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US MBA schools best for banking

29 May 2007

Should you go for Columbia or Cranfield, LBS or NYU Stern?

You may be based in London and doing business in Europe, but when it comes to doing an MBA you’re probably still better off across the Atlantic.

Although Europe’s MBA schools have progressed in leaps and bounds in the past decade, American banks in Europe (and even European banks in Europe) still favour schools in the US.

Merrill Lynch, for example, targets London Business School, INSEAD in France and IESE in Spain for European associate hires. In the US it targets Wharton, Columbia, Harvard, Chicago, and NYU Stern.

The head of associate recruitment at one major European bank says around 60% of its European MBA intake is sourced from US schools: “Big US schools are just streaks ahead in terms of their faculty and curriculum,” she says. “If you want to go into banking, you need to follow the banking route – Wharton is the top business school for finance and it has been for years.”

This may be changing. Research from London-based recruiter EM Finance suggested that students from European MBA schools were 57% more likely than their US contemporaries to be hired last year – however, the stats included recruitment at consulting firms, which tend to favour the likes of Cranfield Business School in the UK , which are all but ignored by banks.

The associate recruiter says some European schools are making their mark. “LBS have ramped up their ability to attract professors, which enhances their overall programme. We’re seeing more American students actually coming there to study as a result.”

Comments (71)

USA MBAs rock and are better than most of the UK MBAs. The reason is the UK MBAs lack rigour and the quantitaive touch that makes the professional crisp and sharp.

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Comments (71)

  • Bankers who do an MBA and end up back in Banking waste $120k on tuition and lose the money they would have made for those two years had they been working.




    It is great for someone who is trying to break into banking but otherwise MBAs are not worth too much in the European market.




    Only the Top 10 US MBAs and Top 2 in Europe (Insead, LBS) are any good. The rest.. don't bother

    Anonymous 29 May 2007

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  • Specialisation breeds excellence, generalism merely spreads mediocrity.  Fill your investment business with mathematicians and economic historians, not MBAs.

    Ashok 29 May 2007

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  • only one school for finance in London. Cass Business School. Goldman's, Morgan Stanley, JPMorgan hire heavily from there

    jerry 29 May 2007

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  • Not only are European business schools behind their US counterparts (exceptions being LBS and maybe INSEAD), most European MBA schools offer one year programs in which you can learn very little.




    Also, in hedge funds, people prefer PhDs or quantitative MS degrees in Finance, Econ. Engineering, Physics, Maths, Comp Science.




    An MBA degree teached the basics of Finance and social networking but does not provide a solid background in quant finance. I have seen numerous MBAs from Harvard, Columbia (where I studied) and even Wharton, who simply are weak in most areas of quantitative finance.

    Anonymous 29 May 2007

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  • What about IMD ?

    Enrique 29 May 2007

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  • I am doing my MBA at HEC Paris and i found an Inv. Banking Associate position at Credit Suisse in London. The top US Schools beat the European ones but it will all come down to personal networking, school relationships and a good CV.

    HEC MBA 29 May 2007

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  • London recruiters are ignorant about US schools. They prefer to stick to the Oxbridge breed, ideally major in PPE (for the American educated this stands for Philosophy, Politics and Economics). Sincere advice to you American MBAs stay in NY if you want to get recognition for your brand (and return on money spent). English society is still too classist and you will not be judged based on your achievements. You will have to swallow a huge discount especially you lack "the London experience".

    Wharton MBA 29 May 2007

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  • Disagree - Banker pre and post MBA & earnings increased 500% in 2 years post Cranfield. Best thing I ever did, particularly for the networking. If you want to save money, be smart and apply for scholarships.

    Anonymous 29 May 2007

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  • I graduated with an MA in Banking and Finance and would like to know if MBA could be of any help.

    Mohamed Lamin 29 May 2007

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  • It is well known the MBAs teach you very little relevant finanace knowledge - you can learn more in 3 months while on the job than MBA will teach you.




    Those thinking of an MBA should consider buying "10 Day MBA" - it costs around £10 and contains what all MBAs know (and more)

    Warwick MSc 29 May 2007

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