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VALUATION AND ANALYSIS OF DERIVATIVES & FIXED INCOME SECURITIES
CapitalMarketsGeek
#21 Posted : Friday, September 17, 2010 6:43:33 PM
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Joined: 9/11/2010
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Ok guys... let me make a contribution, CFA is not anything close to an MBA the difference is commonly captured by the anology CFA is a foot wide and a mile deep and MBA is a foot deep and a mile wide. CFA test some derivative but not enough, Msc in finance and Phd in finance do not cover enough derivative either unless you take Standford PHD finance, the rest are a couple of finance and economic classes. The mail program that covers derivative is Master in finance engineering if you want enough derivative you can get it in that but again the cost is absolutely over the roof, the cheapest school is maybe Illinois institute of technology, Chicago around $35k a year otherwise top quant schools charge around $80k to $120k. I took Msc Finance engineering from University of Michigan in 2007 and the fee total $70k, The good thing in going to these top programs is that signing bonus alone can cover the loans you took to pay and average salaries for the first years top $90k with 100% placement rates in most quant schools but if you wanna get to these schools you need to have an impressive resume coz most applicates have masters and phds in hard science like engineering, Math, Economics, computer science and finance together with impressive work experience and CFAs.
CapitalMarketsGeek
#22 Posted : Friday, September 17, 2010 7:33:02 PM
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Joined: 9/11/2010
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But generally, to trade stock all you need is basic education and a feel of the market which you can get by going to some sites online and learning the basics you don't need to pay anyone to teach you how to trade. However, if you want to trade capital for large investment banks its important to have a good education from a good schools because the competition is brutal and everyone you interview with is arrogant, PHD is not going to impress anyone unless it is in Math or statistics or scientific computation or finance engineering otherwise phds in the rest o business courses.... good luck in classrooms, capital markets are not for you!
emlyn ngwiri
#23 Posted : Saturday, September 18, 2010 11:38:51 AM
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Joined: 8/12/2010
Posts: 129
Location: nairobi
@CapitalMarketsGeek well, what you are saying is that the CFA program does not in itself cover derivatives well enough? which aspect of derivatives does it not cover well? because unlike the CFA course it is Professional as opposed to the Masters in financial engineering that is academic.

Aspects such as distressed securities,commodity markets insurance weather and energy derivatives, are adequately covered in the CFA program.Moreover the sensitivity analysis of options hedging and portfolio insurance are tested in greater detail with a case study approach that matches no other investments and securities course world over!

Te CFA program has an investors approach factoring in emerging issues,the international tax environment and equips its students with skills of how to effectively perform the functions of an investments professional.

in light of the above though a Masters in financial engineering is an excellent degree in the finance field, the creativity and dynamism matches no other.


emlyn ngwiri
#24 Posted : Saturday, September 18, 2010 11:40:40 AM
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Location: nairobi
i meant to say matches no other CFA is the preferred investment course.
CapitalMarketsGeek
#25 Posted : Monday, September 20, 2010 7:06:10 PM
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Joined: 9/11/2010
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Emlyn..
I from the way you defend CFA, I can tell you probably a CFA or heading there, well I am a CFA, I have been for just about a year now. Like you said, CFA is a very unique program and most prefered by the investment professionals and I agree, CFA is bigger tha MS in Finance and is bigger than PhD in finance in my own view but a MS in finance engineering is a whole different program that was designed to solve financial problems that ordinary finance programs like CFA and MS finance and ordinary quant programs like math,finance math, statistics, software engineering, computer scie could not answer. Ms in finance engineering is an hybrid program design specifically to solve derivative problems( the most complex area of finance), so its by far better than any finance program in finance quants related areas i.e Derivatives coz thats what it was designed for. The markets also value MS financial engineering high than CFA and MBA combined this is shown by the average starting salaries for MBA and CFA with average around $60k a year and MS financial Engineering averaging around $80k with additional signing bonus averaging around $30K. Again CFA is a great program, I wouldn't have enter into it if I didn't think so but CFA alone cannot push anyone to a higher level considering the competition and how some MBA schools have responded to threat by CFA by teaching off the CFA programs!
CapitalMarketsGeek
#26 Posted : Monday, September 20, 2010 7:51:56 PM
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Emlyn...
MS Financial engineering is also a professional program just like CFA, MBA, MS finance, they're all professional programs!
CapitalMarketsGeek
#27 Posted : Monday, September 20, 2010 7:56:34 PM
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Joined: 9/11/2010
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http://financialeng.engin.umich.edu/careers.html
Look at 2007 employment statistics for University of Michigan program
CapitalMarketsGeek
#28 Posted : Monday, September 20, 2010 8:04:08 PM
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Joined: 9/11/2010
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emlyn ngwiri
#29 Posted : Wednesday, September 22, 2010 4:11:33 PM
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Joined: 8/12/2010
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Location: nairobi
boy oh boy! mba courses in kenya have become a fad every one seems to be doing an mba in strategic management,or in finance or in project management. I have read the info and the msc in fin engineering looks pretty good!. but can it be contrasted to an msc in finance? as far as course content and coverage?
extrablessed
#30 Posted : Wednesday, September 22, 2010 4:33:46 PM
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Joined: 7/28/2007
Posts: 290
Location: Nairobi
CapitalMarketsGeek wrote:
Ok guys... let me make a contribution, CFA is not anything close to an MBA the difference is commonly captured by the anology CFA is a foot wide and a mile deep and MBA is a foot deep and a mile wide. CFA test some derivative but not enough,.....


