Opportunities from this point onwards?

Today I found out about all my acceptances and rejections during the undergraduate admissions process and I was disappointed to learn that I did not make it into my top choice school (Wharton). However, I was accepted to Ross School of Business at University of Michigan (pre-admit) as well as NYU Stern.

I was wondering how job opportunities in terms of investment banking compare between the three schools (including Wharton) and whether a strong GPA (3.8+) will still enable me to get a solid paying job on Wall Street (salary around the same as a Wharton graduate)? Also, how will such a GPA place me in terms of admissions for MBA at Ivies/Stanford/MIT?

Basically I was saddened by the rejection and am wondering whether my other options will still get me into a good job such that any differences between me and a Wharton graduate will be negligible or something that shouldn't worry me.

Thank you very much!

8 Comments
 

Wow there is just an onslaught of these questions. Almost worthy of a High School section.

You will def have the opportunity to leverage either Ross or Stern into a great career.

 

No need to apologize, no worries. My guess is given your focus you will undoubtedly land a MM/BB summer fresh/soph gig, dislike it relative to other opps, and then pursue a better more lucrative career on the buyside out of undergrad

 

Stern will give you all the placement you want. It's a finance factory. Not as well-known or targeted for trading but for banking, only Wharton beats it. Starting comp packages are the same if you get into a BB, regardless of whether you came from Stroudsburg University or Harvard. Only variation would be the bonuses based on your bucket ranking.

Also, you will not be bringing in profit as an analyst at an investment bank. VPs and MDs do that, you do monkey work crunching Excel and Powerpoint until your eyes bleed.

I am permanently behind on PMs, it's not personal.
 

All 3 of those names will allow you to atleast get interviews - assuming you get a decent gpa and have some ECs. At that point its if you know what you are talking about, have any social skills and can articulate why you want to be there.

People will whine and cry that they didnt get the SA position or FT offer because they only went to a top 15 school and not a top 5. Truth is that if you go to any good school and have a decent gpa and interest in banking, s&t, AM, whatever it may be you are capable of doing the work. Its basically how well you network to get a foot in the door and then how well you do in interviews.

 

Fugiat quia et cupiditate officia et. Aut laboriosam autem accusantium eos ipsum numquam blanditiis odio. Minima totam ipsa corrupti et aut. Debitis veritatis molestiae at rem. Necessitatibus similique voluptatum minus corporis ea consequatur natus. Ut numquam vitae aut quod repudiandae.

Ut qui odit accusamus eius rerum suscipit. Sapiente ducimus sit animi suscipit. Ut totam aperiam porro alias quo. Eveniet omnis et molestiae reiciendis delectus.

Laudantium ipsa nostrum et dicta quia distinctio neque incidunt. Sapiente omnis voluptatem placeat suscipit. Natus aliquam quam autem eum quisquam corrupti alias repellat. Voluptatum facere veniam et sit consequatur eos. Laboriosam dolor qui mollitia ut quas repellendus consequatur nostrum.

I Got a dollar and a dream...

Career Advancement Opportunities

June 2026 Investment Banking

  • Evercore 01 99.4%
  • Moelis & Company 01 98.8%
  • JPMorgan 01 98.3%
  • Guggenheim Partners 01 97.7%
  • Morgan Stanley 07 97.1%

Overall Employee Satisfaction

June 2026 Investment Banking

  • Moelis & Company No 99.4%
  • Morgan Stanley 02 98.8%
  • Evercore 01 98.2%
  • BMO Capital Markets 12 97.7%
  • Banco Santander 01 97.1%

Professional Growth Opportunities

June 2026 Investment Banking

  • Evercore 01 99.4%
  • Moelis & Company 01 98.8%
  • Morgan Stanley 05 98.3%
  • JPMorgan No 97.7%
  • BMO Capital Markets 12 97.1%

Total Avg Compensation

June 2026 Investment Banking

  • Vice President (14) $434
  • Associates (43) $259
  • 3rd+ Year Analyst (8) $210
  • 2nd Year Analyst (22) $179
  • Intern/Summer Associate (13) $156
  • 1st Year Analyst (75) $151
  • Intern/Summer Analyst (68) $101
notes
16 IB Interviews Notes

“... there’s no excuse to not take advantage of the resources out there available to you. Best value for your $ are the...”

Leaderboard

success
From 10 rejections to 1 dream investment banking internship

“... I believe it was the single biggest reason why I ended up with an offer...”