The Switzerland Chapter serves a sophisticated community of CMT charterholders in a global center for wealth and asset management. With active communities in both Zurich and Geneva, the chapter caters to a highly skilled group of institutional investors, portfolio managers, and analysts. The first CMT charter was awarded in Switzerland on December 1, 1999. The chapter has been led by influential volunteers who have also served on the global Board of Directors, advocating for curriculum changes that align with the managed futures industry and the quantitative focus prevalent in the Swiss market.
The Switzerland Chapter is committed to delivering advanced educational programming and elite networking opportunities tailored specifically for the sophisticated Swiss financial industry. Our mission is designed to uniquely address the needs of institutional asset managers, private wealth experts, and the country’s highly analytical investment community. We focus on actively promoting the deep and valuable integration of technical analysis into systematic and quantitative investment strategies. We value precision, institutional relevance, and intellectual rigor, ensuring our events go beyond the basics to explore cutting-edge methodologies. By fostering a high-caliber professional network, the chapter solidifies the Chartered Market Technician® (CMT) designation as the mark of sophisticated, rules-based market expertise in one of the world’s most important financial hubs.
Steward the CMT Association mission at the national level, extending engagement to members and stakeholders beyond individual city communities.
Lead national advocacy for technical analysis with regulators, financial media, and institutional employers.
Provide governance oversight and leadership for city Communities, ensuring consistent standards, reporting, and volunteer support across the country.
Understanding Groups and Gigs
A Group is an ongoing, strategic body of volunteers who collaborate on a defined mission over an extended period. Groups have formal governance, defined membership, and regular meeting cadences. Joining a group means becoming part of a team committed to driving long-term impact within CMT.
A Gig is a short-term, tactical assignment with a clear deliverable and timeline. Gigs are ideal for volunteers who want to contribute their expertise to a specific task without a long-term commitment. They are time-boxed and goal-oriented.
| Group | |
|---|---|
| Ideal Candidate |
Eligible CMT Journey Stages
Chairs/Officers: Active Professional Member (preferred Active Charter Holder); Members: Active Professional Member or Affiliate Member
Key Competencies
Organizing; partnerships; budget basics
Suggested Career Age & TA Depth
6+ years experience; 3+ years TA |
| What You'll Do |
Core Activities
Engage members and partners outside city Communities through national communications, virtual touchpoints, and cross-city initiatives. Host annual or flagship Chapter summits and thematic inclusion campaigns that bring multiple Communities together. Meet regularly with national regulators and financial media outlets to promote recognition of technical analysis and the CMT Program. Coordinate and support Community leaders, including scheduling leadership calls, sharing programming templates, and tracking basic governance and reporting. Hire and onboard Chapter-level volunteers and conduct regular Chapter volunteer meetings to review progress and plan upcoming programs. |
| Time Commitment |
Recommended Time Commitment & Cadence
Chapter leaders should expect a commitment of 6–12 hours per month. This includes approximately 1–2 hours for the formal monthly meeting, with the remaining time dedicated to stakeholder engagement, partnership development, and overseeing city-level Communities. Time commitments may spike to 15+ hours during national seminars or major regional event months.
Chapters are required to hold formal leadership meetings at least four times per fiscal year (quarterly). While quarterly is the minimum, most active chapters convene monthly or every 6–8 weeks to coordinate regional programming, advocacy initiatives, and community support.
Member Appointment & Term
BYLAWS §8.02(E): The members of the committee shall be appointed by the committee chair with the approval of the Board to serve for a term of one (1) year or such longer period as the Board may determine, provided that no individual shall serve as a member of a committee (including anytime as committee chair) for more than four (4) consecutive years.
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Available short-term assignments will be listed here.