Research report · June 2026

The 2026 Buy-Side Readiness Report

What candidates believe, what their work shows, and why evidence now matters more than presentation.

Analysis of more than 400 investment candidates

The five headline findings

What the data shows

73%

of candidates rated their readiness above the level demonstrated by their work. TrendUp calls this the TrendUp Readiness Gap.

81%

overestimated risk awareness, the most overrated skill of any measured dimension.

80/22

80% could explain interest, but only 22% could explain mispricing.

4/19

Non-target candidates performed within 4% of target-school peers while rating themselves 19% lower.

95%+

Structured TrendUp candidates achieved a CFOA pass rate above 95%, against roughly 55% for the general population.

Executive summary

Buy-side hiring has a measurement problem

The real distinction now runs between candidates who can present and candidates who can demonstrate that they are prepared to contribute to an investment process.

Artificial intelligence has made resumes, cover letters, investment summaries and personalized outreach faster and easier to produce. This has improved candidate presentation while reducing the amount of reliable information that presentation alone provides to an employer.

The 2026 Buy-Side Readiness Report analyzes proprietary data from more than 400 investment candidates assessed across multiple TrendUp cohorts. It examines the relationship between candidate confidence, demonstrated investment ability, professional background, progression through assessed training and CFOA examination outcomes. The analysis draws on candidate records collected across cohorts, a randomized matched analysis comparing self-reported readiness with separately graded investment work, and program-progression and examination outcomes.

The results reveal a consistent TrendUp Readiness Gap between perceived and demonstrated ability. 73% of candidates rated their readiness above the level demonstrated by their work, and the gap was widest in risk awareness, where 81% overestimated their ability. The findings also separate interest from judgment: 80% could explain why an opportunity attracted them, while only 22% could explain why it appeared mispriced.

Buy-side readiness shows up in applied judgment, risk awareness, assessed performance, sustained follow-through and credible professional evidence, the kind of record a polished application cannot manufacture.

TrendUp interprets these findings through the TrendUp Seven Signals Buy-Side Readiness Framework: applied investment judgment, risk awareness, technical breadth, assessed performance, professional reliability, practical experience and professional coherence. Together, these signals provide a more useful picture of candidate readiness than a polished application viewed in isolation.

By the numbers

The full data picture

73%
rated their readiness above the level demonstrated by their work
81%
overestimated risk awareness
71%
of risk analyses were generic, naming no specific failure mechanism
29%
addressed position sizing or portfolio fit
68%
prepared primarily through accounting, valuation and modeling
27%
arrived with working knowledge of options, futures or volatility
91%
of candidates who completed L2 went on to complete L3
95%+
CFOA pass rate for structured TrendUp candidates, against roughly 55% generally

01 · The signal problem

The signals that are easiest to produce have become the least informative

A traditional finance application relies on university and academic performance, previous internships, professional credentials, resume presentation, referrals, interview performance and evidence of interest in markets. Each signal provides some information. None directly establishes whether the candidate can analyze an opportunity, identify relevant risks, form an independent view and produce work that supports an investment decision.

AI is becoming a normal professional tool, and candidates are expected to use it. The deeper change is that polished presentation has become easier to manufacture than applied investment competence, so the two have come apart. A candidate can now produce a well-structured resume, a persuasive cover letter, a fluent investment summary and an apparently personalized message before developing the underlying ability those materials imply.

In the matched Buy-Side Readiness analysis, written presentation quality accounted for less than 10% of the observed variation in assessed investment ability. In other words, the materials a candidate can produce in an afternoon now tell an employer very little about how that candidate will perform on real investment work. Clear writing remains a valuable professional skill, but as a measure of investment readiness it carries little signal.

Firms increasingly need signals that cannot be generated instantly: observed work, assessed performance, technical depth, consistency over time, response to feedback, professional reliability and verifiable practical experience.

