Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What some of you - including OP - don’t understand is that financial planners are just that - planners - not investment gurus. Yes, they invest client money, but that investing is overwhelming based on personal/financial goals, index products, and the assumption that investments will return their average over time. Thus, a prestige degree or Wall Street experience is not necessary. Pedigree is reserved for running a hedge fund, or something similar. In that case, the emphasis is on individual investments and overall portfolio strategy. However, hedge funds don’t do financial planning for individual clients.
Interesting. So what are the best prestige degrees if you want to be a hedge fund manager?
Anonymous wrote:I’m a financial advisor and did not take any business or econ classes. I was a psychology major and got a masters degree in education. I learned about the profession through the entry level job I stumbled into, and was fortunate to work with an advisor who took the time to mentor me. Most advisors I know did not study business or Econ. I do have a CFP now.
If I did college over again I would be an econ major - but it was never on my radar as a HS or college student.
Anonymous wrote:What some of you - including OP - don’t understand is that financial planners are just that - planners - not investment gurus. Yes, they invest client money, but that investing is overwhelming based on personal/financial goals, index products, and the assumption that investments will return their average over time. Thus, a prestige degree or Wall Street experience is not necessary. Pedigree is reserved for running a hedge fund, or something similar. In that case, the emphasis is on individual investments and overall portfolio strategy. However, hedge funds don’t do financial planning for individual clients.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Being a financial advisor is just telling people common sense stuff. Not sure a college degree is needed.
A college degree is required to sit for the CFP exam. I'm interested in schools that have a great financial planning and/or investment management program. Interested in top schools with prestige. I think the bio will matter in this field.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Being a financial advisor is just telling people common sense stuff. Not sure a college degree is needed.
A college degree is required to sit for the CFP exam. I'm interested in schools that have a great financial planning and/or investment management program. Interested in top schools with prestige. I think the bio will matter in this field.
Anonymous wrote:Being a financial advisor is just telling people common sense stuff. Not sure a college degree is needed.
Anonymous wrote:The school doesn't really matter. Just graduate, work with a financial advisor, take the CFP coursework, and pass the examination. There are some schools, like VATech, that provide coursework toward the CFP, but that seems overly vocational. Just get an economics or finance degree at the college of their choice.