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CFA Useful for Corporate Finance?

It’s been a long time since I’ve posted on this forum. Here’s my story. In December 2007 I took L1 and failed. I didn’t have any finance or accounting background prior to taking the test and wasn’t sure what the difficulty level was. June 2008 I passed L1 with flying colors. June 2009 I failed L2 despite studying my ass off. June 2010 I passed L2 while studying LESS than I did in 2009. I was just much more cognizant of the gaming and trickery aspect of the questions in the L2 exam. I stopped at this point and never attempted L3.
During this entire time of studying for CFA, I had grand dreams of getting that Wall St job and blasted out my resume during the financial meltdown. I landed 40 interviews over those 4 years at many financial institutions and never got an offer. I do have a top 20 undergrad degree. I finally settled for corporate finance at a manufacturing company. Overall I like the work and really value the work/life balance. I’ve pretty much scrapped the idea that I’ll ever get that Wall St job, and that’s fine with me.
Although I’m close, I want to get to that magical six figure salary at another corporate finance role. I’m wondering if maybe I should finish up the CFA program. I feel that most companies outside of Wall St wouldn’t care for it. I recently had a phone interview with a company that kept harping on the fact that I passed 2 levels and they thought I’d want to leave for an analyst role using the charter. It seems like a double-edged sword - companies may like that I have some sort of advanced certification and others may hold it against me. I don’t really want to do an MBA because of the cost. CFA L3 will require a shitload of work since I haven’t touched this stuff in 3 years. It may just not be worth it.
What do you guys think?

“Corporate Finance” is a misnomer, it should be called Corporate Accounting.
The CFA is of limited benefit for this type of work as others have said. Select another designation or move away from corp fin. The skills you will pick up with the CFA are great and valuable, but not in demand in the corp finance world. Most people come from the accounting side of the business

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If your next job description requires CFA knowledge or considers it an asset, then you know the CFA charter will be very benefitial. Otherwise it’s difficult to say. I would suggest looking at potential 6-figure-salary jobs that interest you and see what the requirements are. Then set your goal for whatever the study is.

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Will your work experience count toward getting your charter?

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Is there a possibility for you to join a bigger organization that would agree to pay for your CFA if you pass and also provide you opportunities to move around given you have the Charter?It may make sense then.
I always use my membership/candicacy as a negiotiation tool in my interviews where, after I receive an offer, I usually cite the benchmark of typical CFA salary ranges with my level of work experience, if nothing else. It does come in handy as it is you that has to create value from it not the employer…its in their interest not to talk about your CFA if you dont use it in your job on a regular basis. However, its only you that has to do the cost/benefit analysis on how much of an increase you would like vs. the amount of work that goes into it.
I, like you, took Level 1 in 2009 and then just took Level 2 after 4 years and I changed jobs in between so I can somewhat speak from experience. In addition, I believe I am now in a country with the highest concentration of Charterholders so it becomes a competitive factor as well.
Good Luck.

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You would be better off buying your boss a cup of coffee than finishing the CFA, it is too focused on AM/ER, and only a “nice to have” credential in CorpFin.  Passing L1/L2, has improved your analytical skills for your job, but taking L3 will not help you at all in your current job.   I think a CPA, CMA or PT/MBA would be better.

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Do u need 100k+ to help them?

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Very good question.
My answer is “depends”.
Do you work for a public company or at least a large multi-national organization? if there is a sizable treausry department in your company, the chance is the Treasurer is probably a CFA charterholder, and there are probably lots of FX transactions and finance procurement. i’d say that’s probably one of the few departments where CFA can be benefitial.
NANA

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My advice - if your boss ain’t a Charterholder, or if your company doesn’t have a lot of Charterholders, don’t do it.  They will never respect it, and they will never pay you for it.  Certainly won’t pay your CFAI dues.
If you want to impress your bosses, a CMA would probably be better, because they understand it and know how much work went into it.  They’ll pay you for being a CMA before being a CFA.
(That shouldn’t be misconstrued to say that the CMA is “better” or “harder” than the CFA–but in his case it is probably more well known and probably would be valued more.)

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