Department of Business and Management

Financial Risk and Investment Analysis (2015 entry)

MSc, 10 months full time

Register your interest for 2015 entry

Subject overview

  • Our courses are taught by world-renowned faculty with a strong background in relevant areas of research. 
  • Our range of courses builds on Sussex’s strong foundation of interdisciplinary study, encompassing corporate risk management, entrepreneurship, international finance, and international and innovation management. 
  • Our teaching is designed to provide you with the knowledge and skills to compete effectively in the fast-paced world of work. We tailor our taught courses to meet current and future employer demands, and will continue to adapt to the changing employment market. 
  • Our courses offer a choice between practice- and research-oriented study opportunities. They have been developed drawing on the expertise and input of experienced practitioners from industry and professional bodies. These experts complement our own expertise in research and help to enrich your learning experience. 

Global perspective

55th in the world for international outlook

Times Higher Education World University Rankings 2013-2014

Academic quality

14th in the UK
43rd in Europe
111th in the world

Times Higher Education World University Rankings 2014-2015

  • 1,600 km2 of South Downs
    National Park area

  • 4,600
    students live on campus

  • 700,000 books and e-books, and
    30,000 journals in the library

  • 13,800
    students study at Sussex

  • Around 4,500 full- and
    part-time jobs advertised each year
    Over 900 paid internships
    advertised in the last 18 months
    300 careers events each year

  • £500-million future investment
    in campus buildings and facilities

  • Over 95 countries across the world
    are home to Sussex graduates

  • 956 academic staff
    1,214 professional services staff

  • 140 student societies and
    over 30 sports clubs

  • 28,000-seater American
    Express Community Stadium

  • £24.7-million
    research income

  • < 9 minutes to Brighton
    < 30 minutes to Gatwick Airport
    < 60 minutes to central London
    < 90 minutes to Heathrow Airport

Accreditation

The MSc in Financial Risk and Investment Analysis is a recognised Academic Partner of the Global Association of Risk Professionals (GARP), a leading international organization for the promotion of risk management.  The MSc has been designed to cover 70% of the material required to obtain GARP’s professional FRM (Financial Risk Manager) certification. 

Graduates are therefore well prepared to pass the FRM exams, or to pursue GARP’s ERP (Energy Risk Professional) certification.  As an Academic Partner, Sussex can provide additional support and information for students wishing to obtain an FRM or ERP certification.  Research fellowships are also occasionally available through GARP.


Carol's faculty perspective

Professor Carol Alexander

‘I started working closely with financial institutions about 25 years ago and have, since then, become a finance academic, consultant and industry leader in both risk management and investment management.  

‘Over the course of my career, employment trends have changed in line with the need for better global risk-management standards and improved risk-return profiles on portfolios of financial assets. As the new disciplines of financial risk analysis and investment analysis come to the fore, it is in these areas that students with excellent quantitative finance skills are especially in demand.

‘The MSc in Financial Risk and Investment Analysis at Sussex is the first postgraduate degree in the UK that prepares you for both areas of employment. The modules use Chartered Financial Analyst UK (CFA)-accredited texts where appropriate and the accelerated learning course leads naturally on to the formal CFA level I training after the MSc assessment is complete.’

Professor Carol Alexander
Professor of Finance,
University of Sussex

Programme outline

This course is for you if you wish to enter a profession in financial markets specialising either in risk or investment analysis. Employment in both these sectors is buoyant. This MSc at Sussex is the only specialist degree in the UK that qualifies students in both financial risk and investment analysis. 

The course has a unique focus on financial markets and is taught by academic faculty who are globally renowned for their teaching excellence and extensive industry experience. At Sussex, you enjoy a close academic (as well as physical) proximity to the activities of the City of London, the European centre for employment in financial markets. 

On this accelerated-learning course all taught-module assessment takes place during the autumn and spring terms. Two projects are assessed during the first half of the summer term, after which you may be tutored for the Chartered Financial Analyst (CFA) Level 1 qualification. You can register for the CFA exam 12 months after commencing the MSc and take the CFA exam four months later.  

