Master of Finance


RankNameCountry
1HEC Paris
2ESCP Europe
3EDHEC Business School
4SKEMA Business School
5ESSEC Business School
6University of St. Gallen
7MIT Sloan School of Management
8Bocconi
9Imperial College Business School
10Shanghai Jiao Tong University

RankNameCountry
1Oxford Saïd Business School
2MIT Sloan School of Management
3HEC Paris
4London Business School
5UC Berkeley Haas School of Business
6=ESSEC Business School
6=Cambridge Judge Business School
8London School of Economics
9UCLA Anderson School of Management
10ESADE Business School

The Master of Finance is a master's degree awarded by universities or graduate schools preparing graduates for careers in finance. The degree is often titled Master of Finance or Master in Finance, or Master of Science in Finance. In the U.S. and Canada the program may be positioned as a professional degree. Particularly in Australia, the degree may be offered as a Master of Applied Finance. In some cases, the degree is offered as a Master of Management in Finance.

Structure

MSF and M.Fin / MSc programs differ as to intended career preparation and hence degree focus — with the former centered on financial management and investment management, and the latter on more technical roles
. Both degree types, though, emphasize quantitative topics, and may also offer some non-quantitative elective coursework, such as corporate governance, business ethics and business strategy. Programs generally require one to two years of study, and are often offered as a non-thesis degree.
The MSF program, typically, prepares graduates for careers in corporate finance, investment banking and investment management. The core curriculum is thus focused on managerial finance, corporate finance and investment analysis. These topics are usually preceded by more fundamental coursework in economics, accounting, and "quantitative methods". In many programs, these fundamental topics are a prerequisite for admission or assumed as known, and if part of the curriculum, students with appropriate background may be exempt from these. The program usually concludes with coursework in advanced topics — where several areas are integrated or applied — such as portfolio management, financial modeling, mergers and acquisitions and real options; managerial economics and various quantitative finance topics may also be offered as advanced courses.
The M.Fin / MSc prepares graduates for more technical roles, and thus "focuses on the theory and practice of finance" with a "strong emphasis on financial economics in addition to financial engineering and computational methods." The MSF core topics are also covered, although in less detail. Elective work includes specific topics in quantitative finance and computational finance, but also in corporate finance, private equity and the like; several of the MSF advanced topics — such as real options and managerial economics — will thus also be offered, here differing as to a more technical orientation. As regards coverage of quantitative finance as compared to more specialized degrees, see below. Topics in data science and machine learning are becoming common.
The MSF-M.Fin distinction is not absolute: some MSF programs, although general in coverage, are "quantitatively rigorous" or offer a "quantitative track" ; while others are specifically technically oriented, or, in some cases, even offer a finance and mathematics dual degree. Also, although the "MSc in Finance" generally corresponds to the M.Fin, many schools offer a range of MSc programs where finance may be combined with accountancy and/or management, and these then correspond to the MSF; many MSc programs are further specialized, with the degree as a whole focused on, for example, Behavioral finance, Islamic finance or Wealth management. MMF programs may, similarly, offer either broad- or specialized finance coverage.
The MAppFin spans the MSF-M.Fin spectrum in terms of available specializations and corresponding coursework; it differs in that it is "for and by practitioners" and therefore "blends... finance theory with industry practice", as appropriate to the specialization. Similar to the MSc, programs are sometimes specifically focused on Financial Planning or Banking, for example, as opposed to more general coverage of finance. Some universities offer both the MAppFin and the MFin, with the latter requiring additional semester-time and coursework. These programs may also differ as to entrance requirements.
Programs require a bachelor's degree for admission, but many do not require that the undergraduate major be in finance, economics, or even general business. The usual requirement is a sufficient level of numeracy, often including exposure to probability / statistics and calculus. The M.Fin and MSc will often require more advanced topics such as multivariate calculus, linear algebra and differential equations; these may also require a greater background in Finance or Economics than the MSF. Some programs may require work experience, particularly if the candidate lacks a relevant undergraduate degree.

Comparison with other qualifications

Although there is some overlap with an M.B.A., the finance Master's provides a broader and deeper exposure to finance, but more limited exposure to general management topics.
Thus, the program focuses on finance and financial markets, while an M.B.A., by contrast, is more diverse, covering general aspects of business, such as human resource management and operations management.
An M.B.A. without a specialization in finance will not have covered many of the topics dealt with in the MSF, and, often even where there is specialization, those areas that are covered may be in less depth.
M.B.A. candidates will sometimes "dual major" with an M.B.A./MSF — certain universities also offer this combination as a joint degree — or later pursue an M.Fin degree to gain specialized finance knowledge;
some universities offer an advanced certificate in finance appended to the MBA, allowing students to complete coursework beyond the standard finance specialization.
The MSM or M.Com finance closely correspond to the MSF. These degrees typically place more emphasis on theory and less on practice.
As above, some MSF and all M.Fin programs overlap with degrees in financial engineering, computational finance and mathematical finance; see Master of Quantitative Finance. Note, however, that the treatment of any common topics — usually financial modeling, derivatives and risk management — will differ as to level of detail and approach. The MSF deals with these topics conceptually, as opposed to technically, and the overlap is therefore slight: although practical, these topics are too technical for a generalist finance degree, and the exposure will be limited to the generalist level. The M.Fin / MSc, on the other hand, cover these topics in a substantially mathematical fashion, and the treatment is often identical. The distinction here though, is that these place relatively more emphasis on financial theory than the MQF, and also allow for electives outside of quantitative finance; at the same time, the range of quantitative electives is often smaller. Entrance requirements to the MQF are significantly more mathematical than for the MSF, while for the M.Fin / MSc the requirements may be identical.
A Master of Financial Economics focuses on theoretical finance, and on developing models and theory. The overlap with the M.Fin / MSc, then, as with the MQF, is often substantial. As regards the MSF, on the other hand, although the two programs do differ in the weight assigned to theory, there is some overlap: firstly, some MSF curricula do include a formal study of Financial Economics; secondly, even where the theory is not studied formally, MSF programs do cover the assumptions underpinning the models studied ; thirdly, many financial economics programs include coverage of individual financial instruments, corporate finance and portfolio management, although this treatment is usually less practical.
The Chartered Financial Analyst designation is sometimes compared to a Master's in Finance.
In fact, several universities have embedded a significant percentage of the CFA Program "Candidate Body of Knowledge" into their degree programs; and the degree title may reflect this: "Master in Financial Analysis" or similar.
In general though, the CFA program is focused on Portfolio management and Investment analysis, and provides more depth in these areas than the standard Finance Master's, whereas for other areas of finance the CFA coverage is in less depth.

A further distinction — as regards all such designations — is that Masters programs include practice on, for example, the Bloomberg Terminal, or in building advanced financial models, while "hands on" training of this sort will not be included in a professional certification program.