CFA Finance

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New answer posted

a year ago

0 Follower 19 Views

S
Sakshi Kedia

Beginner-Level 5

MBA is a broader field than CFA and then again it's your choice if you want to diversify your knowledge or deepen your knowledge in investment management. If you are looking for deepening your knowledge in investment thing only then you can go with CFA and in case you want some diversification in other management aspects as well then you can go with MBA in finance course. And talking about the difficulty level of CA and CFA CA is the toughest course to do. The passing percentage is 1% in CA and 10% in CFA.

New answer posted

5 years ago

1 Follower 51 Views

Shiksha Ask & Answer
kajal soniPursuing FRM part 1 from edupristine

Guide-Level 11

Getting an MBA is usually pricey. Not only are students paying for two years of full-time graduate school, or its part-time equivalent, but they're also missing out on potential earnings during that time. A two-year MBA programme can end up costing far north of $100,000 from a top business school, not counting room, board, books and peripheral expenses. In 2016, 14 of the 20 top-ranked business school submitted salary and debt information for full-time MBA graduates, and the average debt was $94,583. Also consider the effects of any wages you forgo while in school. Of course, financial aid can reduce this burden somewhat, and some corp
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New answer posted

6 years ago

0 Follower 500 Views

Shiksha Ask & Answer
Shail Oberoi

Guide-Level 14

This would depend on your interest areas and career aspirations. MBA finance is a full time 2 year course, whereas CFA has 3 levels and has to be taken as an external student based on self-study model. CFA is more focused on capital market, whereas MBA finance is more holistic with exposure to financial management. Both the courses have good scope. You need to refer their curriculum & keeping in mind your interest areas choose the one that suits your interest areas.

New answer posted

6 years ago

1 Follower 88 Views

Shiksha Ask & Answer
Siddharth BhardwajQuantitative Analyst (Credit Risk)

Guide-Level 14

Dear Darpan,
Let me clear you certain things:
(1) If you go MBA finance, you can become a financial analyst, investment banker, financial planner, equity analyst, quantitative analyst, risk manager, credit analyst and many more.(2) If you go for CFA (suppose you clear level 3 also), you will be specialised person to be the financial analyst or in some cases quant analyst.
I would advise you to go for MBA finance because it opens more opportunities as well. If you look at the profiles of big positions, they want MBA from tier 1 college. However, it would be excellent if you do MBA + CFA.

New answer posted

7 years ago

0 Follower 168 Views

S
Sofia Goyal

Contributor-Level 10

One of the most well-known financial courses in India is CFA, which leads to positions as a Corporate Financial Analyst, Investment Banking Analyst, Risk Manager, Portfolio Manager, and Research Analyst. The skills that these professionals possess are in greater demand.

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