For more information, visit MSc in Financial Risk and Investment Analysis: in detail

Assessment

All autumn- and spring-term modules are assessed by a combination of a mid-term test or coursework (which typically counts for 20 to 30 per cent of the final grade) and a formal examination, taking place after teaching has finished. The two summer-term projects are assessed by a combination of presentations and written reports.

We continue to develop and update our modules for 2015 entry to ensure you have the best student experience. In addition to the course structure below, you may find it helpful to refer to the Modules tab.

Autumn term: you take Equity Investments and Foreign Exchange • Essential Quantitative Finance • Institutions in the Global Financial Market • Interest-Rate Sensitive Instruments. 

Spring term: you take Commodities and Alternative Investments • Market and Credit Risk Analysis • Portfolio Management • Swaps, Futures and Options. You also choose one from Corporate Governance and Social Responsibility • Corporate Governance • Investment Risk Project. 

Summer term (first half): you work on Risk Management Project • Portfolio Management Project.

Back to module list

Advanced Quantitative Finance

15 credits
Autumn teaching, year 1

Following on from Essential Quantitative Finance, this module will provide further instruction on particular financial problems associated with risk analysis and portfolio construction, and a more in-depth knowledge of financial instruments, such as futures and options, laying the foundation for TB2 modules on the Financial Risk and Investment Analysis degree.

All the main concepts will be illustrated by numerous examples and Excel spreadsheets.

Further development of IT skills builds on the knowledge gained in Essential Quantitative Finance, now introducing Matlab programming and the use of Reuters data.

The syllabus covers the following topics:

  1. Time Series and Statistical Volatility
  2. Modelling Linear Portfolios
  3. Newtonian and Stochastic Calculus
  4. Introduction to Financial Options

Commodities and Alternative Investments

15 credits
Spring teaching, year 1

This module describes the common types of alternative investments, their valuation and their unique risks, including those associated with limited liquidity and specialised legal structures. Major categories of alternative investments, including real estate, private equity, hedge funds, structured products and – most recently – volatility.

The course begins with commodity markets and the impact of fundamental commodity concepts such as contango, backwardation, physical delivery, seasonality and storage on commodity market trading and the pricing of commodity futures. 

Weekly topics cover: 

  1. Types of commodities and their producers and consumers
  2. Commodity markets and their characteristics
  3. Trading commodity futures
  4. Empirical analysis of commodity price behaviour 
  5. Socially responsible and ethical investments
  6. Trading and investing in real estate
  7. High-yield, inflation-proof and convertible bonds
  8. Private equity and venture capital
  9. Hedge funds: classification of strategies and historical performance
  10. Structured investment products
  11. Trading and investing in volatility

Corporate Governance and Social Responsibility

15 credits
Spring teaching, year 1

This module is aimed at students on the range of 'conversion' type of MSc programmes across the department and is delivered in the International Accounting and Governance programme as a core. The focus is on contemporary perspectives and practices within the broadly defined areas of Corporate Social Responsibility and Governance.

The module starts from the premise that CSR is a contested, problematic and developing area of study. There is an acceptance that an understanding of ethical frameworks is required to inform debate on this subject and that research generated evidence and insights are necessary to substantiate assertion.

The focus is also practical, and you will individually undertake research into an organisation's orientation and practice towards its stakeholders. A critical and questioning approach to this will be encouraged and required to 'see beyond' the often platitudinous veneer that can characterise this relationship.

Throughout the module the emphasis will be on devloping your own coherent and informed view of matters such as corporate and governance, together with issues of professional ethics within a globalised context. In particular, we examine the extent to which corporate governance practices are moving towards convergence.

