January 21st, 2009, 11:20 pm
Excellent, thank you! I was definitely leaning in the direction of #2, although it was because I wanted a well-rounded education, not because I thought SF was going to survive (I mistakenly thought the whole field was toast). On the other hand, I really need to keep a practical head on my shoulders. I had 8 long but fun years learning what I wanted to learn and giving in to my intellectual curiosity. After nearly a decade, it's time to be more pragmatic in my approach to education.I couldn't find the syllabus for the classes, but here are the course descriptions:Elements of Structured FinanceThe course objective is to allow students to analyze the basic credit quality of securitizations backed by commodity asset types (mortgages, auto loans, credit cards, CDOs). Mastery of the material in this course will let the student model and evaluate the credit impact of collateral or structural alternatives. Hands-on work is both extensive and preparatory to the advanced level.Market and Credit Risk ManagementThis course covers qualitative and quantitative aspects of the financial risk associated with managing financial portfolios and with credit default. Topics include: market risk, VaR and stress testing, model risk, spot and forward risk, credit default risk and credit derivatives.