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Investment Banking
Posted: Tue Jan 25, 2011 5:15 pm
by TraeM2010
In my research I am finding that many of the large investment banks recruit from top law schools. I have also seen that another good way to get into the investment banking industry is to start in corporate finance and then transition in. I have an accounting background and attend University of South Carolina law. I have a CPA license. If I want to try to transition from law school to investment banking should I try to do it from a corporate tax position or should I try to land a corporate finance job out of law school?
Re: Investment Banking
Posted: Tue Jan 25, 2011 5:27 pm
by Renzo
I think you have three options:
1. Invent time machine
2. Go back in time, attend an Ivy undergrad, do well
3. Get a job as a banker
-OR-
1. Get an MBA from Harvard, Penn, Northwestern, Chicago, MIT, or Stanford.
2. Become a banker.
-OR-
1. Get a job as an M&A attorney with a very prestigious firm that does a lot of work with the banks.
2. Pray
3. Transition to banking.
Re: Investment Banking
Posted: Wed Jul 25, 2012 1:33 pm
by Anonymous User
What about applying to Ibanking analyst positions after a top 14 JD? And doing so after taking transactional focused classes and even corporate finance/accounting at the top 14's top 20 MBA program? I have an econ undergrad degree and when I say Ibanks I'm talking about middle market banks--not bulge (think BBT/Suntrust etc.). Also note that I'm talking coming in at the analyst level and not as an associate.
Re: Investment Banking
Posted: Wed Jul 25, 2012 2:01 pm
by Anonymous User
Anonymous User wrote:What about applying to Ibanking analyst positions after a top 14 JD? And doing so after taking transactional focused classes and even corporate finance/accounting at the top 14's top 20 MBA program? I have an econ undergrad degree and when I say Ibanks I'm talking about middle market banks--not bulge (think BBT/Suntrust etc.). Also note that I'm talking coming in at the analyst level and not as an associate.
It's definitely "possible" to get into banking with a JD but you'd be excluded from most any analyst class. You might be able to talk your way into a small boutique firm if you know someone but even in that scenario you'd likely be hired as an associate. Most JD hires have some sort of transferable/relevant experience and depending on that experience, some JD's are even hired as VP's. In the end, it's all about how well you network.
Re: Investment Banking
Posted: Wed Jul 25, 2012 2:15 pm
by Anonymous User
How possible to go:
CCN --> V10 M&A midlevel--> MBA --> IBD --> ??? --> Profit ?
Re: Investment Banking
Posted: Wed Jul 25, 2012 2:36 pm
by Anonymous User
Anonymous User wrote:Anonymous User wrote:What about applying to Ibanking analyst positions after a top 14 JD? And doing so after taking transactional focused classes and even corporate finance/accounting at the top 14's top 20 MBA program? I have an econ undergrad degree and when I say Ibanks I'm talking about middle market banks--not bulge (think BBT/Suntrust etc.). Also note that I'm talking coming in at the analyst level and not as an associate.
It's definitely "possible" to get into banking with a JD but you'd be excluded from most any analyst class. You might be able to talk your way into a small boutique firm if you know someone but even in that scenario you'd likely be hired as an associate. Most JD hires have some sort of transferable/relevant experience and depending on that experience, some JD's are even hired as VP's. In the end, it's all about how well you network.
Why would I be excluded from analyst positions but not for associate positions? I'm looking at the analyst level because I don't have full time professional W/E and I realize that my competency level would be more aligned with analyst positions.
Re: Investment Banking
Posted: Wed Jul 25, 2012 2:39 pm
by fatduck
Anonymous User wrote:Anonymous User wrote:Anonymous User wrote:What about applying to Ibanking analyst positions after a top 14 JD? And doing so after taking transactional focused classes and even corporate finance/accounting at the top 14's top 20 MBA program? I have an econ undergrad degree and when I say Ibanks I'm talking about middle market banks--not bulge (think BBT/Suntrust etc.). Also note that I'm talking coming in at the analyst level and not as an associate.
It's definitely "possible" to get into banking with a JD but you'd be excluded from most any analyst class. You might be able to talk your way into a small boutique firm if you know someone but even in that scenario you'd likely be hired as an associate. Most JD hires have some sort of transferable/relevant experience and depending on that experience, some JD's are even hired as VP's. In the end, it's all about how well you network.
Why would I be excluded from analyst positions but not for associate positions? I'm looking at the analyst level because I don't have full time professional W/E and I realize that my competency level would be more aligned with analyst positions.
i think he means you're overqualified
Re: Investment Banking
Posted: Wed Jul 25, 2012 2:57 pm
by Anonymous User
fatduck wrote:Anonymous User wrote:Anonymous User wrote:Anonymous User wrote:What about applying to Ibanking analyst positions after a top 14 JD? And doing so after taking transactional focused classes and even corporate finance/accounting at the top 14's top 20 MBA program? I have an econ undergrad degree and when I say Ibanks I'm talking about middle market banks--not bulge (think BBT/Suntrust etc.). Also note that I'm talking coming in at the analyst level and not as an associate.
It's definitely "possible" to get into banking with a JD but you'd be excluded from most any analyst class. You might be able to talk your way into a small boutique firm if you know someone but even in that scenario you'd likely be hired as an associate. Most JD hires have some sort of transferable/relevant experience and depending on that experience, some JD's are even hired as VP's. In the end, it's all about how well you network.
Why would I be excluded from analyst positions but not for associate positions? I'm looking at the analyst level because I don't have full time professional W/E and I realize that my competency level would be more aligned with analyst positions.
i think he means you're overqualified
I wouldn't be because associate positions require full time work experience.
Re: Investment Banking
Posted: Wed Jul 25, 2012 3:20 pm
by dingbat
TraeM2010 wrote:In my research I am finding that many of the large investment banks recruit from top law schools. I have also seen that another good way to get into the investment banking industry is to start in corporate finance and then transition in. I have an accounting background and attend University of South Carolina law. I have a CPA license. If I want to try to transition from law school to investment banking should I try to do it from a corporate tax position or should I try to land a corporate finance job out of law school?
You're better off getting an MBA
Re: Investment Banking
Posted: Wed Jul 25, 2012 3:54 pm
by Anonymous User
Renzo wrote:I think you have three options:
1. Invent time machine
2. Go back in time, attend an Ivy undergrad, do well
3. Get a job as a banker
-OR-
1. Get an MBA from Harvard, Penn, Northwestern, Chicago, MIT, or Stanford.
2. Become a banker.
-OR-
1. Get a job as an M&A attorney with a very prestigious firm that does a lot of work with the banks.
2. Pray
3. Transition to banking.
Is it common for V20 M&A lawyers to go back to get their MBA after a few years practing law in order to make the transition or is it just a direct jump?