The Fund Practitioner Qualification Examination *** consists of three subjects. Candidates only need to pass two subjects to obtain the certificate. So how to choose the subjects for the Fund Practitioner Examination? What study suggestions are there?
Introduction to Fund Practitioner Qualification Examination Subjects
There are three subjects in the Fund Practitioner Qualification Examination, namely:
1. Subject 1: Fund Laws and Regulations, Professional Ethics and Business Standards
2. Subject 2: Basic knowledge of securities investment funds
3. Subject 3: Basic knowledge of private equity investment funds
How do you pass the exam? Do you need to pass all 3 exams? Actually, no, subject 1 is necessary, subject 2 and subject 3 can be chosen. If you want to choose a less difficult one, the editor of Deep Space Network recommends that you choose subject 1 + subject 3 to apply. If you really want to learn relevant knowledge from this exam, you can choose subject one and subject two to prepare for the exam. The knowledge points in subject two are relatively difficult.
Study strategies for the Fund Practitioner Examination
1. Read more books and textbooks
First, look at securities investment funds. It talks about a lot of basic knowledge about funds. The exam is also more difficult, with a passing rate of over 30%. Read the book according to the exam syllabus, and be targeted. You can read 20 pages in an hour. If you don't understand something, you can mark it and skip it. You may be able to understand it later by connecting it with other knowledge points. While reading, use a highlighter to mark out some concepts and special places. You should read the book with the mentality of the person who wrote the question and grasp the key points. You can do a set of simulation questions first, and you will have a rough idea of ??what types of questions the question maker likes to take.
2. Grasp the key points and sort out the content
List the important knowledge points, make them into tables, and compare them with each other so that they are easy to distinguish and avoid confusion. Similarly, important knowledge points are also added to the mind map. According to the 80/20 rule, the desired effect of this review method is to master 80% of the key content of the book with a mind map. Basic calculations are a must. There were quite a lot of calculation questions in the exam, almost 10 in my memory. You must understand basic calculation formulas such as expectations, current ratio, asset-liability ratio, inventory turnover rate, etc. You must remember the formulas, and you must know how to calculate the numbers when they are given to you.
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Different from subjective investment, quantitative investment is a data-driven investment method, that is, looking for all kinds of "high probability" eve