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About the Program

In this eight-month graduate certificate program, you will work with innovative and disruptive technologies used in the financial service sector. The programโ€™s expert faculty will outline best practices for product development and entrepreneurship and enhance your understanding of privacy, ethics and the regulatory landscape of financial technology. The program covers topics including cybersecurity, web application and mobile development as well as data analytics for financial services.

Note: Some classes will be taught by web conferencing, with you in the classroom.

In addition to evening classes, you are required to be in-class during regular business hours for a week-long intensive session at the beginning of the program, at the start of the second term and at the end of the program.

Part-time option is available >Program Faculty

Skills

Throughout this program you will develop the following skills:

  • Product development and entrepreneurship
  • Privacy management
  • Financial services and products
  • Distributed ledger technology
  • Cybersecurity
  • Web application
  • Mobile development
  • Business management

Your Career

When you graduate from this program, these are the types of career options that you can explore:

  • Data analyst
  • Financial technology product developer
  • Application developer

Related Programs

Master Financial Technology with an MSc Fintech Degree

Master Financial Technology with an MSc Fintech Degree

From big data to artificial intelligence and blockchain: how masters programs in fintech are exposing students to cutting-edge developments in the field

By Seb MurrayShare

Business schools are racing to offer masters degree programs in financial technology (fintech), as employer demand skyrockets for professionals who can use tools like artificial intelligence to boost financial institutionsโ€™ efficiency, generate new products or services for them, and help the big firms avoid being disrupted by nimbler startups. 

And despite knowing that it is risky to offer a course on volatile and controversial markets such as cryptocurrencies (for example), as they could disappear as quickly as they emerged,schools are enhancing their brands with the fintech offerings, as students and employers demand them.

โ€œI think a course in fintech was a must,โ€says Emilio Barucci,director of the International Master in Fintech, Finance and Digital Innovation at MIP Politecnico di Milano in Italy, in order to maintain MIPโ€™s status as a leading technology university.

The fintech programs are offered by a growing number of the worldโ€™s leading business schools, including the MSc in Finance Technology at Hong Kongโ€™s HKUST Business School; the University of Edinburgh Business Schoolโ€™s MSc in Finance, Technology & Policy; plus a Master of Science Banking, Finance and FinTech, offered by Franceโ€™s EM Normandie Business School, among others.

Additionally, the UKโ€™s Henley Business School offers an MSc Finance and Financial Technology course,through the schoolโ€™sICMA Center,which provides education tailored to capital markets.

The course gives students an in-depth understanding of recent trends and products that are reshaping the finance industry. This includes blockchain, used to securely verify payments and transactions; big data analytics and AI,which are crunching large volumes of data to spot opportunities for banks to sell products or services to consumers; and quantitative finance, or using algorithms to spot patterns in data sets to make potentially lucrative trades. 

An increased demand for fintech skills

Business schools say the catalyst for the introduction of fintech courses has been high and growing demand among finance employers for trained professionals, who can use digital technologies, such as data science techniques.  

Daniel Broby, director of the MSc in Financial Technology at the UKโ€™s University of Strathclyde says:โ€œIt [the course] was launched [in 2017] in order to address an identified skills gap.โ€

Across the world, financial services firms are struggling to attract talent with a mixture of business smarts and technical acumen.In a recent employer survey by Hays Financial Markets, a recruitment firm,61 percent said they faced moderate to extreme skills shortages, with technology among the most sought-after skills.  

Broby says that the biggest demand is for those with โ€œartificial intelligence and machine learning trainingโ€, while the best-paid graduates entering finance are those with computer programming skills, such as Python. 

The demand is global. According to a 2018 report by the Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS),7,800 jobs were added to the fintech and financial services sectors in 2016-2017 in the city-state, with fintech alone contributing close to 2,000 net jobs, far exceeding a target set by the MAS.  

โ€œThe demand among the finance employers [stems from their] desire to automate many financial activities, reduce operational costs, increase productivity, and [create] new products with new technology, such as blockchain,โ€says Chi Seng Pun,director of the MSc in Fintech program at Nanyang Technological University in Singapore.

