gravenewworld said:
Is anyone on the board an actuary or has anyone on here taken the actuary exams? I have graduated witha BS in math and a minor in economics, and was wondering if this was enough to pursue a career as an actuary. The only problem is that I have never ever taken any stat or probability classes. I am sure that I could study the material that would be covered on the actuary exams, but I was wondering if potential employers want to see it actually listed on a transcript. Would I need to take a course on stat/probability or would it just be ok as long as I could study myself and pass the exams? Also, how hard are the exams? Did it take you multiple times to pass the exams? How long did you study for it? How hard is it to find a job as an actuary? What are some things employers look for on a resume?
First off, there's two types of actuaries. There's about ten times as many life actuaries (that's a fairly precise figure) as there are P&C actuaries. The extremely favorable reviews you read of the actuarial field mostly relate to life actuaries. I was a P&C (Property and Casualty) actuary.
You don't really need stat. Basic calculus (perhaps two semesters) is about as far as the "real" math goes. Beyond that, it's this weird sort of math invented by actuaries for actuaries. A basic understanding of stat is about all you need to pick up that part.
The exams are brutal. Each exam is worth an extra $5,000 a year or so, so people study a LOT for them. That's the competition. The official number is 500 hours to pass an exam. The reality is it is still a crap shoot. The exams have about a 50% pass rate. For the P&C exams, it is ALL memorization beyond the first three exams. You need to know the specific solutions provided by specific authors to specific problems. Sample question: "according to Herzog, what is the appropriate treatment for ...". That question will relate directly back to an example in the text, and you have to know that solution, being able to solve the problem is irrelevent.
There are ten exams, offered twice a year. With a 50% pass rate, you'll pass one a year on average, for a ten year "travel time" to pass all ten. During that time, you'll spend 1,000/year (4 hours every single day) studying.
It IS worth it: once you pass all 10, you are pretty much guaranteed to make $150,000/year, even if you tend to drool during interviews.