Chads CFA Level 2 Exam Tips
Chads CFA Level 2 Exam Tips
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Order of Topics I do not have a hard recommendation for this CFA order, but I found it easiest to just follow the CFA Curriculum order. I spent more time on the topics more heavily weighted by the Institute (particularly Financial Statements and Equity). Practice Questions This was touched on above. Do lots of them. There is no substitute. Formulas and Note Cards I made about 250 300 note cards for the formulas. I could not memorize every formula, but I did memorize most and I recommend trying. You will have a lot of confidence on exam day if you have a couple hundred formulas etched in your brain. Many of them you will not use directly, but understanding the formulas will help you work through problems which technically require no computations but depend on a working understanding of the concepts. If there are a few formulas which you simply do not get, just let them go. Last year, there was one derivative formula that I could not master; sure enough the CFA asked a question about it. (Same thing happened to me with one of the L1 formulas.) Who knows if I got the question correct, but I passed the test. Practice Tests I cannot over-state the importance of practice tests and recommend taking four to six. Leading up to May I would periodically do half-tests covering only the topics that I studied to date. By early April, you should have tried at least one partial test covering the material you have studied to date. Do a CFA Institute practice test. You can download that from the website and the Institute will likely send you an email about it sometime before the test. I also recommend contacting the Boston Security Analysts Society (their local name for the CFA chapter) to purchase their annual practice exam. It is expensive, maybe USD $100+, but is highly regarded in the CFA community and the Boston Society provides explanations for each question. I did their exam in preparation for all three levels and found it very helpful. May 1 By this date you should have covered every topic, completed many practice questions on each topic and taken two to three practice tests. Use the final five weeks to review every topic, with heavy focus on the high tier subjects as well as items that you struggled with. Take at minimum two full practice tests during May (three is better). Time them and try to replicate exam conditions. Review them carefully and understand why you missed the questions that you missed. If you are scoring above 70%+ on your May practice tests and are strong in Ethics, then you are in great position for a Level II pass, just dont let up. Hit it hard until the day before the test and then give yourself a rest on the day before. Chad M. James Corporate Finance Professional