@CapitalMarketsGeek:...That a really serious misstatement! My experience tells me otherwise...Get to CFA level 2&3 and you will scream-to-your-mother when you get tested on derivatives...Level-1 offers only an introduction and just tests a minute 5%....
emlyn ngwiri
#31 Posted : Wednesday, September 22, 2010 5:02:51 PM
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Location: nairobi
I tell you guys that CFA is not something to just contrast with the british charterd institute for securities and investments (cisi) Or any other investment course.

click on the link below for a unit by unit past paper exam

http://www.secinst.co.uk...9848780&url=Diploma

To become a cisi is also involving but Compared to th CFA? NO the hell way!

Scooby
#32 Posted : Wednesday, September 22, 2010 5:22:34 PM
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Joined: 9/2/2006
Posts: 121
extrablessed wrote:
CapitalMarketsGeek wrote:
Ok guys... let me make a contribution, CFA is not anything close to an MBA the difference is commonly captured by the anology CFA is a foot wide and a mile deep and MBA is a foot deep and a mile wide. CFA test some derivative but not enough,.....


@CapitalMarketsGeek:...That a really serious misstatement! My experience tells me otherwise...Get to CFA level 2&3 and you will scream-to-your-mother when you get tested on derivatives...Level-1 offers only an introduction and just tests a minute 5%....


Hi extrablessed,

The issue with CMG is that he is ranting that he should have done a MSc. in Financial Engineering instead of haveing completed his CFA.

If that is the case, he is more than welcome to enrol for the course and get more money as he is quoting.

Regards
emlyn ngwiri
#33 Posted : Wednesday, September 22, 2010 5:30:51 PM
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Joined: 8/12/2010
Posts: 129
Location: nairobi
check out my post if anyone is interested in msc in finance from Kemu or KU or ckick the link below

http://www.ku.ac.ke/scho...p/programmes/graduate/31
CapitalMarketsGeek
#34 Posted : Thursday, September 23, 2010 12:20:21 AM
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Joined: 9/11/2010
Posts: 36
Scooby...
I actually did both, CFA and MS financial engineering, CFA is a great program but if anyone want more derivatives ms financial engineering is the deal, if you want equity and fixed income research CFA is enough, if you want to be a trader for IB or Hedge fund,MS financial engineering, or computational finance is the deal no one cares about your CFA if you want to be a quant, as a matter of facts fundamental analysis do not matter anymore in trading, BS dividend thories, financial statemants BS and all those details that people used to care about it don't matter, what matters is what you think I think you think, in short,High order beliefs and with Alogarithem trading systems and other range of supercomputers there is alot of money to be made on misspriced security more that searching for growth stocks and this programs i.e financial engineering, computational finance, teach you how to use this technologies to find missprice security and make money out of it and that why this programs are hot and high!
emlyn ngwiri
#35 Posted : Thursday, September 23, 2010 12:32:37 PM
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Joined: 8/12/2010
Posts: 129
Location: nairobi
CapitalMarketsGeek wrote:
Scooby...
I actually did both, CFA and MS financial engineering, CFA is a great program but if anyone want more derivatives ms financial engineering is the deal, if you want equity and fixed income research CFA is enough, if you want to be a trader for IB or Hedge fund,MS financial engineering, or computational finance is the deal no one cares about your CFA if you want to be a quant, as a matter of facts fundamental analysis do not matter anymore in trading, BS dividend thories, financial statemants BS and all those details that people used to care about it don't matter, what matters is what you think I think you think, in short,High order beliefs and with Alogarithem trading systems and other range of supercomputers there is alot of money to be made on misspriced security more that searching for growth stocks and this programs i.e financial engineering, computational finance, teach you how to use this technologies to find missprice security and make money out of it and that why this programs are hot and high!


check out the coverage for the charterd institute for securities and investments(syllabus)vide the below link.

