2016-02-02

We’ve been seeing an increasing number of actuaries taking the Chartered Financial Analyst (CFA) exams, including many on the Coaching Actuaries staff! This is why Coaching Actuaries and Mike Carmody, FSA, CFA, MAAA (of StudyJAM fame) have launched AdaptPrep CFA, offering Adapt and our quality video learning experience to the CFA exams.

What is CFA?

The Chartered Financial Analyst (CFA) is a professional designation for investment and financial professionals offered by the CFA Institute. It is also a great option for actuaries who want to expand their role or move into investment, portfolio management, or securities related roles. Passing CFA Levels I and II also fulfills an actuary’s VEE requirements. I wrote a post previously on why actuaries would consider the CFA with more good info on why to consider it.

What’s the difference between the CFA and the Actuarial Exams?

If the exams were rivers, the actuarial exams would be deep, swift running rivers, while the CFA exams would be like wide, shallow rivers (although each exam gets deeper). The actuarial exams go into depth on a limited set of topics and are math heavy. Often the challenge for actuarial questions is figuring out what even to do, as the problems can be tricky. The CFA exam covers 10 broad topics with much less math. The 10 topics are also independent and questions do not overlap across topics. The CFA is difficult because there is such a large amount of information to remember. However, while many actuaries can go and pass the CFA exams, much less CFAs would be able to handle the math-intensive actuarial exams.

Getting your CFA designation requires passing three levels (Levels I, II, and III) and getting professional experience. Getting your ASA, by comparison, requires passing P, FM, MFE, MLC, C, FAP, APC, and getting VEE credits.

Here’s a comparison between Exam FM and CFA Level I, just to give you an understanding of the differences:

Exam FM

CFA Level I

# of questions

35 questions

240 questions (2 sessions of 120 questions)

Time

3 hours

6 hours (Two 3 hour sessions)

Time/Question

~5 mins per question

~1.5 minutes per question

Exam Format

Multiple Choice, 5 answers, Computer-based

Multiple Choice, 3 answers, Paper-based exam

Coverage

2 major topics: Interest Theory and Derivatives Markets

10 major topics: Ethics, Quantitative Methods, Economics, Financial Reporting and Analysis, Corporate Finance, Portfolio Management, Equity, Fixed Income, Derivatives, Alternative Investments

Pass Rate

~45-48%

~42-45%

Average Study Hours

150-300 hours

300 Hours

Sittings

6 times a year

2 times: June and December

While most of the preliminary actuarial exams are multiple choice (except MLC) and are consistent in format, the CFA exams change at each level:

Level I

Multiple choice, single questions

Level III

Item sets with a case and six multiple-choice questions

Level III

Half written answer, half item sets like Level II

Have any questions about pursuing the CFA? Contact Tong Khon Teh, ASA, CFA by e-mailing support@coachingactuaries.com.

If you’re interested in preparing for the CFA exams, check out our products over at AdaptPrep CFA.

Example Level I video from Mike Carmody, FSA, CFA, MAA:

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