标题: CFA Citation [打印本页] 作者: hanvinh 时间: 2011-7-13 16:49 标题: CFA Citation
I am currently completing a cover letter for an investment analyst position and am waiting for Level 1 results. I was not sure how to exactly make reference to my current status...do I still state 2011 Level 1 CFA Candidate (even though I am not technically registered for any exams at the moment)? Or can I state that I am awaiting results from the June 2011 Level 1 CFA exam? I would assume the latter but want to be sure as the firm has a number of charterholders.
I appreciate any input...Thanks作者: draz 时间: 2011-7-13 16:49
should be "Level 1 candidate in the CFA Program"
You are candidate from the time your registration is confirmed till the time you results are declared.
If you pass you can write "Passed Level 1 of the CFA Examination in June 2011".
If you fail you have no status, unless you register again and your registration is accepted.作者: kamara5 时间: 2011-7-13 16:49
Yes, cfabombay is correct. I actually did the same for my resume. However, I do wonder if that provides any leverage at all. I have seen some people who have put that in their resumes, and I was very very skeptic of even mentioning it before getting the results (superstition maybe ;p), but a friend was urging me to. I guess it couldn't hurt no?作者: JRossSter 时间: 2011-7-13 16:49
before the june 2011 level 1 exam, i had "something" attached to my name to suggest that i was a level 1 candidate. i don't see that anymore when i log in on the CFA website(after writing the june 4 2011 level 1 exam). i thought i would remain a level 1 candidate until the results are out.作者: sgupta0827 时间: 2011-7-13 16:49
zinamarina Wrote:
-------------------------------------------------------
> However, I do wonder if that
> provides any leverage at all. I have seen some
> people who have put that in their resumes, and I
> was very very skeptic of even mentioning it before
> getting the results (superstition maybe ;p), but a
> friend was urging me to. I guess it couldn't hurt
> no?
Mixed results. But in general: no, it doesn't, unless you can supplement it with something valuable like good internship or work experience, or a prestigious degree.
"L1 candidate" means you were able to shell out $800 to register for an exam. That's it. You haven't accomplished anything.作者: pogo 时间: 2011-7-13 16:49
I think it helps for entry level people, particularly if you have few meaningful internships or other experience. It shows that you've thought about a career in finance, and have taken some initiative to look into credentials that might help you in the future.作者: Penny-wenny 时间: 2011-7-13 16:49
Agree with princealley and ohai! It can definitely add value to your resume but don't assume you'll get places based on CFA Level I alone.作者: Bulla564 时间: 2011-7-13 16:49
princealley Wrote:
-------------------------------------------------------
> Is some non-US markets even candidacy in the
> program sends out a strong signal, especially if
> you're not out of college yet....
Funny, I'd have thought the contrary. In Europe (ok, well in Switzerland), I feel like the CFA is regarded as yet another standardized American test. I remember my quant professor talking with a very french arrogant attitude towards it (so maybe it's just the academia world). Whereas now that I'm in NY, people seem to value it more. Anyway, I graduated over 2 years ago and I've been in my job for over a year and a half so I guess I'll put it anyway.
Thanks for your insights