MSc in Finance and Private Equity
Programme Code: TMFIPE
Department: Finance
For students starting this programme of study in 2018/19
Guidelines for interpreting programme regulations
Classification scheme for the award of a taught master's degree (four units)
Exam sub-board local rules
Academic-year (10 month) programme (TMFIPE). Students must take three compulsory courses (FM410 Private Equity includes a dissertation) and optional courses to the value of 1.5 units. Admitted students are required to attend the Quantitative Methods September course. The dissertation must be submitted by the third week in June.
Please note that places are limited on some optional courses. Admission onto any particular course is not guaranteed and may be subject to timetabling constraints and/or students meeting specific prerequisite requirements.
Paper |
Course number, title (unit value) | |
Paper 1 |
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Paper 2 |
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Paper 3 |
FM410 Private Equity (0.5) | |
Paper 4 |
Courses to the value of 1.5 units from the following. Students must select at least two courses from the list of dedicated options in List 1 and can select the third course from either List 1 or List 2: | |
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List 1 | |
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FM409 Risk Management in Financial Markets (0.5) # (not available 2019/20) | |
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List 2 | |
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Additional course |
The following course is not for credit and can be taken in addition to courses to the value of 1.5 units selected from Paper 4: | |
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FM457 Applied Computational Finance (0.0) |
Prerequisite Requirements and Mutually Exclusive Options
* means available with permission
Footnotes
A : FM404 requires approval from the Course Leader.
# means there may be prerequisites for this course. Please view the course guide for more information.
Students are required to write a 6,000 word dissertation (replacing the exam) in one of the half unit courses. Students will be required to attend teaching for the course which they choose to write their dissertation on.
The Bologna Process facilitates comparability and compatibility between higher education systems across the European Higher Education Area. Some of the School's taught master's programmes are nine or ten months in duration. If you wish to proceed from these programmes to higher study in EHEA countries other than the UK, you should be aware that their recognition for such purposes is not guaranteed, due to the way in which ECTS credits are calculated.
Note for prospective students:
For changes to graduate course and programme information for the next academic session, please see the graduate summary page for prospective students. Changes to course and programme information for future academic sessions can be found on the graduate summary page for future students.