HF vs. IB offer?

I have received two full time offers and am struggling between the two:

  • Offer 1: elite boutique investment bank. Interned there this summer and had a great time

  • Offer 2: elite hedge fund

Any advice as to what I should think about when choosing between the two?

I really like both places. I will base my decision on the long term prospects that each career would provide - which I am struggling to assess.

46 Comments
 

The most important thing you should think about is what you are actually interested in doing long-term. The people I knew who went directly to hedge funds straight out of college were all extremely passionate about investing. That was a large part of the reason why they got those jobs. For them, doing anything else was not even a consideration so the choice to go directly to the buyside made the most sense because it got them to their end goal faster (btw, they have all been wildly successful). If you are unsure what you want to do long term -- PE, VC, HF, corporate, tech -- then do investment banking because it will keep all of your options open. But there is no sense in trying to assess the long-term prospects of each career path because that is difficult even for someone in my position, let alone for someone who has never worked in either industry before.

 

If I were you I would pick the elite boutique. Why?

A. You interned there and you had a great time which means you are familiar with the culture and workload. B. You would get great deal experience and exposure. C. Investment banks provide elite training which can you set you up for different career paths.

Say if your hedge fund collapse, where are you going to go? What are you going to do? same goes to what happens if you get fired? You cant move anywhere because lack of your experience.

But if you were to go to an investment bank. You might have a epiphany where you might decide you want to go into Corporate Development, Asset Management, Private Equity, etc. You can move to any of those with 2 years under your belt.

But if you were to move from a Hedge Fund to one of these places it will be very hard. Think of your future career choice.

 
Best Response

This is bad logic. Your argument is that OP should pick banking BC elite hedge fund will leave him with no options if HF collapses or he gets fired. Banking analysts get laid off when banks need to trim and analysts do get fired as well. If that happens, you think that OP will have options?

Elite HF will get OP much further in his career (I would argue that OP might actually not even be able to get the same job at elite HF out of this boutique bank in two years). Choosing the elite HF would be the right choice, but only if OP knows that public market investing is what he wants to do and ready to sign up for that commitment now. The only reason to go to EBB would be option value.

This also depends on a couple of assumptions: 1) "elite" hedge fund is actually an elite hedge fund and is widely recognized as a top tier fund (if you had the option to join Lone Pine or the equivalent out of college, not that Lone Pine hires out of college, you would be a moron to pass that up); 2) the role is for a junior analyst position where OP would be doing real research.

 

Go the the fund. This is not close IMO. You've already gotten a idea of what banking is and been formally trained. You will have options to return later, if necessary. Good ops at hedge funds are just too rare. Oh, and the money should be much better.

You can always go to grad school to reposition yourself. But, if you do well at the HF, you will never have to.

 

Investment Banking is more capital raising (equity, debt, 144A) and mergers and acquisitions. Do you mean S&T / AM at an investment bank versus a hedge fund?

 

I am an undergrad business grad. I have not had any luck with entry-level position applications - so I am researching internship opportunities but I do not know where to start! Any recommendations? The big corporate companies are so competitive, my small non-ivy-league school resume is always pushed aside. Any ideas for an internship I might actually have a shot at? If I can't land an internship I'm really not sure what to do....

 

I'm actually surprised that a small HF in Toronto would hire someone straight out of undergrad and then start them off at 85k base.

 

I don't want to give away the name of the Bank, but I can say it is one of the big 5 (TD, Scotia, BMO, RBC, CIBC)

HF's strategy is long/short US equity.

Four other guys work there.

Started in 2004 with ~20 mm, has grown to ~200 mm through more investors, but mostly gains on investments.

In the long run, I would like to work at a HF or do PE. I've done banking internships and even the 45 yr olds put in a lot of hours...not something I want to do at that age.

Thanks for your time, in advance.

 

where is the HF located in? calgary? vancouver?

the bank option is the safe bet. you'll learn how to do things gradually and the m&a skillset is very transferrable. the HF option is a risky because the fund is very small and you don't get to learn from a lot of people. with only 5 people you really have to click with all of them or work is not going to be fun. also, it's not based in toronto.

 

Without knowing much about the fund, I'd take the bank. I know it seems tempting to cash in on the larger starting salary, but you are taking a risk. With the bank, you get 2-3 years of solid analyst experience with a name that people know and respect. This gives you plenty of options when you are ready to move on. A $200mm fund is quite small and could easily collapse if performance is unimpressive and investors yank their cash. Then you are left with a little-known name on your resume and questionable training/experience.

Make sure you do your due diligence on the fund. If the fund is new and headed up by a PM with a long track record of experience managing money at reputable institutions, the opportunity is more compelling. If this fund has been around for a while and still has only $200 AUM, and has fund managers that have bounced around a bunch of no-name funds or used to be stock brokers etc., I'd be wary. There are thousands of me-too hedge funds out there run by people trying to make a quick buck and most of them won't be around in 10 years.

 

EHF3660 - Thank you for your detailed response.

I agree, it is a risky move.

The HF has performed very well in recent years and has grown from 20mm...but past performance is not indicative of future results (as they say)!

 

Do you want to make trades or record them? Not to sound like a dick, but I feel like that's the fundamental difference between the two options - making moves or recording them.

I'm on a drug. It's called Charlie Sheen.
 

HF every day.

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