02 · The TrendUp Readiness Gap

The difference between what candidates believe and what their work shows

The TrendUp Readiness Gap is the difference between how prepared a candidate believes they are and what their assessed work demonstrates. Across the randomized matched analysis, 73% rated their overall readiness above their assessed level, by an average of 1.2 points on a five-point scale. Risk awareness produced the widest gap, professional reliability the narrowest. Put plainly, most candidates believe they are more prepared than their work shows, and the TrendUp Readiness Gap measures by how much.

The gap persists because candidates use the wrong evidence to evaluate themselves. Following markets builds familiarity. Profitable personal trades build confidence. Academic success demonstrates intellectual ability. Fluency with terminology improves communication. Each of these falls short of identifying why an asset is mispriced, building a defensible thesis, understanding what the market already expects, defining the conditions that invalidate a view, sizing a position responsibly, and understanding how an idea affects a portfolio.

The TrendUp Readiness Gap by signal, showing the share of candidates who overestimated each skill

The Readiness Gap by signal

Share of candidates whose self-assessment exceeded their assessed performance, by signal, with the average overestimation in points on a five-point scale.

Risk awarenessWidest gap
81%
+1.4 pts
Technical breadth
76%
+1.3 pts
Applied judgment
68%
+1.1 pts
Professional coherence
61%
+0.9 pts
Professional reliabilityNarrowest gap
52%
+0.7 pts
Share who overestimated themselves Candidates judged reliability most accurately and risk capability least accurately.

03 · Interest vs. judgment

Interest in investing is common. Investment judgment is scarce.

Most candidates can explain why an investment is interesting. Far fewer can explain why it is mispriced. In the analyzed investment work, 80% could articulate why an opportunity attracted them, while only 22% could clearly explain why it appeared mispriced. 64% described a strong company without establishing why it was a good investment at the current price, and only 34% included a defined condition that would invalidate the thesis.

A typical early-stage pitch may contain substantial information while remaining weak as an investment argument. It can describe the company, its products, revenue growth, industry trends and an attractive long-term story, and still leave the central questions unanswered: What does the market currently believe? Which assumption appears incorrect? Why is the opportunity mispriced? What catalyst could change expectations? What evidence would invalidate the thesis? Why is the expected payoff attractive relative to the risk?

Investment judgment is the movement from information collection to decision-making. A strong candidate distinguishes a good company from a good investment, an accurate forecast from an attractive payoff, a compelling narrative from a differentiated thesis, and confidence from adequate evidence. The amount of information collected matters less than the quality of the decision it supports.

04 · Risk awareness

Risk awareness is the most overestimated skill

Risk awareness produced the widest TrendUp Readiness Gap of any measured dimension. It is the skill most candidates believe they have already mastered and the one their work least supports: 81% rated their risk awareness above the level demonstrated in their work. The assessed analysis showed that 71% of risk discussions were generic and only 29% addressed position sizing or portfolio fit, with downside discussions generally less specific than upside arguments.

Generic risk analysis states that the economy could weaken, competition could increase, volatility could rise or regulation could change. These statements identify possible sources of uncertainty without explaining the mechanism through which the investment case fails. Professional risk analysis is more specific: which operating assumption is most fragile, which event would materially alter expected value, how quickly the position could move, how volatility changes the trade, whether liquidity could prevent an efficient exit, whether leverage creates asymmetric downside, how the position interacts with existing exposure, and whether hedging or smaller sizing would improve the payoff.

Risk awareness matters across fundamental equity research, family-office investing, options and futures, event-driven strategies, asset allocation, trading and portfolio management. For professionals, it is part of how a position is chosen and sized in the first place, which is why it separates candidates who look ready from candidates who are.

05 · Technical breadth

Technical preparation is usually too narrow

Most candidates arrive with preparation concentrated in accounting, valuation and financial modeling. In the analyzed candidate data, 68% prepared primarily through those methods, only 27% arrived with working knowledge of options, futures or volatility, and among candidates specifically targeting trading or derivatives roles, 41% could not structure a basic options position at intake.

