Re: Accounting Cadetships
Why this is all stemming from a cadetship thread is beyond me... my only thought is it's in response to the person asking if a cadetship will limit their future career prospects, and everyone jumping to the conclusion that IB is the way to go.
ND said:
Somehow I have my doubts that the average IBer will be looking at $110k+ as a base salary for grad. Even when I was applying for UNSW, in the Finance lecture (as in, the one where they give prospective students information on the major and why they should do it), the "pinnacle" job offer was Mac bank's $90k with normal grads getting in the $40-60k range; I really doubt that the "normal" salary which an average IB grad can expect has risen that much in the past two years. Yes this is an invitation to prove me wrong.
turtleface said:
and you'd know because...? oh you must audit the ASIC licence registers...sif. Even then I doubt they'd have details on past careers.
I'm too lazy to login but
http://bww.dnb.com.au/default.asp would probably help answer that.
On a sidenote, there are
a lot of people who leave audit to join IBs whether it be in accounts or as a trader. Even if the actual job is very different, the knowledge and understanding of both how businesses work and the industry as a whole, are probably very valuable insights useful to IBs.
csmg said:
...yes...
keep telling yourself you're all on track to earning 300k at an IB firm...
this is great... junior grad auditors who think they're on track to a huge IB paypacket... HHAHAHAHAHAH
Hmm so where do you work then?
I wonder, of all the people in these BoS topics who bag out Big4 or IB- how many of them actually work in these companies/firms? Or have even worked?
csmg said:
Industry Interests:
Admin/Secretarial
Taken direct from your profile... hmm?
Seriously, before you start bagging out any of these professions or the ease/difficulty of obtaining a spot, why not try getting yourself a job there first? Why not experience first-hand what it's like? Apologies if I'm mistaken but it doesn't seem like you've worked in a professional job before- either that, or it just doesn't show.
velox said:
Goldman Sachs is small in aus, nearly 2nd tier, so probably not the best example. Grads in IB earn around $90k with bonuses around 50-150% of base. Yes they do work more ours, M&A probably being the heaviest. IBs like experience from BIG4, so i'm not sure why people are bagging Big4.
The way to look at IB salaries is to look at the bonus only
Btw ND, Hedge Funds in the US pay more than PE. Just because PE is on the rise this year, doesn't mean the salaries will overtake Hedge Funds.
Lets say 100 hours per week for IB @ $135 000/annum (assuming bonus is around 50%). This equates to ~$26/hour. At $180k/annum (100% bonus), the hourly rate is ~$34.
Lets say 45 hours for Big4 @ $50 000/annum. This equates to $21/hour.
Interesting thought- but assuming all your salary and bonus figures are accurate and applicable to grads, didn't we all study economics with the little supply/demand graphs for labour and marginal product whereby each additional hour needs to be paid just a little bit more to make up for the extra work? That's a pretty big jump working 45hrs/wk to 100hrs/wk. On one hand you're doing 9 hours a day which in busy season is quite expected, but on the other, at 100hrs a week, not counting weekends, that's 20hrs a day. Maybe I'm missing something here but that seems just a tad unreasonable don't you think? If your hourly expectation was correct, then even at that pay rate, I wouldn't want to work 100hrs a week (well not as a grad anyway)!
On a sidenote, I read in an interview from the UNSW Comsoc Careers Guide that in IB, he works 55hr weeks (see p32). Based on his first question respone to what a typical day at work;
p32 said:
I usually get in at about 7:30am and spend about half an hour checking overnight emails and catching up on the morning news. Following that, my day depends on what my team is working on and any tasks that I am able to assist with. I also have regular responsibilities which include daily/weekly/monthly reports and several databases which I have responsibility in updating. I may also have a longer-term project which I'm working on. My day finishes at about 6:30pm.
Am I the only one who thinks that sounds a bit like over glorified data entry?
EDIT: I just realised this is my 3000th post on BoS... man I must have no life if I keep coming back!