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Showing posts from November, 2008

Sleepless nights and Schweser notes

What is a better way to pass the CFA exam - the official materials that you get shipped when you apply, and pay for even if don't want to, or the shorter unofficial materials such as (among others) Schweser Notes? CFA Institute recommends the minimum of 250 hours to prepare for the Level 1 exam. In my practice, this number can go way up, depending on your background and the availability of time. It is good if one majored in quantitative methods and already has a CPA, then CFA should be less of a challenge, but for the vast majority of candidates, it tends to be the first encounter with at least one of the topics on the broad CFA curriculum. So, it is safe to add up 30-50 hours for each area you are completely unfamiliar with. Plus, CFA exam-takers are usually employed, so they have to spread the study over their weekends and nights, and the total length of the preparation period is very long. Unsurprisingly, many people forget what they studied in the beginning by the time they get

From virtual to real: the big shift in investor preferences

Forget about sophisticated financial products. Forget about CDOs, especially if they include (God forbid!) MBS. Investors are going back to basics. In the time when the allegedly absolute-returns Hedge Funds are making headlines with big drawdowns, and the Private Equity firms cannot figure out how to make a buyout with no credit lines available in the banks they had been dealing with for decades, what does it leave a sophisticated investor with to invest into? It comes down to the Real Assets. One of the most popular (at least as a topic of conversation) investments of this sort is Timberland Investment. The beauty of it is that once the tree is planted, it grows without any other cash expenses. All that investor has to do is to make a decision on when and how much of the forest should be cut to sell the timberland and get returns. Timberland investments a long-term, typically over 10 years, and thus fairly illiquid, and compared to Private Equity, for instance, they generate lower re