The coursework requires you to work individually to produce a case study analysis of contemporary stakeholder issues and to thereby further your understanding and exercise research skills and judgement. Supporting and underpinning this is a week by week seminar programme requiring you to ascertain and appreciate your own and others' 'ethical profiles', locate and interpret research-based insights and undertake case study analysis of organisational practices and professional ethical dilemmas.

An examination will test your grasp of relevant concepts, theory and ability to apply insights.

Corporate Governance

15 credits
Spring teaching, year 1

This module aims to introduce you to the roles and functions of boards of directors as well as the organisational structure of different types of firms, such as those within extended family networks and those of an entrepreneurial nature. This will involve developing understanding of information management systems and accounting techniques that assist effective board-level decision making as well as in the assessment of board and CEO effectiveness. The relevance of different boards structures will be discussed through a comparison of split boards and supervisory boards and the module will cover contemporary issues such as shareholder activism, the role of family and corporate block-shareholder control. Equally, the importance of worldwide differences in legal and institutional settings and their impact on corporate structure and governance will be discussed. While you will gain appreciation into contemporary issues effecting management structure of major corporations you will also be expected to apply this in real-life topical settings.

Equity Investments and Foreign Exchange

15 credits
Autumn teaching, year 1

Weekly lectures cover the following topics:

  1. Introduction to international equities
    • How equities are traded, foreign exchange risk, trading forex, asset management and investment companies

  2. Risk and return
    • Risk aversion, diversification, capital allocation to risky assets, optimal risky portfolios

  3. The capital asset pricing model (first lecture)
    • Single index models; capital market equilibrium; capital market line; securities market line; market portfolio; equity beta

  4. The capital asset pricing model (second lecture)
    • As above

  5. Arbitrage pricing theory and multifactor models of risk and return
    • Multifactor models, Fama-French factors, applications

  6. Financial statement analysis
    • Balance sheets, profit and loss reports, financial ratios

  7. Fundamental analysis of equities
    • Macroeconomic and industry analysis, price–earnings ratios, equity valuation models

  8. Spot market for FX 
    • Global economic balances, purchasing power parity, monetary and fiscal policy, coordination of government controls 

  9. Forward FX
    • The London market; FX dealing, types of orders, forward derivatives instruments; no-arbitrage pricing; relationship between interest rates and foreign exchange

  10. Hedging FX risk
    • FX risk in international equities, FX risks arising for corporates

  11. FX trading strategies
    • Fundamental and technical trading strategies, high-frequency and algorithmic trading.

Essential Quantitative Finance

15 credits
Autumn teaching, year 1

The objective of this module is to give you a thorough grounding in the essential mathematics and statistics required for Spring-term modules on the MSc in Financial Risk and Investment Analysis, and to motivate you to learn the necessary skills by first formulating the quantitative finance problem, and then teaching the tools required to solve it. 

The course is focused uniquely on financial applications of mathematics and statistics, with all the main concepts illustrated by numerous examples and Excel spreadsheets.

The module also aims to encourage the development of IT skills and in particular you will be trained to use Excel spreadsheets for data representation and manipulation, through workshops with example. The syllabus covers the following five broad mathematical topics:

  1. Probability and statistics
  2. Linear regression
  3. Linear algebra
  4. Calculus
  5. Optimisation

The lectures are structured by the following topics in quantitative finance:

  1. Modelling financial data
  2. Bond mathematics 
  3. Distributions of asset prices and returns 
  4. Stochastic processes for asset prices and returns 
  5. Simple linear models in finance
  6. Modelling portfolios of financial assets
  7. Factor models
  8. Mathematics for futures 
  9. Options and their mathematics
  10. Simulating asset prices and returns
  11. Introduction to portfolio optimisation

Each lecture is supported by: 

  • a two-hour workshop, in which you will implement in Excel spreadsheets the concepts you have learned during lectures, based on data downloaded using Reuter's, and supported by case studies in the 'Rotman Interactive Trader'. You will be tested on this understanding in the computer-based examination during week 12
  • a one-hour seminar, where you are led through sample questions on the final unseen examination. 

Institutions in the Global Financial Market

15 credits
Autumn teaching, year 1

This module examines the role played by financial institutions in the global market structure and in particular the ways in which these institutions manage risk in their investments, with particular focus on management of operational risk. You will address investment banking and the role banks and other actors such as rating agencies play in capital markets. The module will give a detailed exploration of the nature of operational risk and the way risk management is practiced in financial services firms. It will compare and contrast the prevailing regulatory approaches of New York and London, and will provide in-depth discussions of the prevailing international frameworks for regulating and managing operational risk. There will also be a focus on the process of compliance with these regulations, which will be discussed using both lectures and case study material. The module will also include discussions of corporate scandals, the role of the financial media, and prospects for future regulations.

Interest-Rate Sensitive Instruments

15 credits
Autumn teaching, year 1

This module presents the fundamentals of fixed-income and floating-rate investments, one of the largest segments of global financial markets. It covers:

  • valuation of cash flows
  • bond price and yield
  • interest rate risk, duration and convexity
  • principle of no-arbitrage
  • spot and forward interest rates
  • bond futures
  • forward rate agreements
  • yield curves
  • LIBOR
  • credit spreads
  • basic features and characteristics of interest-rate sensitive instruments and their associated interest rate risk and credit risk
  • present value of basis point
  • mapping portfolios to risk factors
  • securitisation and asset (and mortgage) backed securities
  • credit rating
  • credit scoring. 

A provisional outline of lectures (to be confirmed when the convenor has been appointed) including one revision lecture at the end, is as follows:

  1. Characteristics of fixed and floating rate debt securities 
  2. Principals of valuation; Spot and forward interest rates
  3. Interest rate swaps and LIBOR
  4. Yield curves: term structure characteristics and credit spreads
  5. Interest rate risk and other risks associated with debt securities
  6. Cash flow mappings
  7. Securitisation – asset and mortgage-backed securities
  8. Interest-rate sensitive derivatives and their characteristics: interest rate futures, FRAs, vanilla interest rate swaps 
  9. Hedging interest rate risk
  10. General principles of credit risk

Investment Risk Project

15 credits
Spring teaching, year 1

Market and Credit Risk Analysis

30 credits
Spring & summer teaching, year 1

You will choose between a designated market risk analysis or credit risk analysis project, concerning the application of either value at risk (VaR) and expected tail loss (ETL), or credit valuation adjustments (CVA) to a hypothetical portfolio, based on real historical data. You work individually to analyse the risks of the portfolio using its historical performance on paper, which you begin to track during Spring term. In the final term you write a detailed report on your work and finally make an individual presentation of the results, as if to the Head of Risk Management and the Risk Management & Control team in a financial institution.

This foundation of market risk analysis and the basic VaR models for assessing market risk, including the mapping of fixed-income, equity and option portfolios to risk factors, the construction of covariance matrices and their application to the market risk of portfolios, are required to undertake this project. These skills are taught in formal lectures and seminars during Spring term and assessed during the last week of that term and in exam time. 

VaR and ETL is computed at the portfolio level using historical and Monte Carlo simulation (and, where possible, analytic solutions) and the results are compared and backtested. The credit risk side covers credit scoring models, counterparty credit risk (especially credit exposure, default, and recovery processes) and credit spreads, portfolio models of credit risk and CVA. 

The lectures will be structured as follows:

  1. Introduction to market risk
  2. Market VaR and ETL at the portfolio level
  3. Cash flow mappings for securities and options
  4. Decomposition of portfolio market VaR and ETL
  5. VaR and ETL for options
  6. Backtesting models and stress testing portfolios
  7. Introduction to credit risk
  8. Mitigation of counterparty credit risk
  9. Modelling credit exposures
  10. CVAs
  11. CVA hedging

Portfolio Management

30 credits
Spring & summer teaching, year 1

Working in small teams (typically 4–6), you will be given a mandate to construct an investment portfolio. You will track its performance, write a report and make a presentation to a client (a panel with at least one faculty member and one associate tutor), as if you were already working in the fund management industry.

