Fyi Don't need commerce for that Maths/Engineering/Law will do. You'll just end up covering what you need to know within 3-4 weeks of work.investment banking
Fyi Don't need commerce for that Maths/Engineering/Law will do. You'll just end up covering what you need to know within 3-4 weeks of work.investment banking
Clearly you've never worked at an investment bank before.Fyi Don't need commerce for that Maths/Engineering/Law will do. You'll just end up covering what you need to know within 3-4 weeks of work.
pls let me know how maths, engineering and law get you into ib.Fyi Don't need commerce for that Maths/Engineering/Law will do. You'll just end up covering what you need to know within 3-4 weeks of work.
http://www.goldmansachs.com/careers/students-and-graduates/our-programs/asia-programs/index.htmlpls let me know how maths, engineering and law get you into ib.
No I haven't but I know people how are, and as far as they are concerned all they do is excel and powerpoint everyday for 12-15 hours a day basically 6 days a week (depends on client). At the end of the day graduates do not go into investment banking for the fun of it they go in for a decent salary first year out of uni, the learning experience and hence the exit opportunities.Clearly you've never worked at an investment bank before.
So let's give a grad or intern a simple task - find the net and gross total DV01 for supras taken down in the last year and graph based on typical bucketing of maturities.No I haven't but I know people how are, and as far as they are concerned all they do is excel and powerpoint everyday for 12-15 hours a day basically 6 days a week (depends on client). At the end of the day graduates do not go into investment banking for the fun of it they go in for a decent salary first year out of uni, the learning experience and hence the exit opportunities.
What that doesn't tell you is the prerequisite understanding of finance needed alongside your unrelated degree. You'd be naive to think someone with little to no understanding of the market can simply achieve an internship or grad position based on good marks and EC. There are actual tests during the interview stage to demonstrate your knowledge - how might you possibly answer those questions with no understanding?http://www.goldmansachs.com/careers/students-and-graduates/our-programs/asia-programs/index.html
Have a look for yourself, only the research positions require a degree in a "relevant" field (economics, accounting, finance)
Now that I work in an investment bank that is actually a very fair summary of what my day to day role entails. And I'm not even client facing.No I haven't but I know people how are, and as far as they are concerned all they do is excel and powerpoint everyday for 12-15 hours a day basically 6 days a week (depends on client). At the end of the day graduates do not go into investment banking for the fun of it they go in for a decent salary first year out of uni, the learning experience and hence the exit opportunities.
The point of discussion was that had you not studied commerce, would you have been proficient as a graduate? Whatever your current day to day work entails is irrelevant, you need a certain background understanding in order to get to where you are today.Now that I work in an investment bank that is actually a very fair summary of what my day to day role entails. And I'm not even client facing.
Tbh I thought that b0b's point was that you can get into IB without a commerce degree, regardless of what you just saidWhat that doesn't tell you is the prerequisite understanding of finance needed alongside your unrelated degree. You'd be naive to think someone with little to no understanding of the market can simply achieve an internship or grad position based on good marks and EC. There are actual tests during the interview stage to demonstrate your knowledge - how might you possibly answer those questions with no understanding?
You would need to do a lot of research and learning prior to the interview stage, attempting to understand the intricacies of how the market works and also basic financial maths, e.g. pricing a bond or finding the IRR. You may not necessarily use this in every day work, but it's this basic understanding that allows you to gauge whether it is a good trade or even interpreting financial graphs.
read again:Tbh I thought that b0b's point was that you can get into IB without a commerce degree, regardless of what you just said
I never said you couldn't (I'm working in an IB with an engineering background) but you can't just dumb down a commerce/finance degree and expect to be conversant in your product in 3-4 weeks. It takes a lot to be proficient in your product and the top banks expect this from the get go, so to simply say you don't need a commerce degree has a lot of stipulations which must be outlined otherwise it's just a hollow, baseless statement.Fyi Don't need commerce for that Maths/Engineering/Law will do. You'll just end up covering what you need to know within 3-4 weeks of work.
Isn't it implied that if you're going to get through the recruitment process that you'd have some level of knowledge though? Thought the 3-4 weeks training was in relation to just transitioning what you know into doing your job.read again:
I never said you couldn't (I'm working in an IB with an engineering background) but you can't just dumb down a commerce/finance degree and expect to be conversant in your product in 3-4 weeks. It takes a lot to be proficient in your product and the top banks expect this from the get go, so to simply say you don't need a commerce degree has a lot of stipulations which must be outlined otherwise it's just a hollow, baseless statement.
Then why even single out Maths/Engineering/Law in the first place? It should be more than clear that what you're saying isn't what he is saying.Isn't it implied that if you're going to get through the recruitment process that you'd have some level of knowledge though? Thought the 3-4 weeks training was in relation to just transitioning what you know into doing your job.
They're known to be fairly rigorous courses. If you're able to get a high wam in those respective courses then it says something about work ethic/etcThen why even single out Maths/Engineering/Law?
TradingD94, are you in ibd/m&a or trading based role? I definitely agree with you that you definitely have to have a high level of proficiency in finance and just the markets in general to land a grad role etc. But clearly, as exemplified by you and many others comm degree isn't necessary. Although it is much more difficult to learn how to do a standard dcf online, it can be done - no where near the depth of an actual unit at uni though.
Think you must've misread what I said. I already stated that in terms of the Maths/Law/Engo thing, it's a matter of being able to get a high WAM in those respective degrees (let's say HD+) to prove that you're smart/have a strong work ethic.Trading
Anyway as before, I never said you required a commerce degree, but it's unintelligent to simply state that any rigorous degree will do, without adding what is academically required for landing an internship/grad/full time job, which is a strong finance background in this case. It's not that straightforward learning a completely different area of study that your peers have been learning for 3 years straight. You may have learned fluid flow or PDEs or torts in a semester, whereas your competition have spent a semester learning bonds, credit risk, emh etc. Let's actually try and inform people rather than making loose statements.