CFA Torture

hi finance_machine, yea i got it...i'm super busy these days but will try to take a look at it this weekend or early next week. had a 16-hour work day yesterday and didn't get home until 1:30am, and had to be back in before 8 today...it was rough. going to take a nap now

but anyway, just wondering, when is your meeting so i can get at least some kind of feedback to you?



Edited 1 time(s). Last edit at Friday, September 29, 2006 at 06:46PM by numi.
 
>Oh yeah, sorry about the confusion cfa2grunt...I am definitely signed up for December!

>Like you stated, I think there are people who study for most of the year and several ?>hours each day, but I suspect that the material is either completely fresh for these >people, or they may not have the most effective study habits, or perhaps even both. >That being said, I will definitely bust my chops every night for 1-1.5 hours studying for >this exam, and I won't be wasting precious time like an undisciplined individiual.


Good self image helps the ego and personality, but CFA exam does not care. Be absolutely truthful to yourself - on what you know, your limitations and what you need to know.

I stick to my prediction. Whoever starts in October for Dec exam will fail. Passing will be an exception.
 
hey bambi, you seem to like to shorten words, FYI, the word "commitment" has one "t" not two, as in "committment"
 
greatguy, I wouldn't bet against Numi. Passing with 2 months of study time is only an exception because the candidate pool has trended toward mediocrity as the designation has become more well known.

cfastudent, get a life.
 
greatguy: "Good self image helps the ego and personality, but CFA exam does not care. Be absolutely truthful to yourself - on what you know, your limitations and what you need to know.

I stick to my prediction. Whoever starts in October for Dec exam will fail. Passing will be an exception."

greatguy -- when I ask you for your advice, you will know. Otherwise, continue to rant on as if anyone actually cared about what you had to say -- soon you will realize you are only wasting your own time. Cheers.



Edited 1 time(s). Last edit at Sunday, October 1, 2006 at 01:43PM by numi.
 
People are just different, so you cannot really say how much time one needs. It all depends on commitment, focus, and a little bit of luck in the end. I passed 3 out of 3 with relatively below average preparation: Level I-around 60-70 hours, mainly Flash Cards on the subway, and Ethics from the Schweser Notes, Level II-around 40 hours, mainly past exams and Schweser CD with exams and problems, Level III- around 300 hours, all from original books and Flash Cards. So, as you can see, everyone has to decide about what is affordable in terms of time, non-time constraints, and finance/non-finance background.
 
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