ddrobinett wrote:
rhoffman wrote:
I work for Investment Management Consultants Association® (IMCA®), and we deliver the CIMA® certification. It is actually a quite challenging certification to earn and a majority of our certificants are top financial and investment advisors.
Namely, whom?
rhoffman wrote:
Since 1988, CIMA certification has been the only credential designed specifically for advanced investment advisors and consultants. Last year, CIMA certification was recognized as the only financial services designation in the United States to earn accreditation by the American National Standards Institute (ANSI) under an international personnel certification standard (ISO 17024). Among the hundreds of financial certifications and certificates currently offered, very few meet a similar standard.
Funny–the North American Securities Administrators Association has a few designations that allow a person to qualify for state registration. However, CIMA is NOT one of them.
http://www.nasaa.org/industry-resources/investment-advisers/ia-links/professional-designations/
rhoffman wrote:
The CIMA certification process takes most candidates nine months to a year to complete, but only one in three individuals who start the certification process successfully finish.
Does that nine months include the time it takes to do the background check? And do the other 2/3 of people balk at the 10,000 dollar price tag? I think that’s about the same as the nationwide college success rate.
rhoffman wrote:
To earn CIMA certification, applicants must demonstrate at least three years of financial industry experience and study for approximately 500 hours in addition to passing a background check, qualification exam, and certification exam.
500 hours–is that for the qualification exam, the certification exam, or both? Where do the 2/3 of candidates usually drop out?
rhoffman wrote:
CIMA certificants must also complete advanced investment management consulting coursework provided through The Wharton School, University of Pennsylvania or the University of Chicago Booth School of Business.
So, does that qualify me to put on my CV that I “attended the Wharton School of Business”?
rhoffman wrote:
IMCA feels that advisors who work in client-facing investment advisory roles – retail or institutional – should hold CIMA certification.
Really? The organization that issues (and makes money off of) the CIMA certification encourages people to take (and pay for) the CIMA certification? Who would have figured that?
rhoffman wrote:
The CIMA curriculum tests candidates on five major domain areas, each with dozens of supporting topics, including: developing and recommending investment policy statements for both individuals and institutional clients; making portfolio recommendations based on risk and beta analysis; analyzing performance measurement and recommending the selection of managers; analyzing and recommending specific investments (equities, fixed income, alternatives); and analyzing ethical and legal implications (including understanding fiduciary responsibilities for various client engagements).
Sounds vaguely familiar…I would be interested to see the actual curriculum, and see how it differs from the CFAI curriculum. I wonder if CFAI is aware of this.