As a person who passed all three levels I disagree. The second level I thought was the most complex and actually invovled some out-of-box thinking. I was quite disappointed by level III's lack of depth, because I thought the first 2 levels would be generalist exams to the last one's 'portfolio management specialist'. CFA is like learning how to walk so you can go on to train to become an athlete, or learning how to speak a language so you can go on and live in a certain country.
Maybe the CFA designation has a higher Sharpe ratio (i.e. bigger bang for the buck) but the Ivy League experience has a lot more intangibles like building a network and potentially having a Nobel prize winner as your mentor. This has been discussed to death on this board but that's my take on it.
Maybe the CFA designation has a higher Sharpe ratio (i.e. bigger bang for the buck) but the Ivy League experience has a lot more intangibles like building a network and potentially having a Nobel prize winner as your mentor. This has been discussed to death on this board but that's my take on it.
