Grad pay - similar to banking, bonus lower
Hours - crunches during results season, earlier starts when you release a paper to the sales guys
No prerequisite skills, everything can be learnt. most guys get a CFA for street cred but not really sure how it helps.
In fact your engineering degree probably helps. Law not really.
heard its a bit boring from the guy who used to sit next to me, given you focus on one specific sector and 5-7 companies all the time. but you do gain insight and actually "know" an industry which is more than what i can say for bankers. so the upside is that if you are good, plenty of opportunity to move into the buyside at hedge funds.
actually not many people start at research, its always been a less popular option.
Is there a particular reason why you want to apply for that? as opposed to banking or sales and trading?
It's because, as Omnidragon said, i don't know what i want to do.
I have a lot of opportunities, i guess, and i'm ambitious..this degree opens up almost everything except anything medical and that's kind of the problem. Do i go into engineering and aim for project management and engineering management? Do i become a lawyer working in a top-tier firm? (ugh, but i guess if i can move on to greater things...) Or do i enter finance and the lofty realms of investment banking and MCC like the rest of my desperate cohort?
I guess what's shaping my decision is that i want to enter something 'lucrative' (ie, high salary..i'm ambitious and i've worked hard to get here, sue me), but also something that gives me some sort of tangible skill that allows me to develop, and that shields me from discrimination (i suspect that's going to be a problem in these 'high-powered jobs'). I'm a bit of finance ignoramus (never considered it until like last yr) but churning out powerpoint presentations, excel sheets and pitch-books in my early years, and then convincing clients to accept some sort of merger doesn't seem like something that would provide me with a great level of skill (correct me if i'm wrong). Regardless of money (200k in australia i hear when you begin), and if i'm out...well, i'm out. I don't see what i could otherwise. Where else would i go? What other fields would i break into? What possible skill does an IB have other than churning out powerpoints, convincing clients and being a good monkey for the guys at the top? (if my view is wrong, again, correct me. I'm cynical but i'm also probably most likely very very naive). If it takes 10 years in something else to reach say 150k+ so be it, but i have it in the back of my head that IB is a sucker's game.
Sales and trading is a no-no. As far as i'm concerned, traders creating 'liquidity' by buying and selling shares is just rhetoric. It's just pilfering capital, exploiting prices for gain AFAIC (Again, i'm wrong, correct me). I've researched the role, and the fact that traders say that everyone has 'their own way' of investing rang the alarm bells for me.
So i'm guessing that if i 'know' an industry, that requires some level of skill, it's industry specific, and it could prove useful in the future...maybe? It doesn't pay bad at all (i mean, what could i POSSIBLY do with $2500-3000 to quickly $4000 a week?!)
Is there some catch to these jobs? I've been reading omnidragon's posts, and i can't help but feel as if i'm bit naive....or he's a bit cynical...
It's because at a grad level, people don't know what they should be doing. If I knew what I knew now, I'd have done things a little differently. Probably would've been on to much bigger things now. How's it different to people who get in to say law/medicine/big 4 because they think there are big $$$ before 80 years old?
Either way, too late.
Wait whut? Um, you're 26 according to your profile, and it's over?! ...what field did you break into? Why is it 'over'? What would you have done differently?
P.S Should point out that i would rather be dead than do medicine, for the record...in case anything was thinking that