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Investment Banking Analyst

Street Of Walls Investment Banking Interview Training


Role of an Investment Banker
Investment bankers are responsible for a wide range of duties including raising capital, providing
advisory services for mergers and acquisitions (M&A) and other corporate transactions, completing
valuation work, and marketing the value of the banks expertise to client companies.
Investment Banking Analysts
Investment banking analysts are the workhorses of an investment banking team; they are typically
straight out of top undergraduate programs, and join the bank for a two-year analyst program starting
in the late summer after graduation, with the possibility of a third year option in certain instances.
The Bulge Bracket banks will send their analysts through approximately two months of intensive
technical job training to prepare for the workload ahead. This involves going through classroom-style
teaching, learning the ins and outs of accounting, financial statement analysis, corporate finance and
valuation, and financial modeling, with specific training in needed computer applications such as
Microsoft Excel and PowerPoint.
Generally, the role of an analyst is to perform the bulk of the analytic work needed to facilitate these
corporate transactions, and this typically involves a lot of work with presentations and models.

Presentations, or Pitch Books, are simply marketing material for the bankers to present to
their corporate clients. These PowerPoint presentations get printed and are bound for
meetings with clients/companies. Pitch Books will generally be 30-40 pages in length, though
in some cases can be substantially longer; they will show the banks qualifications, recent
industry data, sample transaction and analysis information, and advisory recommendations.
The analytical work consists of building and perfecting financial models for any given
corporate situation. We will get into this in further detail later, but this work will typically include
Discounted Cash Flow (DCF) analysis, Comparable Companies and Comparable
Transactions (Comps), M&A models, and/or LBO models.
Analysts will spent substantial time repeatedly building and evaluating different financial
alternatives for the client. One example might be running M&A models and showing the
accretion/dilution effects to earnings based on different allocation scenarios for debt and
equity in the proposed transaction.

If your biggest fear is being on call 24 hours a day and potentially working through the night, then
investment banking is almost certainly not for you. Investment banking analysts generally work 80-110
hour workweeks expect to have very little free time outside of the office, especially during the first
year on the job. (Yes, that includes most weekends!) While the hours are strenuous, the cost is
worthwhile for those who treat investment banking as a stepping stone for their career: junior bankers
who excel in their position generally have a wide array of lucrative opportunities in front of them at the
end of the analyst program. It is very common for investment banking analysts to work a few years in
the industry and then transition into roles in such areas as Private Equity or Hedge Funds, which we
will discuss in more depth later in the series.
Investment Banking Lifestyle Questions

Are the hours really that bad? The bottom line is: yes. At the bulge bracket banks and top
boutiques, analysts are expected to work approximately 90-110 hours per week (or even more
under some circumstances). A typical day will be somewhere in the range of 10am to 2am;
this often includes weekends (or at least part of them). During busy times analysts will even
pull an all-nighter working straight through the night and then sticking around to do it again
the next day. The higher you go up the ladder, the less time at the office associates usually
put in less time than analysts, VPs put in less time than associates, etc.
Why dont the banks just hire more analysts then? This primarily because of the culture of
investment banking. You will be spending a lot of time in small teams working on M&A/LBOs,

etc. There will often be many changes per day to these transactions, and the workload can
compound very quickly. Also, it can be difficult to break apart the work and farm it out to
multiple people. Bankers are expected to work a lot; thus they get paid a lot of money for
working those long hours.
Whats the upside? There are two primary upsides in investment banking: the compensation
and the career development potential. Investment banking is probably the most highly
compensated out-of-college career track for the vast majority of graduates in the nation this
is assuming, of course, that you cannot be drafted in the first round of a major professional
sport! In short, you will be highly paid. Also, the set of exit opportunities that will typically be
available to you upon completion of the analyst program is robust: many people treat
investment banking as a stepping-stone to other prestigious careers (just as I did). Some
common post-analyst directions include Private Equity, Venture Capital, and Hedge Funds.
Others may use the corporate finance knowledge they gain as bankers to go back to top
business schools or to start their own companies. Finally, what is learned is invaluable.
Banking teaches analysts the ins-and-outs of corporate finance and how to work and survive
in a stressful, intense work environment. This experience and all of the related technical skills
will prove valuable regardless of what the bankers do in the future.
Is the lifestyle worse/better in some groups than others? Bulges Bracket vs. Boutiques?
The bottom line is: yes and yes. Generally, the hours are quite a bit longer per week at the
bulge bracket firms than at smaller boutiques (note that this is not always true) simply
because of volume of deal flow. Larger banks will tend to do much more volume (i.e., many
more completed transactions as well as proposed ones) relative to smaller banks. Thus, much
more work for you as the junior employee. In terms of groups, this varies bank by bank.
However, traditionally, the product groups have a reputation for working the most hours
(especially M&A and Leveraged Finance).
Is the lifestyle different in areas other then New York? Generally the life is much tougher for a
New York investment banker. The other big finance hubs come in next: London, Tokyo and
Hong Kong. The West Coast (L.A. area) has a somewhat large concentration of investment
bankers, but the stereotype there is that a more laid-back atmosphere.
Do investment bankers get free dinner? Yes. Typically, if you work past either 7pm or 8pm
(which you usually will), you are eligible for dinner on the firm. When I worked in investment
banking, there was typically a budget of $25 for dinner every night, and on the weekends, $15
for lunch and again $25 for dinner. The bank will also pay for your travel home every night and
also travel to and from the office on the weekends. These free meals and travel, combined
with the fact that you wont have much free time out of the office, combine to ensure that you
will save a large chunk of your earnings during your tenure as a junior banker.

Selected Periodicals

Wall Street Journal (especially the Money & Investing section)

Financial Times

Barrons (weekly)

Dealbreaker (online M&A tabloid)

Street of Walls (this website)

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