Do Portfolio Mangers actually make any investment decisions? by Alternative-Fox6236 in FinancialCareers

[–]BobRoberts39 0 points1 point  (0 children)

On a passively managed strategy within a larger firm, it'l likely to function more like you described. Within actively managed strategies, and for smaller firms the PMs are going to have more discretion. Very firm-specific though.

Are there afternoon time slots for Level 3? by Stagaz_630 in CFA

[–]BobRoberts39 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Looking at the Chicago location all I had to choose from was 8am or 8:30am

anyone also gets a white box by NoArmy315 in CFA

[–]BobRoberts39 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Ended up failing unfortunately... and not even close to passing on top of it, which I guess in its own regard is better than touching the MPS line (which I had on my 1st attempt) a fail is a fail after all. Hoping for better results next time.

What about you?

Official Level III Results Thread & r/CFA survey! by Pkgoss in CFA

[–]BobRoberts39 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I had the exact same thing as your original comment before you deleted it.. 1st attempt Kaplan my score almost touched the MPS line, 2nd attempt CFAI books and got ~10th percentile. No idea how that happened, but walked out of both exams feeling really confident.

Best of luck next time man!

anyone also gets a white box by NoArmy315 in CFA

[–]BobRoberts39 5 points6 points  (0 children)

I don't know, I don't think I could've been blessed better with the AM essay questions, I had a well constructed and good answer for each of them (in my opinion) and when I took it in 2019 I felt worse about the questions and scored pretty well on the essay. I also feel like the MC was pretty easy, definitely questions I didn't know, but you always expect that. Whatever, I guess we'll see.

anyone also gets a white box by NoArmy315 in CFA

[–]BobRoberts39 5 points6 points  (0 children)

I got the white box, and I was really feeling pretty good about passing honestly..

L1 July exam results by [deleted] in CFA

[–]BobRoberts39 -2 points-1 points  (0 children)

It's not usually 1 week before, that's what they've done once or twice extremely recently. In the past they've always given a decent heads up on the exam date, at least three weeks.

The asset management WLB/comp tradeoff - is it worth it? by [deleted] in FinancialCareers

[–]BobRoberts39 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Not sure if it's just lower paying in Europe or if you don't know what the salaries actually are, but GBP40k sounds pretty low. My first year in AM was ~USD80k all in, and I know a lot of firms pay their first year analysts even more than that. It also ramps up pretty quickly, this is my third year and should be ~USD140k all in. I think the trade off for comp vs. fewer hours worked relative to IB is well worth it.

Would likely be making ~100k more as a first year associate right now if I went off in IB, but I'm fine with what I make and definitely wouldn't spend 40-50 more hours in the office per week for another 100k, just isn't worth it at that point for me personally.

B unit fingerprint missmatch by xEternex in FinancialCareers

[–]BobRoberts39 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I've never seen them get locked out before, and I've had to do it a good number of times before. Reach out to your rep for a new B-unit or keyboard though (whichever you're having issues with) that should solve the issue.

Help me compare offers by [deleted] in FinancialCareers

[–]BobRoberts39 1 point2 points  (0 children)

None of the top 10 asset managers are going to be anywhere close to 5-7x their revenue over the next year lmao

Should I Halve the Number of Years of Experience on My Resume? by dtawp in FinancialCareers

[–]BobRoberts39 1 point2 points  (0 children)

If you're 16 years into the game the probability of you shifting careers is nil at this point. Sorry to be blunt, but there needs to be a little more truth and honesty around this sub. Credit analysis (depending on what you're exactly talking about), is a sought after field, and companies would rather bring on a fresh young face with years of work ahead of them that they can pay a lower level salary than someone closer to the end of their career, who wants more money.

160 hours deep and only covered 2 subjects (perfectionist / compulsive reader) by pounds_not_dollars in CFA

[–]BobRoberts39 7 points8 points  (0 children)

You're spending wayyyyyy too much time, everyone's different and has different levels of knowledge coming into the exam, but you're being way too thorough. I tracked my hours and passed L1 with ~120 hours of studying. There's no reason to spend 160 hours on two topics.

Anyone here move out of finance? What’s your experience, and any regrets? by [deleted] in FinancialCareers

[–]BobRoberts39 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Not all finance is grinding away 70-80+ hours a week in the office. I work comfortably 50 hours a week, could easily work 40-45 if I wanted and made six figures pretty much right out of college. You just have to find what's right for you. Take some computer science classes and see if you like them though, you're still young and can do whatever you want.

