I'm going to keep this brief and systematic
- Workload - Depends on your lead analyst (who will be the single most important person in your life). 50 hours sounds way too little, think moreso 60-70 as a base point with late hours on top responding to client requests, writing up market events (company results, etc). My general advice is write off Mon-Fri completely but unless you're unlucky you should have your weekend free. Hours have gotten worse in recent years due to headcount reductions & more attention being given to smaller clients who 5 years ago you probably wouldnt bother picking up the phone for. Hours start early, anywhere from 6-7:45.
- Work style - Writing reports is probably 1/3 of the job or less. Different analysts make names for themselves doing different things (but all do a mixture of things) - company report/analysis, industry knowledge/contacts, corporate access. There's a lot more salesmanship involved than most outsiders think. I would go so far as saying it's one of the most client-intensive roles you can work in besides an actual sales role. Also, in contrast to sales roles (where they pick up the phone for 2minutes), in research you are expected to go into greater depth and can usually end up having long conversations - think up to an hour or more for important clients. You could well be expected to talk to clients on the phone in your first year (contrast to IBD where you won't be allowed near a client).
- Pay - Research generally falls within global markets so you're paid identically to the other guys for at least 2-3 years. Beyond that, bonuses are lower than IBD and obviously tied to Equities performance. Long long term, Bank & Resources analysts earn the most because their stocks generally have the most trade activity/market cap. Nothing for you to worry about now though.
- Herp derp research is a cost centre - It's really not anymore than Equity Sales it. Clients assign brokerage to the bank in a lump and then carve out which portions should go to which team, e.g. a typical split is 10% execution, 10-20% sales, 70-80% research. Research is crucial to any bank worth their salt. Lead analysts get their biographies in every important pitchbook and all the eq sales guys actually do is call clients up all day and summarise Research views to them - then they go to lunch at 1pm and often don't come back.
Biggest downsides
- No 'easy days'. Unlike IBD where analysts can often spend all day watching paint dry, you're unlikely to be able to slack off in research. You'll spend your morning getting up to date with news, all day updating databases and completing client requests, if there's no urgent market news to write-up then any top-rated analyst would undoutedbly have you working on a project like an industry piece or performing channel checks. You stay up until 2am arguing with compliance about publishing a report? Tough. News-wrap still due 7am next morning.
- Last-minute client requests at 6-7pm just when you thought you'd be able to go home for the night. Most likely they'll be coming in from clients in Asia who don't care what timezone it is in Australia.
- "NOTICE RECEIVED" on IRESS
Biggest upsides
- Relatively early recognition, your name on research reports (which can end up getting you quoted on the AFR, media... which interestingly most leads actually don't care much for)
- Genuinely interesting to be so on top of market news & getting strong industry knowledge. There's monkey work, but you feel like you're learning a lot, fast.
- Great exit ops. You will have sound financial modelling skills, client relationship skills and in-depth industry knowledge of your sectors. After a few years exp you can exit into IBD, Sales, Buy-side, Corporates ...
Housekeeping:
- In research, Associate title comes before Analyst title
- Very little hierarchy. Titles don't mean all that much. The hierarchy isn't as important as in IBD because you work for your lead analyst and your lead alone. In IBD you'll often be assigned work from seniors who arent in your direct team, so pulling rank is more important
- Entry opps: The major firms generally only take 1-2 research grads annually, so there are far fewer places than IBD. However, there are less people directly applying for Research, so being very specific on your cover letter is already a leg up
- "Parcel culture - If your lead is poached by a rival bank, often he will take his minion with him."