Thursday, October 04, 2007

angie is back to school - but still working!

I am back at school, yay! This is me in front of our beautiful London Business School on Park Road this evening. As you can see the sun in London is shining again! I am still working full-time from 7am every morning and am taking three evening classes now. Studying in London makes this possible. I have another friend and classmate who has been working full-time at Ferrari throughout the first year - don't ask me how!

What I really like about working and taking classes at the same time is that I can apply what I do at work in class - and I realize just how much I have learnt over the last months of work - but also I can apply what I learn in class at work every day, and that feels great.

My three classes this term are great so far, even though it is tough sitting in class from 6 to 9pm, particularly today when there was Sundowners at the same time - and I missed it! No drinks for me yet! Let's try to forget about drinks for now and talk academics :-):

Options & Futures: one of the most dreaded courses at London Business School, this is supposed to be the toughest course. The first lecture was very introductory though - how do forwards and futures work and things like that. After two months on a commodities structuring desk over the summer, you cannot scare me with terms like contango or backwardation! I had trouble shutting up in this class because there is a big divergence between theory and what happens on the trading floor - but I know how annoying people who think they know everything better than the professor are, so I didn't argue about certain things. I don't think my classmates could care less about the reasons for roll yield in commodities markets ;-).

Global Currency Markets: Macroeconomics suffers from the same divergence between theory and empirical evidence or reality, but it is great to think in a more systematic way about exchange rates, trade, budget deficits, what happens to the dollar, how Chinese foreign reserves affect the US and things like that. The professor is very experienced and knowledgable and it seems he is well connected, because we'll have some amazing guest speakers over the next weeks - among them Jim O'Neill, chief economist of Goldman Sachs, as well as the top FX strategist of Goldman, and then a good mix of policymakers, financial journalists and practicioners active in the currency markets.

Mergers, LBOs and Corporate Restructuring: as with the other classes, the class today was introductory and basically a recap of what we have done on M&As in the first year. But the professor, Paolo Volpin, is highly entertaining, smart and knowledgable. I must say each and every finance and economics professor at our school has been amazing. Joao Cocco was brilliant, I loved Marco Ottaviani in Microeconomics, and Paolo Volpin promises to be highly entertaining as well as intellectually challenging as well.

Tomorrow morning at 6am I have to get up again, but soon it is weekend! I will have to do the Options & Futures assignment and some reading for my economics class, but there is also a housewarming party and a dinner with friends lined up, so I am slowly making the transition to student life again.


3 comments:

Anonymous said...

Hi Angie,

I study at European Business School that is in Regent's Park...I think we are very close seeing that you are attending your MBA at London Business School.
This friday I've a presentation about the McKinsey's culture (routines and rituals, control system, organisational structures, symbols and so on...). I would ask you some informations about it.

Thanks for your attention
Emilia (mrslily@hotmail.it)

Anonymous said...

Hello,

I am Nisheeth Gupta. I have 4 yrs of experience in Defence R&D targeted at anti-tank missiles and semiconductor industry. Now, I am interested in an MBA especially with more stress on Entrepreneurship. I am writing essays for various B-schools in US and UK. I am not able to find ppl in my friendship circle who can give me genuine feedback on the quality of my essays. I seriously feel that feedback on my essays from ppl who are currently studying in b-school or have already finished their MBA could help me to write better essays.

I request you to please please please take out few minutes to glance through and comment on my essays, as it could help me to realise my dreams by getting into b-school of my choice.

Waiting for a positive response :)

Please do reach me at nisheethg@gmail.com

Best Regards,
Nisheeth

Anonymous said...

Hey Angie,

I'm a final yr student at the LSE. I'm really interested in pursuing a career at McK. I would really like some help with the case studies (if you have time). Would it be possible to arrange to meet up for a coffee sometime?

Regards,
Yuan
thecrusade@gmail.com