Class of 2022 Graduate Destination Reports

Although the COVID-19 pandemic continued to take its toll on the world in 2022, the 106 graduates from the third graduating class of the NYU Shanghai - NYU Stern joint master's programs made impressive achievements in the job market. With outstanding academic abilities, solid technical skills, rich practice experience, and brilliant character, graduates from the Class of 2022 received job offers from many top-tier companies around the world and were able to maintain a high graduate destination rate as in previous years.

106 graduates of the Class of 2022 reached a graduate destination rate of 96.2% in general. They graduated from 2 different majors: Master of Science in Data Analytics & Business Computing (MSDABC) and Master of Science in Quantitative Finance (MSQF). 43 graduates from the MSDABC Class of 2022 achieved a 100% graduate destination rate, while 63 graduates from the MSQF Class of 2022 reached a graduate destination rate of 93.4%. The top four industries of graduate destinations were consulting, consumer goods, financial services, and internet/technology. Featured employers include Apple, Bloomberg, ByteDance, CITIC Group, Deloitte, Huatai Securities, IBM, J.P. Morgan, PwC, P&G, and more. 

Dear Class of 2022 graduates, you’ve set sail and from here will live your dreams! NYU Shanghai and NYU Stern School of Business wish upon all of you the bravery to embrace your passionate career dream, ride the long wind, and break all the waves!

Click the pictures below to learn more about the first destinations of the Class of 2022.

MSDABC
MSQF

 

* This report includes data on NYU Shanghai - NYU Stern Master of Science in Data Analytics & Business Computing and Quantitative Finance Class of 2022. Figures in this report are based on reasonable and verifiable information about the post-graduation activities of graduates, which the University has obtained through channels such as graduate survey responses and research from external sources. Statistics are rounded to the nearest whole number, so totals do not always equal 100%.