The Star Malaysia - StarBiz

This is not a passing fad – CFA exam adds crypto, blockchain topics

-

HONG KONG: It might be the definitive sign that cryptocurr­encies have arrived on Wall Street.

CFA Institute, whose gruelling three-level programme has helped train more than 150,000 financial profession­als, is adding topics on cryptocurr­encies and blockchain to its Level I and II curriculum­s for the first time next year. Material for the 2019 exams will be released in August, giving candidates their first opportunit­y to start logging a recommende­d 300 hours of study time.

CFA added the topics, part of a new reading called Fintech in Investment Management, after industry participan­ts showed surging interest in surveys and focus groups. The worlds of finance and crypto have become increasing­ly intertwine­d after last year’s Bitcoin boom, with regulated futures now trading in Chicago, blue-chip firms like Goldman Sachs Group Inc dabbling in digital assets, and scores of Wall Streeters joining crypto-related startups.

While digital coins have tumbled in 2018 and the real-world impact of blockchain ventures has thus far been limited, some observers say the technology could ultimately transform swathes of the global financial system.

“We saw the field advancing more quickly than other fields and we also saw it as more durable,” said Stephen Horan, managing director for general education and curriculum at CFA Institute in Charlottes­ville, Virginia. “This is not a passing fad.”

The CFA material on crypto and blockchain will appear alongside other fintech subjects including artificial intelligen­ce, machine learning, big data and automated trading. More crypto topics, such as the intersecti­on of virtual currencies and economics, may eventually be added to the curriculum, Horan said.

“It will be beneficial for us, since there’s been a huge expansion and adoption of crypto in our investment universe,” said Kayden Lee, 27, a financial economics student at Columbia University who took the CFA Level I exam in June and is interning as a fund analyst in Singapore during his summer break.

“But more importantl­y the focus is on fintech and blockchain,” Lee said. “How it works to improve, unravel or even disrupt certain sectors.”

The new topics will also make an appearance in the CFA readings on profession­al ethics, an area that some say is lacking in the crypto world. Many virtual currency projects operate in a legal gray zone, while digital-asset trading venues and initial coin offerings are rife with examples of fraud, market manipulati­on, money laundering and theft.

A record 227,031 people in 91 countries and territorie­s registered to take CFA exams in June, seeking a better understand­ing of finance, improved job prospects or some combinatio­n of the two. A majority of the candidates came from Asia, which also happens to be where much of the world’s virtual currency trading takes place. About 45% of Bitcoin transactio­ns are paired against the Japanese yen, according to CryptoComp­are. com, while Korean crypto exchanges are some of the world’s largest.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia