Do you regret IB?
Pay is become less and less attractive in terms of hourly compensation. I understand that IB is still one of the most lucrative fields out there but if u would do it all over again would you still do IB?
Pay is become less and less attractive in terms of hourly compensation. I understand that IB is still one of the most lucrative fields out there but if u would do it all over again would you still do IB?
| +326 | UBS Tech MD hires Son (from no-name college) as an Intern | 57 | 10h |
| +237 | Evercore Intern Seizure | 35 | 1h |
| +90 | [Official] 2026 IB Analyst Bonus Megathread (with 2025 Consolidated Pay and Perks/Benefits) | 12 | 2d |
| +55 | Is DCM actually underrated ? | 21 | 9h |
| +54 | JPM M&A is Gone??? Purely Coverage Banking??? | 22 | 22m |
| +46 | Are all Tech / TMT groups sweaty? | 33 | 20h |
| +40 | Losing my personality in Banking | 5 | 2d |
| +38 | Am I behind? 31 Year Old Analyst | 9 | 1d |
| +37 | Associate & Above IB exits | 15 | 2h |
| +31 | Incoming IB Analyst: Best Ways to Prepare? | 8 | 2d |
Career Resources
No, I would not do it again unless my ultimate goal was PE and nothing else.
Why do you say that, and what else would you have rather done?
Just came to say HELL YES, I regret it. And NO I would not in a million years do it again if I had a do over
What would you do?
Goose farming perhaps…
Not worth it.
what else should one do?
What would you do with your life if money and societal pressure didn't exist?
Be a baker, own a small shop in some bumble fudge area on the west coast. Open at 5am and close by 10am. Go home, kiss my wife, pet my cat and garden.
based af
More than one way to interpret pet my cat
fuck yea
Are you doing that now? Curious.
It’s worth it. Sucks right now but I pray to god my tears are not shed for not.
wtf is this bruh. This comment makes me sure that u won’t make it past vp if you ever even make it there
Not everyone wants to even make it past associate, let alone vp dawg. Nothing wrong with doing your 2 years and dipping for something else. But when you have a heart attack at your desk ill make sure to say, "damn, he fr grinded".
Always wanted to do credit investing and I took the IB route out of college cause I was convinced I had to in order to get to the buy side.
It was a huge mistake because IB is so retarded and physically grueling at the junior level, and my health and relationships with my family/friends were certainly negatively affected.
I just started my buyside role at a public/private credit shop (after 2yrs of IB), and I literally could’ve got this same exact role if I did credit research. Would’ve been way more relevant and interesting to me, and I wouldn’t have gone crazy working 100 hours a week with toxic colleagues.
TLDR — IB is overrated there are so many other professions within Wall Street that allow you to allocate your time intelligently, while still giving you the opportunity to achieve your goals
Always wanted to do credit investing and I took the IB route out of college cause I was convinced I had to in order to get to the buy side.
It was a huge mistake because IB is so retarded and physically grueling at the junior level, and my health and relationships with my family/friends were certainly negatively affected.
I just started my buyside role at a public/private credit shop (after 2yrs of IB), and I literally could’ve got this same exact role if I did credit research. Would’ve been way more relevant and interesting to me, and I wouldn’t have gone crazy working 100 hours a week with toxic colleagues.
TLDR — IB is overrated there are so many other professions within Wall Street that allow you to allocate your time intelligently, while still giving you the opportunity to achieve your goals
Always wanted to do credit investing and I took the IB route out of college cause I was convinced I had to in order to get to the buy side.
It was a huge mistake because IB is so retarded and physically grueling at the junior level, and my health and relationships with my family/friends were certainly negatively affected.
I just started my buyside role at a public/private credit shop (after 2yrs of IB), and I literally could’ve got this same exact role if I did credit research. Would’ve been way more relevant and interesting to me, and I wouldn’t have gone crazy working 100 hours a week with toxic colleagues.
TLDR — IB is overrated there are so many other professions within Wall Street that allow you to allocate your time intelligently, while still giving you the opportunity to achieve your goals
Tbh it's not even the work sometimes but the negative personalities. So many Karens in finance it's insane.
It’s most definitely the work… bunch of bs
Congrats on new role - how has your pay and WLB been so far after you made the switch? Do you see yourself doing this long term? Questions from a junior with IB SA internship lined up thinking of recruiting straight for buyside FT haha
Can I PM you a few questions about credit research? Would love to chat more
Always wanted to do credit investing and I took the IB route out of college cause I was convinced I had to in order to get to the buy side.
