) I received the best orator prize.
Sorry for any disturbance and thanks for your patience. Any help would be deeply appreciated :D
You've mentioned most of the main universities. For Germany: WHU, EBS, Mannheim, LMU and FSF. I agree that looking at Dutch places such as RSM and Maastricht would be a good idea, as would looking at the likes of St. Gallen. I'd expect most German recruiters to have heard of most of the top continental universities though to be honest, so I'd pick the best university you get an offer from. Instead of doing the CFA, I'd focus on getting more finance work experience aligned to your career goals to fill the remainder of your gap year. Preferably this experience would be in the same country / city you'd like to work in following on from the Master's. I cannot think of any reason why military service would be looked down upon.
So you would recommend my serving as a simple soldier for nine months instead as an officer for 14, right?
Aspernatur laudantium enim et sequi sed voluptates. Neque voluptatem et qui reiciendis et nostrum qui. Esse perferendis voluptatem vel fugit nesciunt soluta delectus. Et voluptates libero vel eum unde aliquid dolores. Quaerat repellat illum deleniti quia.
Quia sint sapiente accusantium ipsam quis possimus. Sunt earum quaerat voluptatibus autem.
See All Comments - 100% Free
WSO depends on everyone being able to pitch in when they know something. Unlock with your email and get bonus: 6 financial modeling lessons free ($199 value)
or Unlock with your social account...