Accounting, valuation and modeling are valuable, particularly in fundamental research, private equity and corporate-finance analysis. Buy-side decisions often require a broader framework that may also include technical and event-driven analysis, options, futures, volatility, hedging, portfolio construction, macro transmission, liquidity, market structure, behavioral finance and risk-adjusted position design.

Candidates do not need equal expertise in every area. They need enough breadth to understand how an investment idea becomes a position. A correct fundamental thesis paired with a poor entry point can still generate a loss. A correct directional view expressed through an unsuitable instrument can still produce an unattractive payoff. Technical breadth is what connects analysis to implementation.

06 · Calibration by background

Confidence does not track competence equally across candidate groups

The direction and size of the Readiness Gap vary by candidate profile, and some groups err in opposite directions.

Retail traders

Retail traders showed the widest confidence-to-evidence gap, ranking first in self-assessed readiness and sixth of seven candidate groups in assessed risk awareness. Personal market experience creates real knowledge, yet it can blur the line between repeatable skill and a favorable market, between risk control and a period without severe losses, and between a successful trade and a professional investment process. They benefit most from assessed work that verifies process, discipline and risk management.

Investment banking and advisory candidates

Banking candidates assessed their execution and modeling accurately, with a gap of just 0.3 points there, while overestimating their independent investment judgment by an average of 1.5 points, the largest single-dimension miscalibration of any group. Buy-side work asks them to move from advising or executing toward choosing, prioritizing, rejecting, sizing and forming an independent view.

Non-target candidates

Non-target candidates were the most consistently undervalued group. They performed within 4% of target-school peers on assessed investment work while rating themselves 19% lower. 63% of non-target candidates underestimated their readiness, against 41% of target-school candidates. Many face a verification problem rather than an ability problem, lacking institutional recruiting access, recognizable employer names and prestige-derived confidence. Assessed work, professional credentials and substantive experience help employers evaluate their ability directly.

Career changers

Career changers underestimated their transferable readiness by an average of 22%, discounting quantitative reasoning, sector expertise, discipline, professional maturity and operating experience. Their task is translating existing strengths into credible investment evidence.

Existing investment professionals

Candidates already working in investing showed the narrowest gap between self-assessment and assessed performance. Their practical exposure gave them more accurate feedback about what they could and could not do.

Self-assessment becomes more accurate when it is repeatedly tested against real work, professional feedback and observable outcomes.

07 · Follow-through

Follow-through is a professional signal

Non-progression in the Winter 2026 cohort was concentrated at the beginning of the program. Among candidates who did not reach a recorded L3 result, 87.5% had not completed L2. Among candidates who completed L2, 91.0% subsequently completed L3.

Winter 2026 cohort progression
Stage with a recorded resultCandidatesShare of enrollment
L18073.4%
L26761.5%
L36156.0%

The pattern is what makes reliability measurable. Reliability is built from repeated behavior over time: continuing after early difficulty, completing increasingly demanding assessments, responding to feedback, maintaining engagement and following through under a real schedule. A single deadline, pitch or exam reveals little of it, while a record across several assessed stages reveals a great deal. Smaller investment firms care deeply about this signal, because junior employees require supervision and a fund manager cannot repeatedly chase incomplete work or rebuild assignments handled carelessly. Progression data gives a firm information a resume cannot.

08 · Professional coherence

Most candidates lack a coherent professional signal

A collection of useful experiences does not automatically form a clear professional profile. 61% of candidates overestimated the coherence of their own profile. A candidate may hold a finance degree, personal trading experience, an unrelated internship, several online courses, investment-club membership, a modeling certificate and general interest in hedge funds, and each element can be positive while still leaving the employer uncertain about what the candidate is prepared to do.

A coherent profile connects target role, technical preparation, assessed work, practical experience, professional credentials and career narrative. For example: an investment analyst focused on derivatives and portfolio risk, with assessed investment work, demonstrated options and futures expertise, the CFOA credential and practical experience in an investment environment. That signal is easy for an employer to evaluate. The goal is to make the relationship between a candidate's preparation, experience and professional goal easy to read, which does not require narrow specialization.

The framework

The TrendUp Seven Signals Buy-Side Readiness Framework

The TrendUp Seven Signals Buy-Side Readiness Framework evaluates readiness across seven connected dimensions. Each answers a question an investment firm must resolve before trusting a junior candidate with meaningful work.

The seven signals
SignalQuestionStrong evidence
Applied investment judgmentCan the candidate form and defend a differentiated view?Thesis discipline, catalysts, valuation, market expectations, invalidation conditions
Risk awarenessCan the candidate identify downside and structure exposure responsibly?Scenario analysis, sizing, volatility, hedging, portfolio fit
Technical breadthDoes the candidate understand how ideas become positions?Knowledge across analysis, derivatives, markets, portfolio strategy
Assessed performanceHas the candidate's work been evaluated credibly?Exams, reviewed projects, rankings, progression
Professional reliabilityCan the candidate operate consistently and follow through?Deadlines, engagement, sustained progression, improvement
Practical experienceHas the candidate applied skills in a professional environment?Research, portfolio work, internships, references
Professional coherenceIs there a clear reason for a firm to consider the candidate?Alignment between role, skills, credential, work, experience

The signals reinforce one another. Technical knowledge becomes more credible when applied. Practical experience becomes more valuable when the candidate can explain what they learned. A credential becomes more powerful when supported by assessed work. An investment idea becomes stronger when its risk is analyzed explicitly. A candidate who appears strong on one signal and provides little evidence across the others remains difficult to evaluate.

Research conclusions

Seven conclusions from the data

01

Presentation is a weak substitute for evidence

Written presentation accounted for less than 10% of the variation in assessed investment ability. It matters for communication, but carries little signal about readiness.

02

Candidates most often overestimate risk awareness

Risk awareness produced the widest gap, which matters because risk analysis, sizing and portfolio fit sit at the center of professional work.

03

Interest is not investment judgment

80% could explain interest while only 22% could explain mispricing. Enthusiasm rarely converts into an investable thesis on its own.

04

Non-target candidates are more competitive than they believe

The assessed performance gap with target-school peers was small while the confidence gap was large. Verification can matter as much as more education.

05

Background shapes calibration

Traders and bankers overestimate different capabilities; non-target candidates and career changers underestimate themselves. Development should address both skill and calibration.

06

Follow-through provides useful information

Early non-progression was common, but candidates who completed L2 were highly likely to complete L3. Sustained engagement is itself evidence of readiness.

07

Structured derivatives preparation is associated with strong CFOA outcomes

Structured TrendUp candidates achieved a CFOA pass rate above 95%. Among the characteristics examined, preparation pathway showed the strongest association with success.

Implications

For candidates and for firms

For candidates

Spend less time optimizing surface-level presentation and more time building evidence.

  1. Choose a credible target role or investment direction.
  2. Produce one or two serious investment projects rather than many shallow ones.
  3. Explain why an opportunity is mispriced, not only why it is attractive.
  4. Include explicit risk analysis in every recommendation.
  5. Address sizing, portfolio fit and invalidation conditions.
  6. Expand technical preparation beyond accounting and valuation.
  7. Seek professional assessment of your work.
  8. Build a relevant credential where it supports the target role.
  9. Demonstrate sustained follow-through.
  10. Obtain substantive practical experience and align your resume with what you can demonstrate.

Networking remains useful, and it works best when you can point the recipient toward evidence worth evaluating.

For investment firms

The conventional application has become a weaker filter, and the signals easiest to optimize with AI provide limited information about underlying ability. A stronger evaluation process can include work samples, investment cases, risk-analysis exercises, structured technical assessment, evidence of performance over time, references based on direct supervision, professionally relevant credentials, evaluation of response to feedback and evidence of sustained reliability. These methods reduce the uncertainty a firm must resolve on its own, even though no process removes hiring risk entirely. A performance record carries more information than a polished claim.

The credential

The role of the CFOA

The Certified Futures and Options Analyst credential, issued by ICFDT, verifies specialized knowledge in futures, options, options on futures, volatility, hedging, derivatives strategy, risk management and portfolio applications. These capabilities are relevant across hedge funds, family offices, asset managers, proprietary trading firms and portfolio-management teams.

The readiness data shows that derivatives and risk are among the areas where candidate preparation is weakest and self-assessment is least accurate, which makes the CFOA a differentiated professional signal. Structured TrendUp candidates achieved a CFOA pass rate above 95% in the available cohort records. The comparable pass rate for the broader ICFDT candidate population during the period analyzed was approximately 55%. While that difference reflects an association rather than proof that preparation pathway alone caused the outcome, it is a large and consistent one: candidates who prepare through structured, assessed work arrive at the examination measurably more ready.

How the CFA and CFOA differ for trading and derivatives roles

The CFA provides broad preparation across investment management, including accounting, valuation, economics and portfolio concepts. The CFOA provides specialized verification in futures, options, volatility, hedging and derivatives risk. For candidates targeting trading and derivatives-intensive roles, the two credentials provide complementary professional signals. The CFOA's value is strongest when combined with applied investment work, assessed performance, risk analysis, professional reliability and practical experience.

The method

How TrendUp develops buy-side readiness

TrendUp's L-Program develops buy-side readiness across three progressive, merit-based levels, moving from investment analysis into options, derivatives, futures, hedge fund strategies and portfolio risk. Progression is earned: candidates must complete the relevant work and meet the performance requirements at each stage. Strong L3 performers may be invited to the Specialization and Recruitment Program, which includes a structured analyst or trader internship with a collaborating hedge fund, family office or private investment firm.

Readiness signals mapped to the TrendUp method
Readiness signalTrendUp development mechanism
Applied investment judgmentInvestment pitches, applied analysis and research work
Risk awarenessVolatility, options, futures, hedging and portfolio strategy
Technical breadthProgressive L1 to L3 curriculum
Assessed performanceExams, projects, ranking and merit-based advancement
Professional reliabilityEngagement and progression observed across multiple stages
Practical experienceSelective SRP analyst or trader internship
Professional coherenceCFOA preparation, mentoring, references and career support

TrendUp is an investment-career development and talent-assessment organization founded in 2016. It currently reports that 91% of alumni are working in finance within six months of graduation, a 94% CFOA pass rate among eligible L3 participants, and a 100% placement rate into the internship component for enrolled SRP participants. These company outcomes are reported separately from the Buy-Side Readiness analysis.

Frequently asked questions

Common questions about buy-side readiness

What do buy-side firms look for in candidates in 2026?

Buy-side firms need evidence that candidates can form investment views, understand risk, complete assessed work and operate reliably. Written presentation accounted for less than 10% of the variation in assessed investment ability, so it provides limited evidence of underlying ability.

What is the TrendUp Readiness Gap?

The TrendUp Readiness Gap is the difference between a candidate's self-assessed readiness and the level supported by their assessed investment work. In the randomized matched analysis, 73% of candidates rated their readiness above the level demonstrated by their work.

What is the biggest weakness among the candidates assessed?

Risk awareness produced the widest gap. 81% overestimated risk awareness, 71% of risk analyses were generic, and only 29% addressed position sizing or portfolio fit.

What separates a good company from a good investment?

Price and expectations. A good company becomes an attractive investment only when the expected outcome is more favorable than the outcome already reflected in the price. 80% of candidates could explain why an opportunity interested them, while only 22% could explain why it appeared mispriced.

Can candidates from non-target universities compete for buy-side roles?

Yes. Non-target candidates performed within 4% of target-school peers while rating themselves 19% lower. Assessed work, a relevant credential and substantive practical experience help employers evaluate ability directly.

How do the CFA and CFOA differ for buy-side roles?

The CFA provides broad investment-management preparation. The CFOA provides specialized verification in futures, options, volatility, hedging and derivatives risk. For trading, derivatives, risk-management and portfolio-strategy roles the CFOA is particularly relevant, and the two are complementary.

How can someone prove investment skill without previous experience?

