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There are many, many, many more MBAs from top B schools than charterholders.GIXX3R wrote:
But Big firms look for MBA from top B-school not from any B-school
And for these people getting a charterholder is not tough
I was going to make this same point.bchad wrote:
there are 150,000 new MBAs in the US alone *every year* and there are a little over 100,000 Charterholders in the world.
Yes, this bothers me too. But these are usually people from a no-name MBA program, no?. I don’t think someone from a T15 MBA program would put MBA after their name.iteracom wrote:
I was going to make this same point.bchad wrote:
there are 150,000 new MBAs in the US alone *every year* and there are a little over 100,000 Charterholders in the world.
This is also a big reason why when I see “MBA ” on a biz card, I think ‘wow what a dbag’
There may be 150k new MBAs in the US *every year* but there are only 5,600 new *top 7* US MBAs (assuming 800 per class) every year. You’re not competing against the 144,400 non-top MBAs for a PE job. On the other hand, all CFA Charterholders are the same (same brand, same test) so the CFA has less of a “branding effect” if that is what you think will get you a PE job.bchad wrote:
So what you mean is CFA has completely lost its value compared to top-school MBA.
I suspect a top-school MBA with a CFA or progress towards it is still more welcome than a top-school MBA without.
And then one can compare CFA to a non-top MBA and it still looks good, given that there are 150,000 new MBAs in the US alone *every year* and there are a little over 100,000 Charterholders in the world.
Anyway, the fact that many more people are taking the exams does make it a less niche/elite designation, but that’s different from saying it’s “completely lost its value.”
Talking about the CFA charter and PE is meaningless. Less than 5% of people in PE are charterholders (wild-ass guess). The whole point of the CFA is for people to engage in fundamental analysis of securities, not do deals. Therefore, comparing the “prestige” of a top MBA vs. that of a CFA charterholder is meaningless. Now if you want to compare a CFA charterholder gunning for a top buyside “stock-picking” role vs. that of a top10 MBA candidate…then you’re comparing apples to apples a little more.AFloverboy wrote:
There may be 150k new MBAs in the US *every year* but there are only 5,600 new *top 7* US MBAs (assuming 800 per class) every year. You’re not competing against the 144,400 non-top MBAs for a PE job. On the other hand, all CFA Charterholders are the same (same brand, same test) so the CFA has less of a “branding effect” if that is what you think will get you a PE job.bchad wrote:
So what you mean is CFA has completely lost its value compared to top-school MBA.
I suspect a top-school MBA with a CFA or progress towards it is still more welcome than a top-school MBA without.
And then one can compare CFA to a non-top MBA and it still looks good, given that there are 150,000 new MBAs in the US alone *every year* and there are a little over 100,000 Charterholders in the world.
Anyway, the fact that many more people are taking the exams does make it a less niche/elite designation, but that’s different from saying it’s “completely lost its value.”
I think you know my opinion about the CFP in a corporate finance setting, and you’re being snide and argumentative.former trader wrote:
I want to know Greenman’s opinion about the CFP in PE.