However, financial institutionsโ€™ automation of some activities, has raised concerns that jobs could disappear as a result.A Citigroup report forecasted that fintech could cost almost 2m bank employees their jobs over the next decade.

So far, displacement has mostly affected staff in banksโ€™ brick-and-mortar retail branches, as banks do more online and cut branches, and staff in โ€œback officeโ€ functions, such as those working in settlements, who make sure that payments are processed. 

Technology could free up โ€œfront officeโ€ workers, such as investment bankers,to do more interesting jobs.For example, several investment banks use AI to help determine the best way to execute big trades by reading market conditions. The AI comes up with the trading optimization strategy, but itโ€™s validated by humans. In one case, the method achieved annualized returns that outperformed a benchmark index. 

โ€œBeing IT proficient is a must, regardless of the role applied for,โ€ saysDr Simone Varotto,co-director of the MSc Finance and Financial Technology course at the ICMA Center.

โ€œEmployers have indicated that knowledge of programming and how to exploit new, large data sources to improve financial products and services would set a candidate apart from other job applicants.โ€ 

How MSc Fintech courses are keeping pace with the industryโ€™s rapid change

But what exactly should be taught in fintech masters programs and who should teach it? With the field evolving so quickly, how are academics keeping pace with market developments? 

โ€œThere is a fair degree of redundancy in teaching material due to the changing nature of financial technology,โ€ says Strathclydeโ€™s Broby.As such, some business schools review the content of their fintech program each year and the involvement of industry practitioners is essential to that. 

โ€œIndustry collaboration ensures a constant exchange of ideas, and the early detection of new trends that could become teaching material,โ€ says the ICMA Centerโ€™s Varotto. 

โ€œWe have strong connections with the fintech industry, running weekly โ€˜Industry Insightsโ€™ seminars led by practitioners.โ€ 

MIP uses case studies in its fintech masters program that were developed by companies such as Aviva, Deloitte and IBM. โ€œThe companies help us in updating the course according to the evolution of the industry,โ€ says Barucci.  

It is also essential for fintech students to have a cross-disciplinary perspective of the industry,according to Strathclydeโ€™s Broby.โ€œTraditional taught finance should be supplemented by computer programming, data analytics, internet payment protocols, regtech [regulation technology], and an entrepreneurial understanding of disruptive business models,โ€ he says.

โ€œThis requires a multi-disciplinary teaching capacity, between accounting and finance, management science and computing [departments].โ€ 

How Fintech MSc programs are preparing students for the job market

Strathclydeโ€™s 12-month, full-time fintech courseincludes practical elementsthat develop knowledge and skills that could make students more attractive to financial services employers.Students use the business schoolโ€™s Bloomberg Trading Simulation Laboratory, for example, and can complete a client-based consultancy project. 

For students considering fintech masters degree programs, location will be an important factor because schools that are close to financial and technology hubs, such as London, will have an easier time accessing corporations for training and recruitment. Indeed, the London-based Imperial College Business School has recently launched an MSc in Financial Technology.

โ€œThe fintech ecosystem in Singapore is healthy and robust with [more than] 400 fintech startups and [more than] 30 innovations labsโ€ that nurture fintech innovation, says Pun at NTU. 

Singaporeโ€™s fintech ecosystem could prove beneficial for students seeking to work in or create a startup.The city-state has a โ€œregulatory sandboxโ€ to guide people who are experimenting with fintech, for instance.

Pun says NTU will liaise with the Monetary Authority of Singapore to see how the schoolโ€™s students could contribute to such fintech projects in future. 

The big question for business schools is: is it wise to offer standalone masters programs focused on what could be considered a volatile industry? 

โ€œItโ€™s unwise not to offer one,โ€ says Strathclydeโ€™s Broby. โ€œWe want to future proof our graduates.โ€ 

At the ICMA Center, Varotto adds: โ€œThe fintech sector may be volatile, but it is here to stay. The potential for innovation and the creation of new jobs is great and should be nurtured with suitable training.โ€   


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