Thanks. I just remembered the CFE (Certified Fraud Examiner program) and found this thread about a new hedge fund analyst trying to find advanced accounting books for “financial shenanigans”. I’ve also heard of the CFE being valued by hedge funds because of their training in forensic accounting.
The CFE books aren’t too bad- 2,000 pages in total (smaller than one level of the CFA) and I found a dealer that is selling them for $200:
http://www.analystforum.com/phorums/read.php?1,912036,912050#msg-912050
“I finished the CFA last year and moved from the sell-side to a hedge fund about six months ago. I don’t have an accounting background, but it seemed fairly easy to pick up when I got into the industry – my accounting skills were at an acceptable level for the sell side and the CFA, but this is a whole different ball game. Specifically, we spend a good amount of time on the short side trying to uncover fraud and understand when a company is about to blow up. On the long side, it might be looking at the probability of bankruptcy of a particular company – i.e., does it survive? what should the cash burn model look like? etc. This is considerably more involved than the “management guided” earnings models you see coming out of the sell side (mostly useless). ”
But I am still unsure what are the most in-depth and effective “practical” tomes on forensic accounting. Should I go for the CFE books or the two tomes by “Financial Warnings” or “Guide to FRA” (same authors) book? (500-600 pages). Or something else.
http://www.amazon.com/s/ref=nb_ss?url=search-alias%3Dstripbooks&field-ke...
Textbooks on forensic accounting, and I’m confused now.
Before I build a small self study program to learn how to short effectively, am I doing this right?
Theoretical background Short selling + entry point technical analysis + short selling books + forensic accounting