I’m currently a level 2 candidate in the CFA program, and I work in FP&A for an asset manager. I cover their alternatives businesses and am hoping to transition into a portfolio management role in this group. I’ve been in FP&A at the firm for 2 years, after spending the first 3 years of my career in the actuarial field (life insurance rotational program).
I’m pursuing the CFA designation as a way to distance myself from the actuarial experience I have and re-brand myself for finance roles. I’ve talked with hiring managers for a few analyst roles on the alts teams, but have been told that they’re looking for someone with more experience in portfolio management or deal execution. I completely understand this. However, how can I go about trying to close this “experience loop”? I can’t get experience in portfolio management without working in this area, and having experience is a prerequisite.
I’m starting to get a little discouraged. It seems like so much of your career is based on what path you immediately took out of college. Since I didn’t pursue banking or management consulting, I feel limited. Obviously an MBA would help my situation, but I’m looking for alternatives to this. I find an MBA to be prohibitively expensive, especially as someone who is still paying off undergrad all on my own.
Has anyone been able to close this gap? What helped and what was a waste of time and energy?