Formal lectures during Spring term focus on:

  • Methods for integrating information, both objective and subjective (Treynor-Black, Black-Litterman, Least-discrimination approaches), for portfolio allocation
  • Understanding utility-based investment criteria (certainty equivalent, Generalized Sharpe and information ratios) for portfolio optimisation
  • Examining specific portfolio strategies (e.g., pension funds, hedge funds, portfolio insurance)
  1. Securities markets and institutions; modelling of returns
  2. Mean-variance analysis
  3. Factor models; market equilibrium; Treynor-Black method
  4. Performance measurement; Utility functions and certainty equivalents
  5. Black-Litterman and least-discrimination methods
  6. Technical and fundamental analyses for equities and bonds
  7. Derivatives for investing and hedging; portfolio insurance
  8. Special investment products and strategies (structured products, pension funds, hedge funds) 
  9. Cost effective trading, risk assessment, performance attribution and reporting


Seminars will consist of:

  1. Introduction to the trading platform
  2. Interpretation of the management mandate
  3. Equity analysis and stock selection screens
  4. Implementation of Treynor-Black and Black-Litterman models
  5. Guidance for report preparation and presentation

Swaps, Futures and Options

15 credits
Spring teaching, year 1

This module introduces the markets, trading and valuation, and applications of forwards/futures, swaps and options. For each type of derivative, we cover characteristics of the markets and the instruments traded, hedging applications, and no-arbitrage valuation.

We will look at the following topics:

  1. Characteristics of forwards and futures
    Characteristics of interest rate and swap futures, bond futures, currency and commodity futures and forwards, stock and index futures, new futures markets

  2. Fair values for futures and forwards
    Principles of no-arbitrage pricing, accounting for dividends, carry costs and convenience yields

  3. Hedging with forwards and futures
    Fundamental concepts, position risk, proxy and basket hedging, short-term hedging and maturity mis-match, case studies for different types of portfolios

  4. Swaps
    The swap market, FRAs and vanilla swaps, decomposition of cash flows, cross-currency and cross-market swaps, variance swaps

  5. Credit derivatives
    Total return swaps, credit default swaps (CDS) and their valuation, CDS indices, the credit crisis

  6. Foundations of option pricing
    Vanilla options, risk-neutral valuation and the Black-Scholes model, the Greeks, hedging options 

  7. Characteristics of vanilla options
    Put-call parity, moneyness and maturity, American options and early exercise

  8. Trading options
    Exchange and OTC trading, issuers and purchasers, bull/bear, spread and volatility strategies, replication of P&L profiles and introduction to structuring

  9. Interest rate options and swaptions
    Caps, floors, swaptions and the LIBOR model

  10. Exotic options
    Exchange options, best-of and worst-of, spread options, Asian options, barrier options, currency protected options, power and chooser options, look-back and look-forward options

  11. Models with stochastic/local volatility and jumps
    Heston, Heston-Jump, GARCH, CEV, SABR, normal mixtures. Model calibration and application.

Back to module list

Entry requirements

UK entrance requirements

Admission for this course is highly selective and applicants require a first class undergraduate honours degree or equivalent in a quantitative subject. International applicants should note that they will need an overall grade considerably above the levels listed in the Overseas Qualifications table below; further information about suitable grades can be obtained from Postgraduate Admissions (email pg.applicants@sussex.ac.uk).

Applicants with a degree in mathematics, physics or engineering are ideally suited to this course. Applicants with finance- or economics related degrees will also be considered, provided the degree contains several modules with a high quantitative modelling content (such as mathematics for economics/finance, applied statistics or econometrics), which have been passed with high marks.

Applicants should also have a basic level of competence using Excel. In the induction week, students will be asked to
take tests for competency in both mathematics (to GMAT level) and Excel, and students who do not pass these tests will be advised to switch to an alternative, less quantitative finance degree.

