Home About Subscription offers Advertise Contacts Free trial Tell a colleague Your details Events
Career Center Jobs and Career Management in the Financial Markets, Banking & Finance Career Center
  Job Seekers Sign in / Register Recruiter's Sign-in

TOP STORIES

Is a CFA really worth the hassle?

COMMENTS

In terms of using it to break into the industry - I think it's probably of minimal use. Relevant experience is far more likely to get you there.  Read all comments »

New entrants looking to break into the ultra-competitive fund management industry have a significant obstacle in their path: the notoriously difficult Chartered Financial Analyst (CFA) programme. The professional qualification comes in three parts, takes four years to complete, and 80% of candidates fall before the final hurdle.

Moreover, as more people take the exams, CFA insiders say the pass rate is bound to fall. A total of 119,000 candidates globally turned up for the final stage three exam this year and their numbers are swelling at the rate of 25% per annum.

Given the difficulty in acquiring the accreditation, it’s unfortunate perhaps that it’s becoming increasingly mandatory. Chris Manfield, managing director and head of the asset management practice in Europe for Whitney Group, says it’s become the norm for new entrants to asset management: “For serious asset management players in the institutional space it is a must-have.”

Whether completing the CFA actually adds to your pay packet is less of a certainty. Some industry surveys have put CFA holders’ salaries 25% ahead of those of non-CFA holders. But Steve Wellard, spokesman for CFA Institute in London, says the issue remains unclear: “It’s not black and white to say that being a charterholder means you can secure more money.”

For new entrants fretting about attaining CFA status, Philip Darling, partner at Korn/Ferry International, says most fund managers will put graduates through the programme, particularly if the parent company is American.

COMMENTS

biggerjoe,  Tue 01 Jul 08

kudos to efinancial.i dont know if anybody in the house has heard about LIFA(licensed international financial analyst)its a rival to CFA.

Add your comment »

Level III Candidate, Quantitative Analytics,  Tue 01 Jul 08

Isn't "a CFA" wrong reference to "a CFA  charter" or "a CFA  designation". Obviously  the author has not gone through the Ethics material.
It takes 4 years because of work experience requirements even if you pass all 3 exams in 1.5 years, which is the quickest you could (pass December, June and June exams).
I have decided to do it as my degree is engineering, though my experience is now more "financial and quantitatvie analysis" oriented. This way, when I earn the charter,  I can be confident that I have the theoretical background complimented by the experience. Having said that the curriculum did help correct a lot of the bad habits and misconceptions I picked up in the past. I think it has helped me become a better analyst and in the end that is what matters.

Add your comment »

H, Trading,  Tue 01 Jul 08

I hear that CFA is highly valued in the middle and back office of most banks.

Add your comment »

Henry, FX & Money Markets,  Wed 02 Jul 08

"I am studying for it ,and so far I am proud of my achievement.-Another qualification to add to my CV.

Rosie 14 hours ago"

Precisely the ridiculous attitude exhibited by so many people on this site, who think that a string of qualifications are your path to success. Most of the most successful people I know, myself included, have no Masters, no PhD, no CFA. Just a 3yr Bachelors degree from a world-class university. That's all you need to enter the front office, and from there you can be a rising star without any further qualifications. Indeed, for client-facing roles you're better off spending your evenings drinking with clients and networking than in your room studying. And even on the buy-side, look at how few of the world's most successful hedge fund managers have a CFA. Absolutely no need, so much effort for usually barely any, if any at all, gain.

Add your comment »

Paul K, Private Equity / Venture Capital,  Wed 02 Jul 08

The problem with CFA is that it gives u so much in various careers that no one will ever use more than 10% of the curriculum in his/her career. Level 3 is to learn by heart instead of testing ur analytical skills, as a final level chartered financial ANALYST. since the change from AIMR to CFA Institute, it has been a profit oriented entity. CFA despite increasing ur salary,in some cases, consumes all ur time, and hinders ur career advancement in many other more practical issues. so if u decide on the CFA, u wil definitely have weak points in ur career, so after ur done, u need to spend double the time trying to make up for what u lost in the last 3 years.

Add your comment »

Phakama,  Wed 02 Jul 08

I think its high over rated...What about CAIA and having an MSc to your name.

Add your comment »

aqsnow, Information Technology,  Wed 02 Jul 08

Just one quick question re the '4 years' experience requirement. Does it have to be in financial industry alone? I mean what if I have 10 years experience in software development (out of which 2-3 were spent wrting software for BFSI clients), would that be considered? Or does it have to be hard core investment industry related experience

Add your comment »

visitor, Private Equity / Venture Capital,  Wed 02 Jul 08

CFA can give you the bricks, but not yet convinced that it gives real investment insight. Over last 3 years, I met many top buy and sell side, mix of CFA and non CFA (incl. MBAs). Conclusion: CFAs are good at completing the financial model, but the questions fielded from CFAs reflected somewhat narrow investment hypotheses, a due diligence approach or a "tick the box" view of investing.

Looking at it another way, as an investor,
- for benchmark funds, a CFA is probably necessary and sufficient,
- for anything stronger or more concentrated, a CFA is reassuring, but not strictly necessary, and certainly not sufficient.

ex-Eurostoxx 50, now PE investor

Add your comment »

Bob Moussa, Investment Consulting,  Wed 02 Jul 08

Do you know any good school teaching CFA?

Add your comment »

MASTER, Compliance / Legal,  Wed 02 Jul 08

I think it is in line with efinancial`s main business to report and write on the main qualification in their area of specialty than talk about other non - core issues, so if you are bored please remember not everyone is bored by the subject , so reserve your nasty comments and let serious readers get good advice from the publication.

Add your comment »
< Prev   1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6   Next >

ADD YOUR COMMENT

* Mandatory fields
Your name
Your field
Your Comment*
You have 1200 characters left
Image verification* ( What is this? )
Enter the code shown below or Sign in / Register to skip this step.
Disclaimer: All comments must adhere to eFinancialCareers Ltd’s Add your comment rules.
To complain about a comment, please email editor@efinancialcareers.com.
© Incisive Media Ltd. 2007 Jobs at Incisive Media | Terms and conditions | Privacy policy | Accessibility Statement
Incisive Media Limited, Haymarket House, 28-29 Haymarket, London SW1Y 4RX, is a company registered in the United Kingdom with company registration number 04038503