Ok, so about 1.5 years ago I landed what seemed like a great job, and it was, in a way. I was a portfolio manager for a convertible securities portfolio in a seperate account framework. I jumped into a sinking ship at that firm, and it was only a matter of time before the bossman couldnt afford to keep me. Performance was historically good and was stellar during my short tenure (about 1 year), but without getting into the nittygritty, it was too risky for me to stick around (i was having a baby in a couple months when I resigned).
I resigned because I was approached by another firm in town that wanted me to serve as a co-portfolio manager/analyst. The firm, by all appearances, was a super place to be, strong team, fast growth (still in its infancy, however), etc. It looked like a no-brainer. Now, 6 months into it, Im realizing it was a bad move. Again, without getting into it all, there are some issues that make it next to impossible for me to utilize my skill set. With an explanation, anyone would agree with me that it wouldnt work out. Any place I approach would certainly receive this explanation confidentially. In addition, 1 of the 2 partners would probably go to bat for me if I decide to leave, as he is aware of the situation and is very apologetic for not predicting these issues.
Both of these firms were <100MM in assets. Very small RIAs.
There is a fund of hedge funds in town recruiting an "executive assistant".. I've been aquainted with one of the partners of this >1B fund for ~2 years (he actually referred me to my first port. mgr. job, above). I explained, in summary form, my situation to him. After that he told me about this executive assistant job. He mentioned that I was really overqualified.
I guess I am looking for advice on this. I have expressed, in a letter, that I have no qualms with a temporary overqualification, if it would help get my foot in the door... though only to the extent that the plan would be for me to move up the ladder rather quickly (i coined the timeline as 3-6 months, but even 6-9 doesnt seem that bad for this kind of opportunity).
If I can assume I'll make the same going into this, what is your take on the situation? I live in a relatively small town (~ 500,000 metro population) and there arent alot of firms this size (umm, i stress that).
has anyone worked at a fund of funds before? comments, suggestions? I dont know exactly what Im looking for, other than I know I need to make a change, and I know Id like a more senior job at the FOF, but this is not necessarily that.
Oh yeah, let me add.. I sat for LIII in June and feel pretty good. Additionally, I do not yet have my bachelors degree.. Im 1 year through it, locally (night hours---doesnt infringe on work schedule)
I resigned because I was approached by another firm in town that wanted me to serve as a co-portfolio manager/analyst. The firm, by all appearances, was a super place to be, strong team, fast growth (still in its infancy, however), etc. It looked like a no-brainer. Now, 6 months into it, Im realizing it was a bad move. Again, without getting into it all, there are some issues that make it next to impossible for me to utilize my skill set. With an explanation, anyone would agree with me that it wouldnt work out. Any place I approach would certainly receive this explanation confidentially. In addition, 1 of the 2 partners would probably go to bat for me if I decide to leave, as he is aware of the situation and is very apologetic for not predicting these issues.
Both of these firms were <100MM in assets. Very small RIAs.
There is a fund of hedge funds in town recruiting an "executive assistant".. I've been aquainted with one of the partners of this >1B fund for ~2 years (he actually referred me to my first port. mgr. job, above). I explained, in summary form, my situation to him. After that he told me about this executive assistant job. He mentioned that I was really overqualified.
I guess I am looking for advice on this. I have expressed, in a letter, that I have no qualms with a temporary overqualification, if it would help get my foot in the door... though only to the extent that the plan would be for me to move up the ladder rather quickly (i coined the timeline as 3-6 months, but even 6-9 doesnt seem that bad for this kind of opportunity).
If I can assume I'll make the same going into this, what is your take on the situation? I live in a relatively small town (~ 500,000 metro population) and there arent alot of firms this size (umm, i stress that).
has anyone worked at a fund of funds before? comments, suggestions? I dont know exactly what Im looking for, other than I know I need to make a change, and I know Id like a more senior job at the FOF, but this is not necessarily that.
Oh yeah, let me add.. I sat for LIII in June and feel pretty good. Additionally, I do not yet have my bachelors degree.. Im 1 year through it, locally (night hours---doesnt infringe on work schedule)