UK Society of Investment Professionals - UKSIP

The CFA Society of theUK, supporting ASIP, CFA and IMC professionals.

  Tue 18 Nov 2008

UK Society of Investment Professionals - CFA Institute

Career Center Jobs and Career Management in the Financial Markets, Banking & Finance
  Job Seekers Sign in / Register Recruiter's Sign-in
Careers Home  |   My eFinancialCareers  |   Find a Job  |   Post Resume
Search by Company  |   News & Advice  |   Search Resumes  |   Post a Job 

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

So easy, CFA, HR & Recruitment,  Thu 03 Jul 08

Easiest set of exams I ever sat, slightly harder than media study GCSE! crammed it all in 6weeks before each exam. Overhyped qualification, size of charter inversely proportional to difficulty.

Add your comment »

chase, Capital Markets,  Thu 03 Jul 08

worthwhile on buy side but ignored on sell side.
ethics section is very key to designation's status.
separtes men from boys.  MBA is just another commodity.

Add your comment »

Advertisement, Consultancy,  Sun 06 Jul 08

How much paid for CFA Advertisement ????

Add your comment »

Mark, Equities,  Mon 07 Jul 08

I appreciate being associated with the CFA.
But in my opinion, CFA is a type of financial certification poker !!!!
If you take CFA exam and fail it, oooooh ! you lose most of your payment and you can not resit.
Rather you have to register again for another chance.
My suggestion to any would be candidate is that, if you don't have huge sum of money, stay away from CFA and just dream about it.

Add your comment »

Sam, Asset Management,  Mon 28 Jul 08

It is so hyped. Pls stop it. I won't hire those people purely because it value destroying

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.