http://www.secinst.co.uk...8780&URL=syllabuses

The variety seems wider than the cfa course


The Merchant
#36 Posted : Thursday, September 23, 2010 1:28:29 PM
Rank: Veteran


Joined: 5/24/2010
Posts: 846
Location: KENYA
CapitalMarketsGeek wrote:
Scooby...
I actually did both, CFA and MS financial engineering, CFA is a great program but if anyone want more derivatives ms financial engineering is the deal, if you want equity and fixed income research CFA is enough, if you want to be a trader for IB or Hedge fund,MS financial engineering, or computational finance is the deal no one cares about your CFA if you want to be a quant, as a matter of facts fundamental analysis do not matter anymore in trading, BS dividend thories, financial statemants BS and all those details that people used to care about it don't matter, what matters is what you think I think you think, in short,High order beliefs and with Alogarithem trading systems and other range of supercomputers there is alot of money to be made on misspriced security more that searching for growth stocks and this programs i.e financial engineering, computational finance, teach you how to use this technologies to find missprice security and make money out of it and that why this programs are hot and high!

So CMG do you work or run a quant shop. With those two papers I think you should. I know alot of hedge fund managers without those credentials. I hope you are not looking to sign uop with them. Do your thing men. You can even start with a prop trading firm. You should not waste those skills. While at it, can I join you? I am a prop trader.smile
CapitalMarketsGeek
#37 Posted : Thursday, September 23, 2010 5:56:42 PM
Rank: New-farer


Joined: 9/11/2010
Posts: 36
Emilyn..
I look wide to me, but I don't know the depth of it, one unique thing about CFA is the depth of its exam. Again it could be deeper than CFA but as long as the market doesn't value it deaper than it doesn't matter.... The courses look more operational to me, CFA is more decisional.

Merchent......
What I can tell you is, yes some hedge funds are founded by people with less credentials but these people have one thing that you cannot learn in school, charisma, our down fall is when we start chasing people and comparing ourselve with people with this unique chararistic, the earlier we realise that we might not be these unique people the better since we can concentrate on building those abilities that we have that can be complemented with these people's abilities, remember that all these gifted pple hires the best minds to work behind the scence and they pay them good. Yes I can join any hedge fund manager no matter how less educated they are as long as my best interest is served and yes I work for an Hedge fund/ trading firm but not in Kenya.
..You being a Prop trader, is a great thing, I know some prop traders who trade millions of thier own capital and if you're those kind of prop traders, you don't need no ones advise, but if you're a young man out of college with no much capital, you might wanna try to first find a working and profitable trading strategy, once you do that, call some of the big prop traders or trading firms and if they think you can make money for them they will hire you and you can trade their own capital that is every trader dream! Good luck
Scooby
#38 Posted : Thursday, September 23, 2010 7:15:38 PM
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Joined: 9/2/2006
Posts: 121
Hi CMG,

Thanks for your clarification about MSc. Financial Engineering and CFA. Out of curiosity, will your role be affected by the recently passed Frank-Dodd bill? Am referring to the fact that prop trading will be required to be stripped out of banks (including bank holding companies).

I also do share the same view about the equity valuation methodologies. At least thats what I have seen with NSE.

It looks like there will be a "big" fight in future between those who subscribe to the traditional approach to finance (i.e. subscribe to the valuation methodologies) and the modern approaches which also include behavioural finance.

Regards
CapitalMarketsGeek
#39 Posted : Thursday, September 23, 2010 7:37:53 PM
Rank: New-farer


Joined: 9/11/2010
Posts: 36
Emilyn...
You asked the difference btw MS finance and MS financial Engineering, the difference is the quantitative nature of the program, MS finance tries to mimick cfa exam, most of them teaches off the CFA program, MS finance is also offered under business school and follows the less quant nature of business programs. MS Financial Eng, on the other hand if offered by college of math or college of computational science or college of engin and expect every entering student to have a formal programming course equivalent to a complete two to three semester programming courses beyond C and an equivalent to a Minor in Mathematics( most engineering and computer scienc student qualify for these while Business student don't have enough maths in their program). In short it is impossible to succeed in the program if your undergraduate is from a business school you don't even get admitted unless of course you got you undergra from a business school and went back for more math and programming.
CapitalMarketsGeek
#40 Posted : Thursday, September 23, 2010 8:15:13 PM
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Joined: 9/11/2010
Posts: 36
scooby...
Yes every bill that seek to limit creativity of human's brains affects everyone and limiting or uprooting inhoused funds from investment banks not only affact the business of the bank but it also affect every player in the Markets. Remember that these in housed fund are the breading grounds of the eventually most brillient fund managers in the capital markets, and if you go through the list, every succesful fund manager once worked for an inhoused fund of a bank. On the other hand its only one part of DR LI formula( A copula fuction approach) that was model wrongly, the corrolation of securities, so we can redo the formula and make money again! Anyway Wall street have the best brains so dispite the bill there will always be a way to make money!
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