CFA® Useful for Breaking Into PE?

Hey Monkeys,

I am curious if the CFA® 
is helpful with breaking into PE. I would imagine it would help a bit since Associates are evaluating investment opportunities.

Any insight would be greatly appreciated.

 

If you've already completed II you might as well do III. I'd recommend also trying to get the GMAT done as soon as you can as well.

My current firm has 2 CFA associates but no one talks about it. Additionally, I took level I and in the words of my principal, "you know, you probably should have just prepped more for the typical deal related stuff, the CFA only really has 20%-30% applicable material".

I was pushed more to become sound at accounting, all components of LBOs (strong understanding of debt and equity structures, different business models and their drivers) and extremely proficient at modeling. On the last point, there are very big differences between being able to build a LBO and building a very clean and easy to understand operating model.

If I could do it again, I think I would have focused on my Principal's recommendations and taking the GMAT instead of Level I the summer leading into my associate program.

"If you want to succeed in this life, you need to understand that duty comes before rights and that responsibility precedes opportunity."
 
Best Response
TheBigBambino:

If you've already completed II you might as well do III. I'd recommend also trying to get the GMAT done as soon as you can as well.

My current firm has 2 CFA associates but no one talks about it. Additionally, I took level I and in the words of my principal, "you know, you probably should have just prepped more for the typical deal related stuff, the CFA only really has 20%-30% applicable material".

I was pushed more to become sound at accounting, all components of LBOs (strong understanding of debt and equity structures, different business models and their drivers) and extremely proficient at modeling. On the last point, there are very big differences between being able to build a LBO and building a very clean and easy to understand operating model.

This. If you have a non-traditional background, the CFA may slightly help you get your foot in the door. However, since you're coming from IB, that shouldn't be an issue for you.

Now that I'm in PE, it's really of no use. My time studying for L3 would be much better spent learning things actually related to my job instead of portfolio management bs. Since you've already passed L2, I'd follow through with getting the certification, but it'll be of little help for the purpose of breaking into PE.

 

It will not help. Period.

That said if you've come this far you might as well finish. It clearly shows dedication and intelligence but I do not believe it will be the difference in 1) getting and interview, 2) converting an interview into an offer. If you are qualified with good work experience you will be fine with or without the CFA. If you don't have the proper experience the CFA will never make up for it.

 

Well if you plan to go to business school obviously.

It's not a bad line item to have on your resume. I just got reached out to for my first potential VP job and these guys asked for my resume, SATs and GMAT. I haven't taken the GMAT and my SATs kind of sucked so in my situation I would consider the GMAT valuable.

"If you want to succeed in this life, you need to understand that duty comes before rights and that responsibility precedes opportunity."
 

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