Just curious: Youngest to complete all 3 levels?

Youngest charter would have to be four years out of school nowadays, unless you’re dougie howser and graduating when you’re 12, the youngest charterholders would like be 24-25. If that’s the case I’ll feel pretty good if I can get mine this August.
 
good friend of mine just passed level 3 at 26 and has charter. He had to retake level III so could of passed all 3 at 25 but he just got the work exp this year.
 
Maybe i was a bit hard on him. just wanted to rant.
 
A friend of mine just wrote L3, pending that he passes he will be a charterholder within a year.
Edit: He is 23.
 
rohufish Wrote:
——————————————————-
> i’m really not sure what some 22 yr old who has
> not even saved their first 10k, or dealt with org
> politics, or experienced their first job / career
> change, or marriage, or parenthood, or home
> ownership, or led a large team of differently
> abled/skilled individuals, etc etc. could possibly
> gain out of the L3 exam. sure, they may pass it,
> but they’ll have no context on so much stuff. ok,
> L1 and L2 is mostly theoretical, so anyone can
> learn this stuff, hard as it may be. But L3 is a
> very rich, complex, subjective set of materials
> which require a lot of thought and insight to
> really master.
>
> ideally, if you don’t care about doing all 3
> together, i’d do L1 and L2 early, work 4 years,
> and take L3 when you’re eligible for the charter.
> you’d get so much more out of L3.
Have to agree here. On the experience front as well as with respect to eligibility.
I plan on doing level 1 and 2 and taking time off until my work experience requirement has been rubber stamped by CFAI. I’m not passing level 3 and waiting two or three years to get my just dessert.
 
I should have had the charter at 24, but it took the CFA institute 9 months to approve my work experience. Dont think that makes me a badass though.
 
psh…I passed all 3 lvls at age 10, but I couldn’t get a job cause I wasn’t legal to take clients to strip clubs. The only person who passed it at a younger age is Chuck Norris, I think he did it at age 2 before he taught Benjamin Graham how to invest.
….Who really cares…
Step 1) Pass lvl 1 on the first try in December
Step 2) Pass lvl 2 6 months after lvl 1
Step 3) Write lvl 3, then you start dreaming about being a young ass charterholder.
 
rohufish Wrote:
——————————————————-
> i’m really not sure what some 22 yr old who has
> not even saved their first 10k, or dealt with org
> politics, or experienced their first job / career
> change, or marriage, or parenthood, or home
> ownership, or led a large team of differently
> abled/skilled individuals, etc etc. could possibly
> gain out of the L3 exam.
What do these things have to do with L3? Nothing. If you are trying to argue that someone has to have experienced life and be mature to really gain the benefit of L3, then age is irrelevant to that discussion.
I do agree though that trying to jam three levels of material into your brain without relevant professional experience (totally different from the things you listed) is not that helpful. But then again, neither is a finance degree. Experience > everything else.
 
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