CFA® Charterholders Heading Top Hedge Funds?

I honestly can't name off the top of my head CFA® charterholders who are heading top funds. I don't "count" Cooperman/Gross since they both have MBAs too. Heck, it almost seems that JDs are a more common professional designation in the top HF & PE space (Singer, Rubenstein, Bonderman).

Am I overlooking people?

 
Best Response

In general, a CFA just isn't valued in the HF community the way it is in the long-only AM world. Also, among the HF manager set, a good number began as traders, so it's not really surprising that something like a CFA wasn't in the cards. Fundamentally, there is just very little in the CFA program that is going to contribute to you becoming a good investor.

A JD is actually potentially useful, although unlikely to provide a great return on investment of time and money. Definitely helps in credit investing, especially distressed, to have a legal background. It'll help you with identifying potentially interesting opportunities and doing preliminary research. That said, even if you have a legal background, you'll always end up having a law firm review docs before investing in a distressed situation, so the benefit is muted.

 
mk1275:

In general, a CFA just isn't valued in the HF community the way it is in the long-only AM world. Also, among the HF manager set, a good number began as traders, so it's not really surprising that something like a CFA wasn't in the cards. Fundamentally, there is just very little in the CFA program that is going to contribute to you becoming a good investor.

A JD is actually potentially useful, although unlikely to provide a great return on investment of time and money. Definitely helps in credit investing, especially distressed, to have a legal background. It'll help you with identifying potentially interesting opportunities and doing preliminary research. That said, even if you have a legal background, you'll always end up having a law firm review docs before investing in a distressed situation, so the benefit is muted.

I'd say you've provided a mixed bag of advice/information.

Isn't valued in the HF community as it is in the LO AM world? Bold statement. There is very little difference in terms of fundamental analysis that you do at a LO and e.g. a L/S equity fund. Certain parts of the CFA are directly relevant AND useful for your role. Will it make you a great investor? Absolutely not. Will it make you more knowledgeable and more informed about things that actually matter to you when making investment decisions? Absolutely yes.

JD potentially useful when compared with CFA? Hell no. Only for specific roles - maybe distressed debt, maybe more broad event-driven investing, but that's pretty much it really. Rule of thumb, if you had to choose between the two and didn't know what fund strategy you'd like to immerse yourself in - go for the CFA.

Trader - PM transition - agree completely. It was a different age when the most common transition was from prop trading at a bank to an analyst/PM role at a fund. Nowadays it's much more M&A/ER to an analyst/PM position (at least for more traditional equity funds).

 

Solid contender for the most pointless thread of 2015.

Also, evidencing a severe misunderstanding of the history / evolution of finance careers and both qualifications.

"After you work on Wall Street it’s a choice, would you rather work at McDonalds or on the sell-side? I would choose McDonalds over the sell-side.” - David Tepper
 
PaulAllenIsInLondon:

I'll bring it back up around year end to get it nominated.

I'm on this website to be educated on the "history/evolution of finance careers." Hope to see you meaningfully contribute to that education sometime soon.

Jesus you little shit.
"After you work on Wall Street it’s a choice, would you rather work at McDonalds or on the sell-side? I would choose McDonalds over the sell-side.” - David Tepper
 

Two that come to mind are Marty Whitman and Howard Marks.

mk1275:
Also, among the HF manager set, a good number began as traders, so it's not really surprising that something like a CFA wasn't in the cards
Ironically the only CFA charterholder in my group is our trader. He's also one of only two MBAs. Overall I think my firm (mega-cap multi-strategy HF) has
There have been many great comebacks throughout history. Jesus was dead but then came back as an all-powerful God-Zombie.
 

This make sense since in special situations and distressed debt investing, having strong legal knowledge (bankruptcy provisions, debt covenants, taxes, etc.) can be more useful than a CFA or MBA. Ultimately it depends on the firm and the type of strategy you're working on. A big long-only mutual fund such as BlackRock will value a CFA since it is more relevant to what they actually do. Also, a fund's preference lot of times will boil down to the background of the founders. If the founder has an MBA, he will probably be biased towards those who also have an MBA, especially from his school.

So short answer: it really depends.

 

CFA has become more prevalent in the last decade or so . . . so yeah I don't think 70+ year old Leon Cooperman would have it.

"Some things are believed because they are demonstrably true. But many other things are believed simply because they have been asserted repeatedly—and repetition has been accepted as a substitute for evidence." - Thomas Sowell
 

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