Overseas entrance requirements

Overseas qualifications

If your country is not listed below, please contact the University at E pg.enquiries@sussex.ac.uk

The following table is given as a general guide for our taught postgraduate degrees requiring a first- or upper-second class undergraduate honours degree. If you have any questions, contact the University at E pg.enquiries@sussex.ac.uk

CountryOverseas qualification
Australia Bachelor (Honours) degree with second-class upper division
Brazil Bacharel, Licenciado or professional title with a final mark of at least 8
Canada Bachelor degree with CGPA 3.3/4.0 (grade B+)
China Bachelor degree from a leading university with overall mark of 75%-85% depending on your university
Cyprus Bachelor degree or Ptychion with a final mark of at least 7.5
France Licence with mention bien or Maîtrise with final mark of at least 13
Germany Bachelor degree or Magister Artium with a final mark of 2.4 or better
Ghana Bachelor degree from a public university with second-class upper division
Greece Ptychion from an AEI with a final mark of at least 7
Hong Kong Bachelor (Honours) degree with second-class upper division
India Bachelor degree from a leading institution with overall mark of at least 60% or equivalent
Iran Bachelor degree (Licence or Karshenasi) with a final mark of at least 15
Italy Diploma di Laurea with an overall mark of at least 105
Japan Bachelor degree from a leading university with a minimum C/GPA of at least 3.0/4.0 or equivalent
Malaysia Bachelor degree with CGPA of at least 3.3/4.0 or B+
Mexico Licenciado with a final mark of at least 8
Nigeria Bachelor degree with second-class upper division or CGPA of at least 3.5/5.0
Pakistan Four-year bachelor degree, normally with a GPA of at least 3.3
Russia Magistr or Specialist Diploma with a minimum average mark of at least 4
South Africa Bachelor (Honours) degree or Bachelor degree in Technology with an overall mark of at least 70%
Saudi Arabia Bachelor degree with an overall mark of at least 70% or CGPA 3.5/5.0 or equivalent
South Korea Bachelor degree from a leading university with CGPA of at least 3.5/4.0 or equivalent
Spain Licenciado with a final mark of at least 2/4
Taiwan Bachelor degree with overall mark of 70%-85% depending on your university
Thailand Bachelor degree with CGPA of at least 3.0/4.0 or equivalent
Turkey Lisans Diplomasi with CGPA of at least 3.0/4.0 or equivalent depending on your university
United Arab Emirates Bachelor degree with CGPA of at least 3.0/4.0 or equivalent
USA Bachelor degree with CGPA 3.3-3.5/4.0 depending on your university
Vietnam Masters degree with CGPA of at least 3.5/4.0 or equivalent

If you have any questions about your qualifications after consulting our overseas qualifications, contact the University at E pg.enquiries@sussex.ac.uk

English language requirements

IELTS 6.5, with not less than 6.0 in each section.

For more information, refer to What qualifications do I need?

Visas and immigration

Find out more about Visas and immigration.

For more information about the admissions process at Sussex

For pre-application enquiries:

Student Recruitment Services
T +44 (0)1273 876787
E pg.enquiries@sussex.ac.uk

For post-application enquiries:

Postgraduate Admissions,
University of Sussex,
Sussex House, Falmer,
Brighton BN1 9RH, UK
T +44 (0)1273 877773
F +44 (0)1273 678545
E pg.applicants@sussex.ac.uk 

Fees and funding

Fees

Fees for studying on courses available on a part-time basis will be charged at 50 per cent of the full-time fees listed below.

Home UK/EU students: £8,150 per year1
Overseas students: £17,350 per year2

1 The fee shown is for the academic year 2015.
2 The fee shown is for the academic year 2015.

For more information on fee status, visit Fees

Visit Living costs

Scholarships

The funding sources listed below are for the subject area you are viewing and may not apply to all degrees listed within it. Please check the description of the individual funding source to make sure it is relevant to your chosen degree.

