agent1

agent1

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    Thanks for your answer.

    But no, they are not roughly similar – the difference is massive.

    Did anyone notice that as well? If you could look on page 500 of the accounting book – you’d know what I’m talking about. Will be happy to discuss.

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    thanks… I was thinking more about a “get together” with 3-5 people or so. But apparently the idea does not attract much interest so far.

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    MockTurtle, thanks for sharing this. I think I know exactly how it feels. Although I live in London, I find myself completely stuck in a mediocre job and I don’t know how to break out of this circle. London indeed offers more opportunities than any other city in the UK and probably in the entire Europe. However, it seems that a lot of it is based on pure luck and personal connections/non-transparent recruiting (aka “networking”).

    I have seen young people making brilliant careers (Bachelors Degree => 2 years in a bulge bracket bank => credit hedge fund), being less than 25yo, no Masters, no CFA exams, nothing.
    Others get into front desks of the bulge bracket banks straight out of the uni without seemingly being better or smarter than many other guys.

    Many of them didn’t even do the L1 CFA exam and some of them don’t even know what this is (especially traders).

    Let’s face it – most of the candidates pursue the gruelling exams to eventually land a well-paid job (let’s say £70k+) and a good bonus (let’s say 40%+), at Associate level.

    I am about to start preparing for an exam an June. And I think about it: the amount of time, health, nerves, managing your work/study/life balance that goes into it is HUGE. How do I know that in the end of the day it will worth it? Football analogy: that’s like training every day to become a top goalscorer in the world and then just sit on the bench. In my circle, there is very limited evidence of landing well-paying job/prosperity and passing the CFA exams. Although such examples do exist, I must admit.

    I am facing a dilemma here, my choices are:
    1) take the exam and subscribe to no weekends, very little time off, putting more strain on relationships with colleagues and friends;
    2) shun the exam and spend the time on hard networking, extending personal relationships, attending industry and career events and applying to every opportunity there is.

    Not an easy choice, would love to hear your opinions. Thanks.

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