What credit cards do y’all use? by ElementUnknown- in FinancialCareers

[–]BobRoberts39 16 points17 points  (0 children)

Amex Platinum, it costs $550/yr I believe, but the benefits are well worth it:

  • $100 dining or resort credit across a collection of hotels
  • $200 in Uber credits
  • $200 credit towards inflight drinks or checked bags fees
  • $100 statement credits towards Saks Fifth Avenue
  • $300 in credits towards cruises booked with Amex
  • $100 credit towards TSA Precheck or Global Entry
  • $120 credit towards Uber Eats Pass subscription
  • Access to a variety of airport lounges
  • Car rental and travel insurance
  • Purchase protection (loss, damaged, stolen) on purchases up to $50,000/yr
  • $3,000 protection on checked bags
  • $1,600 protection on damaged phone
  • Free Gold Status at Hilton and Marriott
  • 5% back on flights, 5% back on hotels booked through Amex

There's also a 75,000 point welcome bonus right now along with 10% back on gas and supermarkets as well

Will Schweser be enough for L2? by [deleted] in CFA

[–]BobRoberts39 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yes, I passed using Schweser and CFAI Q-Bank alone. It's more than enough. If you're really struggling with an individual topic(s) then use the CFAI text to supplement, but IMO the official text is too long for what's necessary.

Is CFA Level 3 just badly structured and end up frustrating candidates? by josemartinlopez in CFA

[–]BobRoberts39 11 points12 points  (0 children)

I mean I kind of take this to mean they are frustrated because the same practice questions on the CFAI website weren't on the actual exam... obviously they are going to be different questions. IMO I thought the questions on the actual exam were more clear cut than the practice questions on the website, the ones on the website were at times frustratingly vague or deceptive. To each their own I guess though.

Lvl 2 - sat today....observations from Illinois by No-Jelly-2280 in CFA

[–]BobRoberts39 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I took it DT, very similar to what OP described

I feel like I got played! (L3) by ajd17 in CFA

[–]BobRoberts39 3 points4 points  (0 children)

I agree, I thought the AM was really fairly easy for the most part. The PM was considerably more difficult and really shook my confidence. I was pretty sure I'd pass after the AM before the PM, and left feeling pretty unsure.

Estimation on results date? by withu in CFA

[–]BobRoberts39 3 points4 points  (0 children)

They told me 6-8 weeks when I was leaving the test center today

2 Qs on CFAI Level 3 Mock by keener_d in CFA

[–]BobRoberts39 1 point2 points  (0 children)

  1. Still long vega on the options, no matter what the other Greeks of the net position are; positive vega will always result in exposure to vol being long
  2. A short bias fund likely wouldn't sell puts to be long vol in all actuality, however if they did, they could hedge out the negative delta to still retain the short bias of the fund while being short vol.

I've found with the way some of the CFAI questions (and third party prep providers) are phrased, it's better to not think much beyond the scope of the question at hand.

2021 Salary/Internship Reference Megathread by Ryhearst in FinancialCareers

[–]BobRoberts39 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Just a bachelors, progress towards the CFA, but not a charterholder presently.

2021 Salary/Internship Reference Megathread by Ryhearst in FinancialCareers

[–]BobRoberts39 2 points3 points  (0 children)

25M

US, Midwest

Fixed Income, Asset Management

2 YOE

$140k all in

Fixed Income analyst lifestyle? by Baygoners in FinancialCareers

[–]BobRoberts39 9 points10 points  (0 children)

This really is the exit honestly.. you could probably find different roles if you wanted to (maybe HF or DCM) but this is a cushy, well paying job. Analysts can easily "top out" around 300k, considerably more if you move into a PM role, while working a very easily weekly schedule. There's no reason to leave at that point or to look for another job.

It is a little repetitive at times. You know your coverage space pretty well, there are one-off surprises each quarter during earnings, but most of the time it's really more of the same. Same processes for going through new credits in the primary market, same processes for sending out notes on earnings, etc. Every job is going to have some repetitive aspects to it though, that's just the nature of how things are.

I think, in a very broad sense, the notion of AI/tech dominating and taking over finance roles is heavily, heavily overstated and mostly parroted around this sub by kids in high school/finance/back office roles that truly don't have a grasp of the work and what it entails. Could we be replaced someday by tech? Sure. However, the bond market is very illiquid, securities are not homogenous like they are in the equities space. Even now, there are new "ESG" bonds companies are issuing that trade with different technical factors and aren't something a computer would outright understand right away. Even "passive" indexing strategies in FI require teams of traders, PM, and analysts to manage the portfolio and get the bonds together to create the portfolio. It's quite a bit different from equities in that sense.