cfa_student29
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- Jul 25, 2010
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^ so true, but I’ll die if I don’t make it
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agree with you that its only a test but the three letters infront of your name do tell the interviewer that you are willing to learn more.TimeTravel wrote:
You have spent hours studying financial analysis, portfolio mgt and stuff. How about you track a certain sector and create a small porfolio ($1000 or a hypothetical one) and test your skills. A 15% return will be the same whether you have $1m or $1k on the line. This will be music to an interviewer’s ears and your CFA might help you land that interview.Optimist85 wrote:
I thought earlier that passing the 3 exams will be a ticket to my dream job, I’m already over it, passing the first 2 didn’t help at all and I have no big hopes from this one as well, its just that I want to complete what I started..and I did it for both skills as well as the letters although now Im doubtful about how they are going to lead me to new opportunities
CFA means an American body said you passed a test, that’s all. Hiring managers or any serious person will be interested in how you have utilized the skills studied, which is why you can do better even after failing the test but having grasped the material.
The “CFA”, as with most good things out there, will be a hazard to the unsuspecting eye. Imagine a knife in the hands of a mad man or a gun in the purse of, let’s just say, any woman!!! Hope you get the picture.
totally!marketstudent1 wrote:L 1 and 2 results just made the wait more unbearable.
you must have a lot of emotional strength to take the test in these circumstancesishkurti wrote:
Unlike previous results, my stress this year is nearly non-existent. Had a family loss happen the week before and my bosses at work were surprised I even wrote the test. I do have a raise hanging on the result, but I have pretty much warned everyone I probably did not make it. While the driven competitor in me wants to be one of the first passers throughout all three levels, what I have been through the last couple of years has taught me that you can try and do all the “right” things, yet the “good” things are still a mixture of–yes–preparation, but a whole lot more luck.
Being a CFA candidate did not help me be marketable in the job market, but it gave me enough knowledge to be “dangerous”, so to speak. I landed my current job because people liked my trajectory in life and my sunny disposition and humility, not my two master degrees or the fact that I was a Level III candidate a year and a half into the program. I realized that in the CFA program–and anything that takes years of self-directed dedication like it–the journey is better than the destination. I don’t give a damn if I find out I did not pass, and instead will gladly grab those books again, as it may actually be opportunity to grab onto what I previsouly did not get well (After all, like reading a good book, the second or third time might be when you get the whole story).