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From MIT to Singapore and back: Delivering knowledge and advancing careers in finance

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Both sections of MIT class 15.433 (Financial Markets), taught this fall by visiting associate professor of finance Hong Ru MFin ’10, PhD ’15 at the MIT Sloan School of Management, include over 100 students from the master of finance program . However, when he joined the program’s inaugural class just over a decade ago, this number was much smaller.

“I started in the program in 2009 and graduated in 2010, and there were only 26 students then. Not like today,” says Ru, who is an associate professor of banking and finance at Nanyang Business School. Along with his wife, Juno Wei Chen MFin ’10, Ru returned to Boston after eight years in Singapore to teach the next generation of MFin students at MIT Sloan.

Chen, a senior portfolio manager of the Global Asset Allocation team at Columbia Threadneedle Investments, says their return to Boston and MIT Sloan has been a “great pleasure.” It’s where they first met, where they started their careers in academia and finance, and where they got married.

Ru is especially grateful for the chance to give back to the program that introduced him to Chen and set the pair on their respective career paths, going as far as to describe it as the duty of alumni.

“It’s not just my obligation to deliver my knowledge as a lecturer but, as an MFin alumnus, to help students with their career development and to figure out what to do at this stage of their life and career. We have been there,” he says.

The place to be

Even without a major marketing push by the school in 2009, the pilot program for the master of finance degree garnered 179 applications.

Ru and Chen, who both attended universities in Shanghai but met for the first time when they matriculated at MIT Sloan, independently discovered the new program as they began researching potential graduate schools.

“There has been a very strong appreciation for the American education system, especially since the United States is one of the centers of the financial world,” says Chen.

Given her double major in finance and mathematics, applying to a school like MIT made perfect sense to Chen. This was the same conclusion that Ru, also a finance major, came to.

Not only did the Institute boast one of the top management schools in the world, but it also housed a very influential economics department, whose faculty and alumni include many Nobel laureates — like the late Paul Samuelson, the first American to win the Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences, and School of Management Distinguished Professor of Finance Robert C. Merton PhD ’70, whose office, as Ru excitedly points out, is right next to his.

“MIT Sloan was definitely the place to be,” says Ru. Out of all the applicants vying for a spot in the inaugural class, he and Chen were both admitted.

“MIT brought us together, and I feel very fortunate to have met so many people from all over the world. It’s a very small class, but it’s very representative of many different countries, regions, and cultural backgrounds,” says Chen.

Two different, complementary paths

As their classes began in 2009, Ru, Chen, and their classmates were experiencing the first global recession of their adult lives. Ru pointed this out to his 15.433 students during a recent lecture, saying his peers faced a financial reality in which the S&P 500 had lost nearly 50 percent of its total value.

Even so, Ru and Chen appreciate everything they were able to learn, both in their coursework at MIT Sloan and off campus at various site visits and joint projects with industry firms. This context also informed the two different, but complimentary career paths they eventually took.

During her undergraduate studies, Chen interned with McKinsey & Co. and a few financial institutions in Shanghai, from which she decided to further explore the possibility of a career in finance. She was able to focus her path at MIT Sloan, where her courses taught her quantitative financial analysis and qualitative business skills, and networking events hosted by faculties like Senior Lecturer Mark P. Kritzman introduced her to firms like State Street, where she landed her first job after graduation.

“Where I ended up is a result of my personal interests and where I got my exposure, my knowledge, and where opportunities opened up for me,” says Chen.

The same can be said for Ru, who received offers for industry jobs in Boston and Hong Kong after graduation. Yet his interest in more advanced studies had been piqued when he enrolled in several doctoral-level classes to supplement his master’s coursework — including one taught by the late Stephen Ross, the inventor of arbitrage pricing theory.

“All the professors I had at MIT, like Stephen Ross, Jiang Wang, Leonid Kogan, and Antoinette Schoar, really cared about their students. Not all professors are like that,” Ru says of the faculty who influenced him. “They’re very passionate about what they do.”

The next 10 years

Ru and Chen are elated to be back in Boston, both because it was their first home together and because it is now the home of their growing family. They are also excited to reunite with their classmates after a long hiatus.

