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Is Getting a CFA Worth the Effort?

<p>Gilaxia / Getty Images</p>

Gilaxia / Getty Images

Reviewed by Amy SoricelliFact checked by David RubinReviewed by Amy SoricelliFact checked by David Rubin

Becoming a chartered financial analyst (CFA) means over 900 hours of graduate-level study, successful completion of three rigorous examinations, 4,000 hours of relevant work experience, and adherence to a well-honed code of ethics and standards of professional conduct.

Approximately one in five entrants into the CFA program sees it through to completion. But in a crowded job market, in a profession held in rather low esteem by the public of late, is all of the effort devoted to obtaining the CFA worth it?

Key Takeaways

  • Getting a CFA requires participating in the program’s rigorous course of study and successfully passing three exams.
  • You must have 4,000 hours of relevant work experience to qualify as a CFA charterholder.
  • CFAs work in many areas of finance from risk management to private wealth counseling.
  • A CFA is a professional certification that can only be earned via the CFA Institute.
  • It takes more than 900 hours of study to qualify for a CFA.

The Value of a CFA

Financial service employers recognize the value that a charterholder brings to the workplace, which is why many job postings in the industry either request or require that the applicant have or is working toward the designation. According to the CFA Institute, this credential “is the professional standard of choice for more than 31,000 investment firms worldwide.”

JPMorgan Chase, Morgan Stanley Wealth Management, Royal Bank of Canada, BlackRock, and TD Bank Financial Group are just a few of the financial institutions that employ CFAs.

CFAs have a total self-reported income of $177,000, with a base salary of $126,000, according to a 2019 CFA Institute compensation study based on data from 15,000 members. The study also found that in that same year, average base salaries of CFAs increased at a greater rate, year over year, than those for the general market.

Important

The language of finance may be English, but the practice of finance is decidedly global and competitive. 

CFA Education and Skills

A CFA designation can be especially helpful if you don’t have an undergraduate degree in finance, economics, or accounting, and your goal is a job or career in the finance industry. Unlike a master’s in business administration (MBA), which can vary significantly in content, rigor, and reputation, the CFA is a professional certification conferred only by one organization: the CFA Institute.

The CFA Institute is a nonprofit association that represents part of the asset management and research field. It creates, administers, and tests a curriculum that strives for perpetual relevance in a dizzyingly complex world. More important is the international merit of the Institute and its exam.

A CFA’s knowledge and skills qualify them to work nationally and internationally. The investment management sectors in which they are employed range from asset and private wealth management to commercial and investment banking and insurance.

What Does a CFA Do?

There are a number of occupations available to a CFA and new uses for the tools developed in rigorous exams that experts and generalists are regularly updating to reflect the current financial environment. A long development period guards against quality degradation.

The candidate body of knowledge derives from the global financial body of investment knowledge and is grounded in changing professional practice. Examples of charterholder careers include portfolio manager, investment analyst, risk analyst, chief investment officer, performance measurement analyst, risk manager, and private wealth counselor.

Candidates learn along a continuum, beginning with knowledge and comprehension of critical areas and concepts, such as quantitative methods, economics, and portfolio management (Levels I and II), to application and analysis of what was learned (Levels I to III). This culminates in the synthesis and evaluation of key areas of practice (Levels II and III), such as wealth planning and portfolio management pathways on an institutional and individual level.

The learning is not so much sequential as evolving, assuming greater depth as the level of the examinations progress.

Level I  Level II  Level III 
Questions 180 multiple choice  Vignette-supported multiple choice Vignette-supported essay and multiple choice 
Time 4 hours 30 minutes 4 hours 22 minutes  4 hours 24 minutes

How Much Does a CFA Earn?

According to Payscale, the average base salary for a chartered financial analyst is $97,591, with a range of $64,000 to $176,000. With bonuses and profit sharing, the total pay can go as high as $238,000. According to a 2019 CFA Institute compensation study based on data from 15,000 members, total self-reported income was $177,000, with a base salary of $126,000.

What Are Typical Jobs for a CFA?

CFAs are often employed in investment decision-making roles, typically as research analysts or portfolio managers. Other common positions include risk analyst, chief investment officer (CIO), performance measurement analyst, risk manager, and private wealth counselor.

Is a CFA Better Than an MBA?

The answer depends on your career goals. If you are looking for broad knowledge of business and its core concepts, with perhaps the goal of a management job at a large company, going to business school for an MBA might be your best option. Another advantage of pursuing an MBA is that you can connect with your peers and school faculty to help you build a network of contacts that can prove valuable when it comes time to land a job.

A CFA provides you with specialized skills, such as investment analysis, asset allocation, financial reporting and analysis, and wealth planning. It is a self-study program, which means you don’t have to step into a classroom. This program may be suited to individuals who know what type of finance career they’re aiming for, such as investment management, corporate finance, or risk management.

The Bottom Line

Whether it makes sense to pursue a chartered financial analyst’s certification depends on several factors, including your educational background, career goals, and time. There are three very difficult exams, each requiring a minimum of 300 hours of study. Pass rates, according to the CFA Institute, were 44% to 46% for Level I, 59% for Level II, and 49% for Level III in the February and May 2024 examinations.

Becoming a charterholder may help you break into finance—especially if your undergraduate degree is not in finance, accounting, or economics—or advance in an investment career, thanks to the knowledge you’ll gain and access to a large network of other CFAs.

Read the original article on Investopedia.

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