<p>What do you need to go for Masters in Finance?</p>
<p>For example for lawyer school any bachelors will do find to go and apply for law school. </p>
<p>Does the same go for Masters in Financing?</p>
<p>After answering the first question does a bachelors in philosophy, ba in history or B.S mathematics good enough to go into the masters in financing or a</p>
<p>no one have answer?</p>
<p>Hi, I was wondering the same thing as well, and for other courses like Operational Research, Financial Engineering, Financial Maths, or maybe a maths/stats terminal masters. I’ll be doing Maths and Economics at the LSE and I would like to know if it is suitable prepartion/accepted as a prerequisite to the masters.</p>
<p>But I think if you were going to choose among the three you have listed above, I believe maths>philosophy>history, but definitely maths.</p>
<p>Thanks and sorry for hijacking your thread.</p>
<p>I appreciate the feed back. I just want to know if a BS in mathematics is good enough to get into Masters of Financing and the GPA requirement Minimum and Maximum.</p>
<p>Instead of asking random people on a forum, why don’t you look at Web sites for those programs and see what their admissions requirements are?</p>
<p>For an MSF you generally need a finance or business undergrad. A lot of times Econ will also fit. Those with math and engineering degrees can also be admitted. Make sure you have calc and stats exposure also. </p>
<p>For MFE degrees you really need an engineering or mathematics undergraduate. Hope this helps.</p>