14 Comments
 

Note: I have no experience with Level 3, i'm a L2 candidate at the moment.

Might as well try. Seems a bit late in the game to start (regardless of which level) but the fees are a sunk cost at this point. Why not give it a solid 6 weeks and see if you can scrape by. Worst that happens is you fail and come away with a better idea of how to approach it next year when you have more time and a base level understanding of the material.

Array
 
Thanks, don't plan to move my start date. I spoke with a friend and he said he barely passed with 80 hours of studying. That gave me hope.

Look it's possible and like others said you really have nothing to lose. If you can dedicate a fair amount of time to studying you have a chance.

The thing that makes L3 harder is that half the exam is essays which require you to really know what you're talking about, as opposed to L1 and L2 which are all multiple choice.

 
Best Response

For Level 1 and 2 I would say a background in the industry is helpful, but unless you've worked as an allocator or a consultant, Level 3's focus is a lot different - lots of higher level portfolio/wealth management, behavioral finance, not really doing DCF and etc. It's actually a lot more of getting fed current industry standard thoughts on things and applying it to hypothetical situations. My personal experience was that I had to actually 'learn' how to respond correctly to their questions, since half of it is essay and you can't discount that in your studying.

Yes, there are always some people who can weasel their way through on 60-80 hours of study, but you probably know by now if you're that kind of person or not...

Overall, I think it boils down to how much time you can afford to study - if your new job's going to be nuts, forget it. But if you can put some significant time into it between now and then, it will be difficult to doable.

My 2 cents, I'd skip. But you know your workload and abilities best, so figure out what's best for you.

 

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