Those two futures have nothing to do with American CFA. One is a domestic exam, and the other is an American exam. One is Chinese, and the other is English. And the content is very, very different. Futures business and investment consulting are mainly derivatives, with little economy and little statistics. Financial derivatives account for less than 5% of CFA. The proportion of statistics in CFA is about 15%-20%, but the statistics involved in futures business and investment consulting are very, very few compared with CFA. CFAⅱII II focuses on stock and portfolio management, and these two futures exams are totally excluded. Unless you are a financial engineering major, it doesn't mean that people from other majors have visually observed CFA.