I'm on the risk side. First, as was pointed out before, organizations differ in their risk management practices -- risk at a bank is different than a hedge fund, obviously (or maybe not so obviously) but the set up at each bank can vary widely. There are several different types of roles that are under the umbrella of risk, so that may be the cause of some of the confusion as to what people do. There are roles that do one or a combination of the 3 things JDV pointed out as necessary skills.
I am on the credit side. I would say that the CFA curriculum has been helpful just as JDV pointed out -- I have literally seen stuff in corp fin, accting the very next day in my job (I ignore all the haters' comments of "the CFA is too equity focused to be relavant to what WE do" - which just means the speaker failed a level and gave up at some point). The fixed income and deriviatives covered in the curriculum are very very basic compared to what I do + have done coursework in.
There is one other guy in my group who holds the charter, but I am not really sure why he pursued it. Many of the new hires are beginning the CFA program but I think it is young herd mentality.
I have no real knowledge of the PRM / FRM but I am not tied to risk as a long time career so for me, the CFA is more in line with my career goals. Also, the CFA is widely recognizable and known, here in the US and abroad.
I would say that we typically hire (across the market and credit side, from the "quant" that I do to the real real quant) people with a science/engineering/math background with Master's level work in finance, math, or quant fin. I think progression in the program shows that the candidate has an extra dimension -- often times the backgrounds that I mentioned are at a loss for the intuition, the tangible part of the products....i.e. like they understand Merton structural model of default but don't understand that when times get tough, the firm will draw all its revolvers down fast.
I am on the credit side. I would say that the CFA curriculum has been helpful just as JDV pointed out -- I have literally seen stuff in corp fin, accting the very next day in my job (I ignore all the haters' comments of "the CFA is too equity focused to be relavant to what WE do" - which just means the speaker failed a level and gave up at some point). The fixed income and deriviatives covered in the curriculum are very very basic compared to what I do + have done coursework in.
There is one other guy in my group who holds the charter, but I am not really sure why he pursued it. Many of the new hires are beginning the CFA program but I think it is young herd mentality.
I have no real knowledge of the PRM / FRM but I am not tied to risk as a long time career so for me, the CFA is more in line with my career goals. Also, the CFA is widely recognizable and known, here in the US and abroad.
I would say that we typically hire (across the market and credit side, from the "quant" that I do to the real real quant) people with a science/engineering/math background with Master's level work in finance, math, or quant fin. I think progression in the program shows that the candidate has an extra dimension -- often times the backgrounds that I mentioned are at a loss for the intuition, the tangible part of the products....i.e. like they understand Merton structural model of default but don't understand that when times get tough, the firm will draw all its revolvers down fast.