CIMA mark from IMCA is approved

The Investment Management Consultants Association got a thumbs-up last week from the American National Standards Institute for its CIMA designation
MAY 17, 2011
The Investment Management Consultants Association got a thumbs-up last week from the American National Standards Institute for its CIMA designation. The certified investment management analyst program was launched in 1988 and will become the first financial services credential to get the seal of approval from the ANSI. “This sets the CIMA apart from other designations and brings it to a higher standard,” said Jamie Parrish, marketing manager for IMCA. The CIMA designation is intended for “advanced investment consultants,” she said. Applicants have two years to complete the program, which includes a qualifying exam, five days of classes at The Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania and a final certification exam. The curriculum covers subjects such as asset allocation, investment policy, manager search and selection, performance measurement and attribution, behavioral finance, risk management, derivatives, the legal and regulatory environment, and ethics. CIMA applicants must also have three years of experience in the financial services field. According to IMCA's website, the cost of getting the designation is between $7,000 and $11,000. IMCA had to do several things to earn the ANSI accreditation. For one, it had to separate IMCA's board from the certification commission that sets policy for the designation. IMCA also had to separate the education element of the program — which is conducted only by Wharton, from the testing function, which the organization outsources to a testing firm. There are about 6,100 individuals who hold the CIMA designation, the smallest number of holders of the three major credentials for financial advisers. About 62,600 individuals hold the certified financial planner designation, and there are more than 100,000 chartered financial analysts around the world. E-mail Andrew Osterland at [email protected].

Latest News

Americans back sharing AI wealth as debate over industry’s economic benefits grows
Americans back sharing AI wealth as debate over industry’s economic benefits grows

Public support grows for policies that spread AI’s financial gains beyond tech companies.

JPMorgan's record Q2 profit rides trading and dealmaking surge
JPMorgan's record Q2 profit rides trading and dealmaking surge

Investment banking fees rose 30% on a wave of IPOs and megadeals, led by the largest public listing on record.

Feathery raises $30 million to power AI-driven RIA operations
Feathery raises $30 million to power AI-driven RIA operations

Series A funding from Portage, Bain Capital, and other investors will fuel data tools designed to speed advisor transitions and cut onboarding delays across wealth firms.

Wealth Enhancement deepens East Coast presence with Wealthshield deal
Wealth Enhancement deepens East Coast presence with Wealthshield deal

The Minneapolis-based RIA aggregator is adding two North Carolina practices managing nearly $1 billion, pushing its total client assets past $158.2 billion.

The real reason I expanded my RIA to Hong Kong (it wasn't for the AUM)
The real reason I expanded my RIA to Hong Kong (it wasn't for the AUM)

As markets disintegrate, the value of on-the-ground, first-hand research through "intimate knowledge acquisition" is skyrocketing.

SPONSORED Direct indexing webinar targets tax-loss harvesting amid market swings

Northern Trust’s Ken Lassner shows advisors how to convert volatility into after-tax portfolio gains

SPONSORED Who builds the income when the pension disappears?

Dan Biagini of American Equity says the steady decline of pensions, longer lifespans and a reset in interest rates are rewriting how advisors build retirement income