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Number of candidates sitting chartered financial analyst exams falls sharply

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Number of candidates sitting chartered financial analyst exams falls sharply

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The number of candidates completing chartered financial analyst exams is in stubborn decline as demand slides for a qualification once seen as essential for the profession.

The latest available results for CFA Institute, which oversees the tests, show 116,727 people sat all three levels of the exam in the first eight months of the year, down 2,735 on the same period in 2023.

Last year there were 163,000 exam registrations, 40 per cent down from the peak of 270,456 in 2019.

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Margaret Franklin, chief executive at the CFA Institute, which oversees the qualification, said a downturn in growth from China was partly to blame.

Chinese and Indian candidates have boomed in number over the past decade as graduates overseas seek international investment qualifications that could lead to jobs with US and European investment companies. India’s exam registrations have doubled since 2014 to 31,600.

China’s growth rate “has slowed down, but it was hyperbolic before that,” she told the Financial Times, adding that “the CFA programme is still really highly regarded” in the country.

Candidates from India have taken up some of the slack, although she anticipates that growth from the South Indian nation will moderate.

The pandemic negatively affected the number of people attempting to qualify, especially among those under the strict lockdown regime in China. The CFA Institute has shifted to online testing but the new system took time to establish.

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After a sharp dip in registrations during the pandemic, exam result numbers have shown no recovery. Pass rates overall have recovered to 46 per cent, having dipped to 22 per cent in 2021.

Whether the CFA makes a difference on the job front is what matters for candidates, some of whom see it as useful but not necessary.

“You’re not going to hire or not hire someone on the basis of having a CFA,” said Elise Badoy, head of Emea equity research at Citi. However, she said the qualification “helps for younger analysts”, and that for the first three or four years of their career “it’s definitely a positive thing”.

The slowdown comes at a time when structural changes in the asset management industry, such as the shift towards passive investment and private capital, threaten the relevance of holding a CFA.

CFA Institute has introduced new products like investment certifications in areas such as ESG and climate change. Candidates can now focus on course areas other than general portfolio management, such as private markets and wealth management. Case studies within the exam include the cryptocurrency sector.

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“We are diversifying, trying to find the things that meet the needs of people in all stages of their career,” Franklin said.

To encourage more applicants, candidates for the Level I CFA exam can now be up to two years away from completing their undergraduate degree, up from one year previously. Franklin believes the CFA offers a “more meritocratic, less selective” qualification than a more expensive MBA from universities.

While she believes the worst of the pandemic effect has passed, the organisation has had to adapt to the slowdown.

“Do I think we are going to have the same hyper growth? No. Hyper growth in the business isn’t there any more.”

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Finance

Intact Financial provides update on Q2 catastrophe and large losses

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Intact Financial provides update on Q2 catastrophe and large losses
The corporate logo of Intact Financial Corporation is shown. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Handout – Intact Financial (Mandatory Credit) – The Canadian Press

TORONTO — Insurance provider Intact Financial Corp. says it had higher catastrophe losses and large losses in the second quarter than it initially expected.

Intact Financial reported that its combined catastrophe and large losses were $247 million above its expectations for the second quarter on a pre-tax and net of reinsurance basis.

The combined higher losses amount to $1.08 per diluted common share after tax.

Total catastrophe losses reached $416 million on a pre-tax basis during the second quarter and net of reinsurance.

The company says catastrophe losses in Canada were due to weather events, while commercial fires drove losses in the United Kingdom and Ireland.

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Intact Financial says the increase in large losses included higher-frequency fire claims as well as other property losses across different geographies.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published July 8, 2026.

Companies in this story: (TSX: IFC)

The Canadian Press

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How Natura &Co Is Transforming Finance with Generative AI on SAP S/4HANA

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How Natura &Co Is Transforming Finance with Generative AI on SAP S/4HANA

For a company navigating one of the most consequential transformations in its history, financial clarity is not optional—it is essential. Natura &Co, the Brazilian personal care and cosmetics group behind iconic brands such as Natura and Avon, has long been committed to combining purpose-driven business with commercial performance. After a period of strategic portfolio reshaping, including the divestiture of its Aesop and The Body Shop holdings, the company is now sharpening its focus on profitability and operational excellence across Latin America and global markets.

At the center of that effort sits a deceptively complex challenge: understanding, in real time, which revenue and cost factors are driving or eroding gross margin across a highly diversified business. For years, answering that question meant manual reporting, delayed insights, and finance teams spending valuable time on data gathering rather than analysis.

That’s now changing, thanks to a co-innovation initiative developed together with SAP and Numen, a global SAP partner specializing in digital transformation and enterprise software implementation.

From manual reporting to proactive decision intelligence

An enterprise AI platform built for your business

The project’s goal was to replace a labor-intensive gross margin analysis process with a generative AI application embedded directly into Natura &Co’s financial workflows. Built on SAP Business AI Platform, SAP’s unified foundation integrating business technology, data, and AI capabilities, the application connects directly to data in SAP S/4HANA to provide finance teams with automated insights and narrative recommendations in real time, without the need for manual data pulls or offline reporting.

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The application enables users to explore revenue, cost, and margin drivers interactively, identifying at a glance which elements are protecting or eroding margin performance across markets and product lines. Crucially, human oversight remains central to the design: the AI application generates insights, while finance professionals retain full control over interpretation and decisions.

“The implementation of gross margin analysis using AI in SAP S/4HANA marked an inflection point in the analytical capability of our finance area,” said Rogério Dias Garcia, tech manager, ERP Latam, Natura &Co. “We overcame delays and raised the standard of insights by integrating margin analysis from SAP S/4HANA with a large language model connected via the SAP AI Core layer. This architecture allowed us to provide, in an agile, secure, and completely anonymous manner, a stratified and precise view of gross margin offenders and protectors—discriminating exactly which revenue or cost elements were driving market performance.”

A collaborative architecture for scalable AI adoption

Natura &Co’s application derived from a prototype SAP partner Numen created in early 2024 at SAP’s global Hack2Build on business AI, leveraging the generative AI capabilities of SAP Business AI Platform. The solution was designed and developed through close collaboration between Natura &Co, Numen, and SAP. From the outset, the approach was to align AI adoption with concrete business priorities, ensuring the application would be scalable and production-ready rather than a standalone prototype.

Numen brought deep SAP implementation expertise to the project, combining knowledge of SAP S/4HANA architecture with hands-on experience in building solutions on SAP Business AI Platform. The technology stack—SAP S/4HANA, SAP AI Core, SAP Fiori, and SAP Business Technology Platform—provided the secure, integrated foundation needed to connect financial data with generative AI capabilities in an enterprise context.

“SAP enabled the transformation by providing the technological foundation and expert support,” said Carlos Aravechia, head of Data Design & Intelligence at Numen.

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The success of the project has validated a broader conviction at Natura &Co: that generative AI, embedded directly in ERP workflows, can fundamentally reposition finance from a transactional function to a strategic business partner.

A blueprint for other businesses

The Natura &Co project demonstrates a pattern that other organizations can replicate, particularly those running SAP S/4HANA. The combination of structured ERP data with the contextual reasoning capabilities of large language models creates a foundation for decision intelligence that goes well beyond traditional business intelligence tools.

The project was built within a six-month co-innovation sprint and went live in August 2025. It is currently in use across Natura &Co’s Equador operations.

Looking ahead, Natura &Co is already planning the next phase: integrating Joule Agents to further automate the extraction of standard analytical content and deepen the AI-driven optimization of financial processes.

“The success of this initiative validates the transformative potential of embedded AI within our ERP,” Dias Garcia noted. “We are now ready to move forward—deepening these insights and integrating the capability of Joule Agents to maximize the extraction of standard content and further optimize our business decisions.”

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For SAP customers evaluating how to move from AI experimentation to AI in production, the Natura &Co project offers a concrete, replicable model: start with a high-value, well-defined business process, embed AI directly into existing workflows, and build in human oversight from the start.


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Low-income Chinese girl aces gaokao, inspires live-streamers offering help

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Low-income Chinese girl aces gaokao, inspires live-streamers offering help

A girl from a disadvantaged rural family in central China topped this year’s gaokao, attracting numerous live-streamers eager to finance her education, which she declined.

The home of 18-year-old secondary school graduate Han Yaping in a Henan province village was recently bustling with live-streamers.

This attention came after Han achieved an impressive score of 699 out of 750 in the gaokao, China’s national college entrance exam.

She has received offers from China’s two leading universities, Tsinghua University and Peking University.

Han’s accomplishment is particularly remarkable given her family’s impoverished circumstances.

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Her mother suffers from ankylosing spondylitis, an inflammatory arthritis affecting the spine, preventing her from working. Her father, who earns a living through farming and odd jobs, serves as the family’s sole provider. Han also has a younger sister.

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