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A long time ago I listed the CFA in a list of “stuff investment bankers don’t like,” which resulted in a lot of controversy and dozens of angry comments.
Being a marketer, I actually liked all the attention.
But ever since then, there have been discussions on message boards and via email of my claim that the CFA is “useless for investment banking.”
So I wanted to explain in more detail why I don’t like it and why you can waste hundreds of hours studying for the CFA – but also why it can be useful in some situations.
Why All the Hate?
If you’ve been in school most of your life, you’ve been conditioned into thinking that grades / degrees / certifications = success.
So by extension, you might think that the CFA = success.
Just one small problem: the real world doesn’t work like that.
Everything is based on money, rather than grades or paper designations.
If you want to make a serious amount of money, you need to generate a serious amount of money and take a percentage of it – via investments, sales, clients, and so on.
And the CFA doesn’t prepare you to sell products or to win clients, or even to make investments (yes, it tests your analytical skills but not your make-a-tough-decision skills).
The Time Requirements
According to the CFA Institute, 300 hours of study are required for each level of the exam – 900 hours altogether.
To put that number in perspective:
And those last 3 items would help you break into investment banking far more than passing the CFA.
Remember that time is the scarcest resource of all – you can never generate more time no matter how much money you have.
Even if you’re in school and you think you have infinite time, those 900 hours take away from socializing, studying, and activities.
The CFA in Investment Banking, Sales & Trading, Private Equity, Hedge Funds, and More
Very few professionals in these fields have the CFA designation, even at the top levels.
The CFA does not cover the accounting, valuation, and financial modeling specific to investment banks, and there’s nothing on conducting due diligence, creating pitch books, or communicating with senior bankers – all of which you’ll be doing a lot as an analyst or associate.
Here’s how it stacks up across different industries:
The CFA is best for portfolio management, which most of us are not interested in.
There’s nothing wrong with wanting to do portfolio management rather than the industries above, but you need to be aware of where the CFA will help and where it won’t.
Why You Might Want to Ignore All This and Get Certified Anyway
I like to present both sides of the story, so here’s the case for the CFA:
You Have the Free Time
Maybe you’ve already networked like a ninja, or you have no interest in setting up 900 informational interviews (I admit it, that it is excessive).
Or maybe you already have an offer lined up and you have 6+ months of free time to prepare with no concrete plans.
Or maybe you’re working full-time, networking on the side, and you can still devote 10-20 hours per week to the CFA.
If you’re in one of these categories, then it may not be such a bad idea to do the CFA.
Remember, it’s not that it’s completely useless – having the bullet point will show that you know something about finance – it’s that it doesn’t deliver a solid return on time.
But if you have a surplus of free time, that’s less of an issue.
Networking
In some cities, there are “CFA Societies” that you can join once you get the certification – and they can be very helpful for networking.
There won’t be too many bankers in these societies because the CFA is more common in portfolio management – but you can get referrals from other CFA charter holders and use those to meet bankers.
These groups are more hit-and-miss than alumni networking, professors, student groups, and other tried-and-true methods, but you should consider them if you spend the 900 hours to get the certification in the first place.
You’re in an Emerging Market
The CFA won’t turn the heads of many bankers in the US and Europe, but it gets more respect in emerging markets like India, parts of Asia, and South Africa.
Especially if you’re in a region that’s more “traditional” when it comes to recruiting – AKA networking does not work as well – the CFA may give you a leg up.
Do not drop out of school or quit working to take the exam – consider it if you have extra time, you’ve networked extensively without much success, or you’re coming from a non-traditional background where the CFA demonstrates your interest in finance.
You’re Interested in Portfolio Management, (Some) Hedge Funds, or Equity Research
There’s a high overlap between portfolio management and the exam material and most charter holders are portfolio managers, so it’s almost a requirement there.
For hedge funds, it depends on the fund – if it does short-term trading, the CFA won’t be terribly useful. But if it’s closer to portfolio management and it focuses on long-term investments, the exam will help.
At the entry-level in equity research the CFA is not a good use of time, but many people in more advanced ER positions have the certification – just look at equity research reports issued by banks.
The Bottom-Line
So, to CFA or not to CFA?
If you want to do portfolio management, then definitely go for it.
In other fields of finance, think about it only if you’ve already networked a lot and have some spare time – or if you’re in a region where it’s more respected.
But please, if you’re sophomore or junior without internships, don’t spend 900 hours studying for the CFA and think it will have the same effect as landing a bulge bracket internship offer.
And if you’re at the MBA level, please do not go for the certification in lieu of a solid pre-MBA or school-year internship.
-Brian
Mergers & Inquisitions
Breaking Into Wall Street
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