Only 35% Pass Wall St.’s Toughest Test. How Much
Does That Matter?
This summer, a record low number of
C.F.A. test takers passed the first level of the notoriously difficult
exams, reviving an old debate about the merits of the qualification.
Outside the New York Stock Exchange in September.
Victor Llorente for The New York Times |
By Lananh
Nguyen
Sept. 30, 2021
When the pandemic hit, Irene Zhu decided
to explore switching careers from tourism to finance. A lifelong math whiz, Ms.
Zhu, 37, set her sights on becoming a chartered financial analyst, a highly
coveted professional qualification in the investing world. But to do so, she
would need to pass three notoriously difficult tests, the first of which she sat
for in February — after staying up well past 1 a.m. on many nights studying.
She failed.
“I have to say, it was pretty messy,” Ms.
Zhu said in a video chronicling her experience. “What made the C.F.A. exam
really challenging for me is the time and effort that I needed to put in,” she
said.
The process of earning a C.F.A. after
one’s name has always been grueling: Candidates are expected to master 3,000
pages of material and demonstrate their ability to analyze companies’ financial
statements, forecast investment profits and manage conflicts of interest,
alongside a vast swath of concepts and scenarios.
The pandemic made that slog harder. Ms.
Zhu, based in Melbourne, Australia, was among roughly 140,000 people who sat for
one of the three qualifying exams required for a C.F.A. this year. Only 35
percent passed. Of those who took their first exam in the most recent round in
July, the
pass rate was 22 percent — the lowest on record since the nonprofit
CFA Institute began administering the tests in 1963. On average, fewer than half
of C.F.A. test takers across all levels pass.
The record lows revived a longstanding
debate among finance industry veterans: How useful is the credential for success
on Wall Street? And how does it compare to the industry’s most popular graduate
degree — the M.B.A., or master of business administration? Those questions —
M.B.A. vs. C.F.A. vs. nothing at all — pop up periodically in the industry, but
this time around they carry more urgency, especially with registrations for the
C.F.A. program down from their 2019 peak. In the midst of the pandemic, Wall
Street’s biggest firms have also been forced to rethink some of the rites of
passage that have long gone unquestioned — like long
hours at the mercy of bosses or buttoned-up
attire.
C.F.A. candidates whose exams were
canceled or postponed because of lockdowns and hardships during the pandemic had
poorer results, the institute said after
auditing data from the last two rounds of subpar scores. Although the tests are
typically offered twice a year, they were offered several times this year
because of the pandemic.
“People have had, in many cases, their
lives upturned — we know they’re working from home virtually, there’s a fatigue
setting in,” said Margaret Franklin, the chief executive of the CFA Institute,
which is based in Charlottesville, Va. “There’s kind of the optimal study
conditions, and then there’s the reality of Covid,” she said.
Margaret Franklin, the chief of the CFA Institute. She
acknowledges the hardships faced by test takers.
Tom Jamieson for The New York Times |
Many of today’s top financial managers
hold CFA credentials, including Marty Flanagan, the chief executive of Invesco,
which manages $1.5 trillion, and Heather Brilliant, chief executive of Diamond
Hill Capital Management. Other top leaders in the asset management business,
including the BlackRock chief Laurence D. Fink, do not.
Howard Marks, the billionaire investor and
co-chairman of Oaktree Capital Management, a fund that specializes in distressed
debt, holds both a C.F.A. title and an M.B.A. degree. A firm supporter of the
C.F.A. program, Mr. Marks said the title was valuable because it was the closest
thing the money management business had to an industry qualification.
The C.F.A. doesn’t tell anybody whether
so-and-so is a good investor — it only goes to the question of academic
preparation, but it’s clearly a plus,” Mr. Marks said. “You can take an M.B.A.
and not have any investment courses, so an M.B.A. is clearly not sufficient,” he
added.
A recent round of poor results prompted
Jared Dillian, the author of an investing newsletter, to write an essay last
month with a pointed headline: “Wall
Street’s CFA Program Is a Colossal Waste of Time.” Mr. Dillian was
blasted by C.F.A.s who were quick to defend the merits of their hard-won
credential. But he said he also received many private messages that concurred
with his assessment.
