Not a US Citizen, but my understanding is that it's extremely hard. You have to be truly exceptional for a US bank to sponsor you at an entry level.

Not to be cynical, but the reality is that there are a huge number of very qualified candidates who already have the right to work in the US. Sponsorship is extremely time consuming and expensive. You have to give the bank a really good reason to hire you when so many other local candidates don't requires sponsorship.

If you really want to work in the US, your best bet is probably to try and get into an M7 business school, absolutely crush it and try recruiting as an International Student (although there are no guarantees you'll get a gig).

 
Best Response
Jimbus:

For internally would that be through contacts in NY, HR or an internal application for a job? Plus how senior are people if they make the move?

I know several who've transferred internally at Analyst 3 and Associate 1. Some banks even encourage it. I imagine it is done through HR, as an analyst you will likely not have sufficient contacts in NY to pull the necessary moves.

Best bet is to get into an American BB, work hard for 2 years and scope out an internal transfer. Why would a bank in NY go through the effort of sponsoring you when there's a wealth of qualified candidates who wont require sponsorship.

 
<span class=keyword_link><a href=/resources/skills/economics/seigniorage target=_blank>Seigniorage</a></span>:
I'm very biased against 3 year bachelors. Is that even a full undergrad education?

As opposed to wasting two years in an American university studying things like Philosophy of Apes, Horticulture and Intro to Learning?

 

this reminds me of work I did in bioengineering research in upstate ny. a couple of the people were cornell engineers (note that cornell engineering usually takes 5 years to finish all reqs unlike most bachelors that are 4 years) and then there was this one random science BA from oxford. Apparently he was telling people he had a masters because apparently oxford automatically converts everyone's 3-YEAR bachelors into a MASTERS after a few years! People probably would have hated his pompousness less if not for that british accent on top of everything!

 

As requested. I finished UG (non-target) in 3 years with a 3.75 overall. Originally planned on going into consulting so internships/experience centered around that (no MBB though). GMAT 660 (I think) 40+ in each section. I was a lower than I should have been in quant but, had high marks in quant heavy courses to compensate. Currently getting my MS at London Business School.

 

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