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Master of Science Program

 Quantitative and Computational Finance at Georgia Tech Homepage

Quantitative & Computational Finance
School of Industrial and
Systems Engineering
Georgia Institute of Technology
765 Ferst Drive, NW
Atlanta, Georgia 30332-0205
Phone: 404.894.2300
Fax: 404.894.2301

College of Management
Georgia Institute of Technology
800 West Peachtree Street NW
Atlanta, GA 30308-0520
Phone: 404.894.2600
Fax: 404.894.1552

School of Mathematics
Georgia Institute of Technology
686 Cherry Street
Atlanta, GA 30332-0160
Phone: 404.894.2700
Fax: 404.894.4409


The MS QCF Program

Past Events

Experience Quantitative Finance - QCF DAY 2006

Friday, March 31, 2006: A day of connections & education about the Quantitative and Computational Finance community. (Photos 2006)

Experience Quantitative Finance - QCF DAY 2005

Friday, April 1, 2005: A day of connections & education about the Quantitative and Computational Finance community.

Experience Quantitative Finance - QCF DAY 2004

Friday, March 26, 2004: A day of connections & education about the Quantitative and Computational Finance community.

Experience Quantitative Finance - QCF DAY 2003

Friday, March 28, 2003: A day of connections & education about the Quantitative and Computational Finance community.

PRMIA Meeting at Georgia Tech

The Professional Risk Managers International Association (PRMIA) will hold a meeting of its Atlanta Chapter at Georgia Tech on Tuesday, April 15, 2003 at 6 p.m. in the Instructional Center, Room 205 (see map, building #55).

Thomas Day will give a presentation entitled "The Role of the Asset Liability Manager: A Regulatory Perspective." Tom is the Directing Examiner, as well as the Central Point of Contact and Senior Capital Markets Specialist, with the Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta.

Please RSVP to atlanta@prmia.org by Wednesday, April 9th. If you will put "Meeting Reservation" in the subject line, this will facilitate processing.

FTS Market Simulation

What is a Market Simulation?
The students create their own market and trade different kinds of securities. The objective is to make as much money as possible by using various pricing methods and a bit of common sense. Market simulation is an excellent venue to practice the techniques you've learned in class in a realistic and competitive environment.