Early in his career, Mr. Dillian passed
the first-level C.F.A. exam, but later failed the second level. He considers his
M.B.A. from the University of San Francisco more valuable because it enabled him
to network and learn from business leaders while at school.
“It’s better than sitting at your desk at
home, banging your head against the wall, memorizing formulas,” Mr. Dillian
said.
An essay Jared Dillian wrote called the C.F.A. program a
“colossal waste of time.”
Leslie Ryann McKellar for The New York Times |
The CFA Institute first offered exams in
the 1960s as a way to set professional standards for financial analysts who
manage investments for clients. During that decade, an average of 1,500 people
took the tests each year. Of those, 73 percent to 94 percent passed.
Over time, the C.F.A. curriculum came to
be seen as foundational knowledge for analysts and portfolio managers who were
willing to plow through the material to gain an edge. But as the designation
became more popular, pass rates dropped. The number of candidates peaked above
270,000 in 2019, and an average of 44.2 percent passed.
While exam registrations are down from
their 2019 peak — exacerbated by the pandemic — roughly 1.7 million people
remain enrolled in the program, of which 236,000 people are booked for coming
tests. Each exam clocks in at four-and-a-half hours. Registration, exams and
materials cost about $3,000 — far cheaper than the average cost of an M.B.A.
program. Holders of the C.F.A. designation have to pay annual membership fees to
keep their titles.
“It’s a great certification to have, but
given the time and demands to obtain it, it does make sense to plan
appropriately,” said Paul Sorbera, president of the Wall Street executive search
firm Alliance Consulting. Advanced qualifications can lift an employee’s earning
power, but higher compensation isn’t guaranteed, Mr. Sorbera said.
Michael Lin, a 28-year-old amateur boxer
who received the C.F.A. designation in August after passing all his exams on the
first try, compared the effort to training for an athletic tournament. Mr. Lin,
who was working at Wells Fargo’s wealth management division at the time, started
by studying several hours a day outside of work, then added weekends, and took
one to two weeks off before each exam to study full time. The pandemic lockdown
allowed Mr. Lin to hunker down and hit the books, unlike some of his colleagues
and friends who had bigger disruptions.
“Mentality is a huge part of it,” said Mr.
Lin. While a C.F.A. is highly specialized for money managers and analysts, it is
also a solid credential that is much more cost-effective than a master’s, he
said. Now that he is a chartered financial analyst, “I definitely don’t want to
drop a couple hundred grand for an M.B.A.,” Mr. Lin said.
Florian Campuzan, an independent stock
trader in Versailles, France, was not as lucky. Mr. Campuzan is pursuing a C.F.A.
in hopes that the knowledge and prestige gained from the credential will bolster
his consulting jobs, such as advising companies about their commodity hedging.
But he fell short on his final exam because busy equity markets took up more of
his time in the first quarter.
Mr. Campuzan appeared to take the news in
good humor, posting
on Twitter: “Failed CFA level 3,” with a thumbs up emoji. In an
interview later, he was more philosophical. “Trading is the school of hard
knocks and it teaches you to be humble — it teaches you to be a hardworking
person and it teaches you to accept failure as a part of the journey,” Mr.
Campuzan said. “This time, I failed, but next time, I will succeed.”
Ms. Zhu, who took her first C.F.A. test in
February hoping to switch careers, was discouraged. “Whoever wants to take the
C.F.A. really needs the mental and physical time to be dedicated to the exam,”
she said. Toward the end of the six-month period she had allocated to herself to
prep for the exam — with two children at home and a husband also working
remotely during the pandemic — Ms. Zhu said she felt that she was running out of
time.
After learning that she hadn’t passed, Ms.
Zhu decided pursuing the C.F.A. wasn’t worthwhile. “I was a little bit
disappointed, but then again, even if I passed level one, it seems to be a long
journey to pass level two and level three and the charter.”
Instead, she plans to build a career in
finance partly by making YouTube videos where she shares her insights on
investing.
Lananh Nguyen covers Wall Street for The New York Times. She previously spent
more than a decade at Bloomberg News in New York and London, where she wrote
about banking and financial markets.
A version of this article appears in print on Oct. 3, 2021, Section BU,
Page 1 of the New York edition with the headline: How the Pandemic Made a Tough
Test Even Tougher.
© 2021 The
New York Times Company