Chartered Financial Analyst
The Chartered Financial Analyst program is a postgraduate professional certification offered internationally by the US-based CFA Institute to investment and financial professionals. The program teaches a wide range of subjects relating to advanced investment analysis—including business analysis, statistics, probability theory, fixed income, derivatives, economics, financial analysis, corporate finance, alternative investments, portfolio management, ethics applicable to the finance industry—and provides a generalist knowledge of other areas of finance.
A candidate who successfully completes the program and meets other professional requirements is awarded the "CFA charter" and becomes a "CFA charter-holder". As of December 2024, at least 200,000 people are charter-holders globally, growing 5.5% annually since 2012. Successful candidates take an average of four years to earn their CFA charter.
The top employers of CFA charter-holders globally include UBS, JPMorgan Chase, Royal Bank of Canada, Bank of America, and Morgan Stanley. In 2025, according to the CFA Institute member database, 2,390 of their 204,000 CFA Charterholders worked at Royal Bank of Canada – the highest number for any employer worldwide.
History
The predecessor of the CFA Institute, the Financial Analysts Federation, was established in 1947 as a service organization for investment professionals. The FAF founded the Institute of Chartered Financial Analysts in 1962; the earliest CFA charter-holders were "grandfathered" in through work experience only, but then a series of three examinations was established along with a requirement to be a practitioner for several years before taking the exams. In 1990, in the hopes of boosting the credential's public profile, the CFA Institute merged with the FAF and the Institute of Chartered Financial Analysts.The CFA exam was first administered in 1963 and began in the United States and Canada, but has become global with many people becoming charter-holders across Europe, Asia, and Australia. By 2003, fewer than half the candidates in the CFA program were based in the United States and Canada, with most of the other candidates based in Asia or Europe. The number of charter-holders in India and China had increased by 25% and 53%, respectively, from 2005 to 2006.
CFA Charter
The CFA designation is designed to demonstrate a strong foundation in advanced investment analysis and portfolio management, accompanied by a strict emphasis on ethical practice.A charter holder is held to the highest ethical standards. Once an investment professional obtains the charter, this individual also makes an annual commitment to uphold and abide by a strict professional code of conduct and ethical standards. Violations of the CFA code of ethics may result in industry-related sanctions, suspension of the right to use the CFA designation, or a revocation of membership.
Requirements
To become a CFA charter-holder, candidates must satisfy the following requirements:- Have obtained a bachelor's degree or be in the final year of a bachelor's degree program. However, an accredited degree may not always be a requirement.
- Pass all three levels of the CFA program.
- Have 4,000 hours in a minimum of three years of qualified work experience acceptable by the CFA Institute. However, individual-level exams may be taken prior to satisfying this requirement.
- Have two or three letters of reference.
- Become a member of the CFA Institute.
- Adhere to the CFA Institute Code of Ethics and Standards of Professional Conduct.
Pass rates
The CFA exams are among the most difficult exams offered globally. During the period 2014–2024, pass rates for CFA Levels 1-3 ranged from 22-59%. The CFA level I examination in May 2021 and July 2021 made news headlines after plummeting to a record-low pass rate of 25% and 22%, respectively, and in August 2021, the level II pass rate fell to 29%. The sudden drop in pass rates and candidate volume has yet to fully recover since 2020 and 2021.Curriculum
The curriculum for the CFA program is based on a Candidate Body of Knowledge established by the CFA Institute. The CFA curriculum is updated annually to reflect the latest best practices, with the extent of changes varying by year and level. The curriculum comprises, broadly, the topic areas below. There are three exams that test the academic portion of the CFA program. All three levels emphasize the subject of ethics. The material differences among the exams are:- The Level I study program emphasizes tools and inputs and includes an introduction to asset valuation, financial reporting and analysis, and portfolio-management techniques.
- The Level II study program emphasizes asset valuation and includes applications of the tools and inputs in asset valuation.
- The Level III study program emphasizes portfolio management and includes descriptions of strategies for applying the tools, inputs, and asset valuation models to manage equity, fixed income, and derivative investments for individuals and institutions. Since 2025, CFA Institute has introduced a Core curriculum plus a choice of 3 elective options called Specialized Pathways: Portfolio Management, Private Markets and Private Wealth.
As of 2019, the examination includes questions on artificial intelligence, automated investment services, and mining unconventional sources of data.
Ethical and professional standards
The ethics section is primarily concerned with compliance and reporting rules when managing an investor's money or when issuing research reports. Some rules pertain more generally to professional behavior ; others specifically relate to the proper use of the designation for charter-holders and candidates. These rules are delineated in the "Standards of Professional Conduct", within the context of an overarching "Code of Ethics".Quantitative methods
This topic area is dominated by statistics: the topics are fairly broad, covering probability theory, hypothesis testing, regression, and time-series analysis. Other topics include time value of money—incorporating basic valuation and yield and return calculations—portfolio-related calculations, and technical analysis.Recent additions, as mentioned above, are a survey of machine learning and big data.
Economics
Both microeconomics and macroeconomics are covered, including international economics. By Level III, the focus is on applying economic analysis to portfolio management and asset allocation.Financial statement analysis
The curriculum includes financial reporting topics, and ratio and financial statement analysis. Financial reporting and analysis of accounting information is heavily tested at Levels I and II, but is not a significant part of Level III.Corporate
topics include capital investment decisions, capital structure policy and implementation, and dividend policy; building on accounting, economics, and statistics. It then extends to more advanced topics such as the analysis of mergers and acquisitions, corporate governance, and business and financial risk.Security analysis
The curriculum includes coverage of global markets as well as analysis and valuation of the various asset types: equity, fixed income, derivatives, and alternative investments. The Level I exam requires familiarity with these instruments. Level II focuses on valuation, employing the "tools" studied under quantitative methods, financial statement analysis, corporate finance, and economics. Level III centers on incorporating these instruments into portfolios.Equity and fixed income
The curriculum for equity investments includes the functioning of the stock market, indices, stock valuation, and industry analysis.Fixed income topics similarly include the various debt securities, the risk associated with these, and valuations and yield spreads.
Derivatives
The curriculum includes coverage of the fundamental framework of derivatives markets, derivatives valuations, and hedging and trading strategies involving derivatives, including futures, forwards, swaps, and options. The curriculum incorporates various pricing models and frameworks, such as Black-Scholes and binomial option pricing, while coverage of the underlying mathematics is conceptual as opposed to technical.Alternative investments
The curriculum includes coverage of a range of topics in the alternative investment category. Topics include hedge funds, private equity, real estate, natural resources, infrastructure, and other alternative investments, including, as applicable, strategies, sub-categories, potential benefits and risks, fee structures, and due diligence.Portfolio management and wealth planning
This section increases in importance with each of the three levels—it integrates and draws from the other topics, including ethics.It includes:
modern portfolio theory ;
investment practice ;
and measurement of investment performance.