Produce assessed investment work containing a differentiated thesis, evidence of mispricing, explicit downside analysis, position-sizing logic, invalidation conditions and a clear recommendation. A relevant credential and substantive practical experience strengthen that evidence.

Does following through on professional training matter?

Yes. In Winter 2026, 91% of candidates who completed L2 subsequently completed L3, while 87.5% of candidates who did not reach L3 had not completed L2. Sustained progression provides useful evidence of reliability.

Are retail traders ready for professional investment roles?

Some are, but personal trading success does not by itself verify professional readiness. Retail traders showed high confidence but considerably weaker assessed risk awareness, so verification should focus on process, sizing, drawdowns, repeatability and risk control.

Methodology appendix

Research scope and method

This report draws on TrendUp's proprietary candidate dataset covering more than 400 investment candidates assessed across multiple cohorts. The broader dataset contains candidate education and professional backgrounds, separately graded investment work, program-progression records, assessment outcomes, CFOA examination outcomes, candidate specialization and career objectives, and a randomized matched self-assessment analysis.

Buy-Side Readiness matched analysis

A randomly selected subset of 141 candidates from the broader candidate population received the Buy-Side Readiness questionnaire. Their self-assessment responses were matched with separately scored investment work, measuring overall perceived readiness, applied investment judgment, risk awareness, technical breadth, professional reliability, professional coherence and candidate-background differences. Random assignment reduced selection bias within the eligible candidate population. The underlying population consisted of individuals who had engaged with TrendUp and should be read as such rather than as a perfectly representative sample of every aspiring investment professional.

Winter 2026 progression analysis

The progression analysis included 109 enrolled candidates. A positive recorded score indicated completion of the relevant assessed stage. A zero or blank indicated that the candidate either did not complete the stage or did not achieve a recorded passing result. The analysis therefore uses the terms recorded completion, progression and non-progression, and treats a missing result as non-progression rather than confirmed voluntary withdrawal. In most cases, non-completion reflected removal from progression due to unsatisfactory performance rather than a decision to leave the program.

Calculation of the Readiness Gap

Self-assessed readiness and professionally assessed performance were converted to comparable five-point scales. The Readiness Gap was calculated as self-assessed score minus assessed-performance score. A positive result indicated overestimation; a negative result indicated underestimation. A candidate was classified as overestimating a signal when their self-assessed score exceeded their assessed-performance score.

Investment-pitch coding

Investment work was coded for the presence and quality of a differentiated thesis, evidence of mispricing, market expectations, catalysts, valuation or pricing logic, risk specificity, position sizing, portfolio fit and invalidation conditions. Generic risk analysis referred to risk statements that named a broad category of uncertainty without identifying the mechanism through which that uncertainty would damage the investment thesis.

Candidate-background classification

Candidate groups were coded using disclosed education and professional background at intake, across target-school candidates, non-target candidates, retail traders, investment banking and advisory candidates, existing investment professionals, career changers and other early-career candidates. Target-school classification was based on institutional recruiting access and recognized placement into major financial employers rather than a candidate's own description of their university. Subgroup analyses should be read in light of their respective sample sizes.

Presentation-quality analysis

Written presentation quality and assessed investment ability were scored separately. The finding that presentation accounted for less than 10% of the variation in assessed ability refers to the observed statistical relationship between those measures in the matched analysis. Presentation quality was scored independently of investment competence.

Interpretation

The report describes associations and observed differences within TrendUp's analyzed candidate population. It does not claim that one factor alone caused an outcome, that every finding applies equally to all aspiring investment professionals, that a readiness score guarantees employment, that a professional credential replaces practical ability, or that self-assessment alone establishes professional competence.

Privacy

All published findings are aggregated. The report excludes candidate names, identifiable comments, individual admissions or progression decisions, personal characteristics that could identify a participant, firm-specific confidential information and personally identifiable examination records.

How to cite this report

TrendUp. (2026). The 2026 Buy-Side Readiness Report. TrendUp Insights. https://trendupnow.org/buy-side-readiness-report/

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