Finance

Financial Analyst / CFA

Analyze investments, build financial models, and advise on capital allocation across asset management, corporate finance, and equity research. The CFA charter is the most respected credential in the field — earned through exams, not a degree program.

CFA Exam Levels
3
Level I, II, and III
Avg Pass Rate (L1)
~40%
Historically varies
Entry Analyst Pay
$65–90K
Corporate finance / research
CFA Charterholder
$100–150K+
Buy-side / sell-side
Portfolio Manager
$150–500K+
With experience

What Financial Analysts Actually Do

Financial analysts work across a wide range of settings — investment banks (sell-side equity research), asset management firms (buy-side research and portfolio management), corporate finance departments, commercial banks, insurance companies, and consulting firms. The common thread is quantitative analysis of financial data to support investment or business decisions.

A sell-side equity research analyst covers a portfolio of publicly traded companies — publishing research reports with buy/sell/hold recommendations for institutional clients. A buy-side analyst at a mutual fund or hedge fund does similar analysis but for internal portfolio management rather than external publication. A corporate financial analyst works inside a company on budgeting, forecasting, and strategic financial planning.

Why the CFA matters

The Chartered Financial Analyst (CFA) designation is the most globally recognized credential in investment analysis and portfolio management. It requires passing three rigorous exams covering ethics, financial statement analysis, equity, fixed income, derivatives, portfolio management, and alternative investments. The full charter typically takes 3–5 years to complete while working. In asset management and research roles, the CFA is the credential that separates serious practitioners from everyone else — and in many organizations it's effectively required for senior advancement.

Three Settings — Very Different Jobs

Sell-Side
Equity Research Analyst

Work at an investment bank's research division, covering companies in specific sectors. Publish research reports, financial models, and investment recommendations consumed by institutional investors. Strong career for people who love deep fundamental analysis. Path to buy-side roles or eventually portfolio management.

Buy-Side
Investment Analyst / Portfolio Manager

Work at a mutual fund, pension, endowment, or asset manager. Analyze securities and make recommendations to portfolio managers (or eventually manage money yourself). Higher pay ceiling than sell-side, more directly tied to investment performance. The CFA is especially valued here.

Corporate
Corporate Financial Analyst (FP&A)

Work inside a company — financial planning and analysis, budgeting, forecasting, and business unit performance reporting. Better hours than banking or research. Clear path to CFO for high performers. The CFA is less critical here — the CPA or MBA is often more relevant for corporate finance advancement.

Fixed Income / Credit
Fixed Income / Credit Analyst

Analyze bonds, credit quality, and interest rate environments for asset managers, banks, or insurance companies. Often overlooked relative to equity — but significant in size, well-compensated, and deeply covered in the CFA curriculum. Strong demand at insurance companies and pension funds.

The CFA Exam Path

1
Meet eligibility requirements and register for Level I
To sit for Level I, you need a bachelor's degree (or be in the final year of a bachelor's program) or 4,000 hours of professional work experience. Exams are offered multiple times per year at testing centers worldwide. Registration fees run $900–$1,200 per exam plus study materials. Study time for Level I: 300+ hours recommended.
2
Pass Level I — Ethics, Quantitative Methods, Economics, Financial Reporting
Level I tests breadth of knowledge across 10 topic areas. Multiple choice format. Historical pass rates average around 35–45%. Most candidates study 4–6 months. The Ethics section carries special weight — a high Ethics score can push borderline candidates over the threshold.
3
Pass Level II — Financial Statement Analysis, Equity, Fixed Income, Derivatives
Level II is widely considered the most difficult exam — it goes deeper into valuation, financial statement analysis, and application of concepts. Item-set (vignette-based) format. Historical pass rates average 40–50%. Study time: 300–400 hours recommended. Most candidates take 12–18 months between Level I and II passes.
4
Pass Level III — Portfolio Management, Wealth Planning, Risk Management
Level III focuses on portfolio construction and management — integrating all earlier concepts into a portfolio management context. Essay and item-set format. Historical pass rates average 50–55%. After passing Level III, you have 4,000 hours of relevant work experience requirement to fulfill before receiving the charter.
5
Complete 4,000 hours of relevant work experience and receive the charter
Work experience must be in investment decision-making — portfolio management, research, analysis, or related roles. Most candidates accumulate this while working through the exams. Submit to CFA Institute for verification. Once approved, you're a CFA Charterholder.

What You Can Earn

Pay by role and experience

Entry-level financial analyst (corporate): $60,000–$80,000
Sell-side equity research analyst: $80,000–$130,000 (base) + bonus
Buy-side analyst (asset management): $100,000–$200,000
Portfolio manager (mid-career): $150,000–$400,000
Senior PM / CIO (top-tier firms): $500,000–$2,000,000+

CFA charterholders at major asset managers earn a median of approximately $177,000 according to CFA Institute surveys, with significant upside at senior levels through performance-based bonuses and profit sharing.

What Most People Get Wrong

Common assumption
"The CFA helps with investment banking recruiting."
The CFA is the credential for investment management — not investment banking. IB firms care about GPA, school, internships, and interview performance. A CFA Level I pass on a banking resume is a neutral signal at best. The CFA is most valuable in asset management, equity research, and wealth management careers.
Common assumption
"You can pass the CFA exams quickly if you're smart."
The CFA Institute recommends 300+ hours of study per level. The pass rates are real — smart, hardworking finance professionals fail these exams. The curriculum is comprehensive and the exams are genuinely difficult. Most candidates take 4–6 years to complete all three levels while working full-time. Treat the time commitment seriously before starting.

Next Steps

1
Download the CFA curriculum topic outline at cfainstitute.org
Understand what's covered across all three levels before registering. The breadth and depth of the curriculum should inform whether this credential aligns with your career goals.
2
Choose a study program — Kaplan Schweser, UWorld, or Bloomberg Exam Prep
The official CFA curriculum is comprehensive but dense. Third-party prep programs condense and organize the material for exam focus. Most successful candidates use a prep program alongside the official curriculum.
3
Get into a finance role while studying
The 4,000-hour work experience requirement runs concurrently with your exam path. Starting in a relevant financial analysis role early means you'll have the work experience requirement met by the time you pass Level III.
Last updated: April 2026