Like many Institute alumni, Ru and Chen missed out on getting back together with old friends and former teachers because of the Covid-19 pandemic, as 2020 marked the 10-year anniversary of the inaugural master of finance class. Yet they are hopeful for future gatherings at their next class reunion in 2025, as well as other school functions.

“We miss our friends, but the program also has 14 classes now, so let’s get together and have some fun,” says Ru. “Come sit in on 15.433 and see how I’m doing.”

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Wharton’s PhD program in Finance provides students with a solid foundation in the theoretical and empirical tools of modern finance, drawing heavily on the discipline of economics.

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  1. PhD Program in Finance

    2023-24 Curriculum Outline. The MIT Sloan Finance Group offers a doctoral program specialization in Finance for students interested in research careers in academic finance. The requirements of the program may be loosely divided into five categories: coursework, the Finance Seminar, the general examination, the research paper, and the dissertation.

  2. PhD Program

    MIT Sloan PhD Program graduates lead in their fields and are teaching and producing research at the world's most prestigious universities. Rigorous, discipline-based research is the hallmark of the MIT Sloan PhD Program. The program is committed to educating scholars who will lead in their fields of research—those with outstanding ...

  3. Current PhD Students

    Profiles of our current students. Institute for Work and Employment Research. Students in the Institute for Work and Employment Research group study topics such as behavioral science, comparative employment relations, labor economics, labor standards in global value chains, political economy, subjective well-being, worker grievances and voice, and working time arrangements in organizations.

  4. Faculty

    MIT Sloan's finance faculty are world-renowned thinkers who combine original insights and breakthrough ideas with a practical approach to finance education. Like colleagues before them, today's finance faculty is engaged in groundbreaking research of critical significance and relevance to the world. Our faculty bring that research into the ...

  5. Finance Group

    Finance Group. Finance is the study of markets for real and financial assets. The practical implications of modern financial theory are widely recognized and implemented by Wall Street and corporations. The PhD program provides students with an understanding of the theory on which the field is based and the tools they need to conduct ...

  6. Job Market Candidates

    Doctoral candidates on the current academic market. David Kim. Research Group: Accounting Previous Degrees: B.A. Business Administration and Economics, Seoul National University; M.S. Business Administration, Seoul National University Research Interests: The Role of Information in Technology (Cybersecurity, AI) and Investing Advisors: Eric So, Rodrigo Verdi, Nemit Shroff, Andrew Sutherland

  7. PhD Students

    PhD students in the Finance Group benefit from the teaching, research, and mentorship of MIT Sloan's world-renowned faculty. Students in MIT Sloan's finance programs will graduate prepared to tackle the challenges of today's complex global economy—and to teach the business leaders of tomorrow. View a list of our PhD students currently on ...

  8. From MIT to Singapore and back: Delivering knowledge and ...

    Both sections of MIT class 15.433 (Financial Markets), taught this fall by visiting associate professor of finance Hong Ru MFin '10, PhD '15 at the MIT Sloan School of Management, include over 100 students from the master of finance program.However, when he joined the program's inaugural class just over a decade ago, this number was much smaller.

  9. PhD Program

    Wharton's PhD program in Finance provides students with a solid foundation in the theoretical and empirical tools of modern finance, drawing heavily on the discipline of economics. The department prepares students for careers in research and teaching at the world's leading academic institutions, focusing on Asset Pricing and Portfolio ...

  10. Yinuo (Roma) Wang

    The mission of the MIT Sloan School of Management is to develop principled, innovative leaders who improve the world and to generate ideas that advance management practice. Find Us MIT Sloan School of Management 100 Main Street Cambridge, MA 02142 617-253-1000

  11. Department of Finance

    PhD students also enjoy the benefits of Stern's economics department, NYU's economics department in the Graduate School of Arts and Science (GSAS), and the Courant Institute of Mathematics. Graduates of Stern's Finance PhD program have been placed at leading research institutions such as Harvard, MIT, Chicago, Stanford, Wharton, Yale, and ...