This program offers a thorough, yet non-technical exposition of the important concepts associated with the FinTech phenomenon and the implications for the future of financial intermediation, banking, regulation and currencies.
This program offers a thorough, yet non-technical exposition of the important concepts associated with the FinTech phenomenon and the implications for the future of financial intermediation, banking, regulation and currencies. It is comprised of four modules covering Electronic Trading, Marketplace Lending, Big Data, and Cryptocurrencies and Blockchain.
Desk-Ready Skills
Understand the principle differences between classical data analysis and modern data science.
Understand the implications of electronic/algorithmic trading for price discovery and the structure of markets for financial instruments.
Appreciate the computational advances and the explosion of data (big data) that have enabled marketplace lending and other modes of financial services disintermediation.
Understand the mechanics of distributed ledgers and consider the long-term feasibility of digital currencies from a technological and regulatory perspective.
The New York Institute of Finance (NYIF) was founded by the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) in 1922 as the New York Stock Exchange Institute. In 1924, 205 NYSE employees graduated from the Institute.
The following year, the Institute introduced the “Mock Market”, a trading simulation conducted on the floor of the Exchange, after trading hours. The simulation became an integral part of the one-year training program for new employees. By 1930 courses of the Institute were extended to employees of member firms of the Exchange.
The first record of the new name for the Institute, “The New York Institute of Finance,” appears in the minutes of the NYSE Board of Governors meeting, October 8, 1942.
Prentice-Hall acquired NYIF from NYSE in 1960. Via an acquisition of Prentice-Hall by Pearson PLC, ownership of NYIF moved to Pearson PLC. In 2008 the Institute opened its Beijing office. In 2013 ownership of the Institute was transferred to a Pearson company, the Financial Times Group (FT). A consortium of companies purchased NYIF from the FT in July 2017.
Today NYIF is an independently held business, headquartered in New York, providing world-class training to professionals in the financial services and related industries. The Institute offers a vast array of courses ranging from introductory to advanced, as well as a number of professional designations that build careers through expertise.
Each year the Institute delivers training to more than 50,000 individuals in over 125 countries. Some of the world’s leading financial institutions, central banks and regulatory bodies are clients of the Institute.
Break into finance technology with this bootcamp. Learn the skills and programming languages to analyze financial data, build machine learning models, and complete hands-on projects.
The curriculum at University of Denver FinTech Boot Camp is designed to give students both the knowledge they need to move toward the financial technology industry and ample experience applying that knowledge to real-world problems.
Learn the analytical skills and programming languages to break into finance technology. Master Python for data science, finance, and machine learning. Learn SQL to query databases.
FinTech (financial technology) has changed the way businesses and consumers access their finances, disrupting traditional financial and banking industries.
Break into finance technology with this bootcamp. Learn the skills and programming languages to analyze financial data, build machine learning models, and complete hands-on projects.
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