Visit Postgraduate taught scholarships 2015

Visit Career development and part-time work

We are in the process of updating funding sources for postgraduate study in the academic year 2015/16. For general information, visit Postgraduate taught scholarships 2015.

For more information on scholarships go to the Scholarships web pages.

Faculty interests

Prof Carol Alexander
Professor of Finance
C.Alexander@sussex.ac.uk

Research interests: Algebra, Applied Statistics, Decision Analysis, Evolutionary Game Theory, Exchange Trading, Finance, Financial Markets, Financial Mathematics, Financial Modelling, Game Theory, Hedge Funds, Mathematical Statistics, Mathematics, Real Options, Risk Analysis, Statistical Methodology, Statistical Modelling, Stochastic Analysis, Stochastic Processes, Volatility Analysis

View profile

Dr Michael Coulon
Lecturer In Finance
M.Coulon@sussex.ac.uk

Research interests: Commodities, Energy, Environmental policy, Finance, Financial Mathematics, Financial Modelling

View profile

Dr Andreas Kaeck
Reader In Finance
A.Kaeck@sussex.ac.uk

Research interests: Asset Pricing, Derivatives, Finance, Financial Econometrics, Risk management, Volatility Analysis

View profile

Dr Jacques Pezier
Teaching Fellow in Finance
J.Pezier@sussex.ac.uk

View profile

Mr Emmanuel Pezier
Tutorial Fellow In Finance
E.Pezier@sussex.ac.uk

View profile

Careers and profiles

The trend for increased employment in risk management is set to continue as recent changes in banking regulations put increased focus on improving risk management standards. And there will always be a demand for investment analysis – not only from pension funds and large corporations – as private equity continues to grow in the current global economic environment. 

On completion of this MSc you are qualified to apply for graduate training positions as a quantitative risk analyst, a quantitative investment analyst or asset manager in a bank, corporation, hedge fund or insurance company. 

To find out more, visit Careers and alumni

School and contacts

Contact us

School of Business,
Management and Economics,
University of Sussex, Falmer,
Brighton BN1 9SL, UK
T +44 (0)1273 872668
E bmec@sussex.ac.uk 

School of Business, Management and Economics Online Open Event

Find out more about the taught postgraduate (Masters) courses offered by the School, and understand how they can boost your career prospects.

Wednesday 15 April to Wednesday 29 April

To secure your place, register for our Online Open Event today

Visit the Department of Business and Management

Visit the Department of Economics

Visit SPRU - Science Policy Research Unit

Discover Postgraduate Study information sessions

If you cannot make it to our Postgraduate Open Day, you are welcome to attend one of our Discover Postgraduate Study information sessions. These are held in autumn, spring and early summer and enable you to find out more about postgraduate study and the opportunities Sussex has to offer.

Book your place on one of our Discover Postgraduate Study information sessions

Other ways to visit Sussex

We run weekly guided campus tours year round.

Book your place on one of our guided campus tours

You are also welcome to visit the University independently without any pre-arrangement.

Our online campus tour can also give you an excellent introduction to the University.

Take our online campus tour

Overseas visits

Meet with Sussex staff in your country at exhibitions, visits to schools and universities, and at a wide range of other events. Forthcoming visits are planned all over the world:

Bahrain • Brazil • Brunei • Canada • China • Colombia • France • Germany • Ghana • Greece • Hong Kong • India • Indonesia • Iraq • Italy • Japan • Kenya • Kuwait • Malaysia • Mexico • Nigeria • Norway • Pakistan • Qatar • Saudi Arabia • Singapore • South Korea • Spain • Sri Lanka • Taiwan • Thailand • Turkey • UAE • USA • Vietnam.

In-country representatives

In the International Office, we manage a network of overseas representatives who have been trained to support international students with their application to study at the University. Services representatives provide can include pre-departure information, support in submitting your housing application and advice regarding applying for a UK Student Visa.

Find out more about our overseas visits and in-country representatives

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