It was a huge mistake because IB is so retarded and physically grueling at the junior level, and my health and relationships with my family/friends were certainly negatively affected.
I just started my buyside role at a public/private credit shop (after 2yrs of IB), and I literally could’ve got this same exact role if I did credit research. Would’ve been way more relevant and interesting to me, and I wouldn’t have gone crazy working 100 hours a week with toxic colleagues.
TLDR — IB is overrated there are so many other professions within Wall Street that allow you to allocate your time intelligently, while still giving you the opportunity to achieve your goals
Bro this is amazing but why did you post the same thing four times?
I think he always wanted to do credit investing guys
Did you do coverage at Barclays? Interested in PC but going to IB this summer, just curious.
I do not regret it at all, unsure if it is the weather or the time change but this website has turned into doomer land recently. IB gives you the opportunity to make 2-3x the U.S median salary as a 22 year old, the opportunity to progress your career at a much faster rate than most of your peers, and connections to a wealth of current and future C-Suite executives. Does it suck sometimes? Yes. Do the benefits far outweigh the negatives? Absolutely in my opinion.
You can make the same exact base and nearly the same all-in after-tax in S&T, Private Banking, Sales, ECM/DCM, investment strategy at a BB and ER for far less hours so your entire argument hinges on exit opps once again like everyone else.
1. Total comp in IB is historically significantly higher than all of those industries. Not saying you can't make good money, but in the vast majority of scenarios, you will make more in IB.
2. Hours aren't the same everywhere, I am in a group that rarely ever gets over 80 hours a week, ER can be just as brutal during earnings season.
3. Exit opportunities should be one of the most important factors of a first job, especially in todays day & age it is becoming increasingly less likely that someone will spend their whole career at one place or in one industry. IB gives you the opportunity to pursue a wide variety of different exits, those other verticals you mentioned will not provide the same career mobility in most cases.
4. Staying in IB and working up to D/MD is one of the (relatively) easiest & safest ways to become wealthy in finance. I am not suggesting that every analyst can become an MD, but for the majority of middle bucket+ analysts, staying and working your way up is a great way to gain huge financial upside with a high degree of safety, the same can't be said for many other high finance verticals (when comparing career risk + earnings ceilings).
It is the change of times. Wall Street (IB/PE) used to be the land for no bullshit, money hungry, ambitious people to flourish. These days its filled with lost, clueless, prestige seeking high school kids that just follows what their friends are doing after watching a few episodes of some tv show/tik tok reels that romanticize the finance industry. Sad. But it’s reality based on my experience.
No regrets. I'm one of the lucky ones, I fucking love what I do.
You strip away all the bullshit process, admin / execution bitchwork and you're really left with the core of the job - being an advisor to C-suite and boards. To ball at that level, it requires creativity, gamesmanship, ego/relationship management, a head for analysis and a bit of arrogance.
You meet super interesting people, see how incredibly successful businesses are run and get in the heads of the people who built those. Shit fascinates me.
Do the hours suck? Yes. Until you're off of most of the "strip away" things in my first sentence it does.
Does the pay suck? Off your rocker if you think it does. Could I make more as an SWE? Maybe. Ignoring that TC is a lot of stock, I'd also have to be an SWE. Maybe it's for you, that shit isn't for me.
Great post from one of the older heads here somewhere commenting on another dipshit "how do I optimize my path" post. Crux of it is you'll always excel in a career path you enjoy.
Looking back over the years at the waves of colleagues who burnt out chasing the dollar, prestige or whatever and hated the job, I can tell you that shit only brings misery if you don't like the work. You can convince yourself you'll push past that misery, but banking/PE/law/SWE/being a carnie, it doesn't matter, you can't.
The hours are fucking stupid- software engineers at FAANG make the some money and work 30 hours a week
Can second this a lot of people i know working in faang started making 130-160k out of college and they barely work 40 hours a week, and it is not a dead route as most people here say to cope, it is still very much a viable path, even early stage ai startups pay upwards of 170k for 50-55 hours a week, series A, series B AI startups pay 200-225k out of college for similar hours
Have you not seen what the job market looks like in tech rn? Good fucking luck getting a sexy FAANG in this market if you don't go to CalTech or MIT lmao, you'll likely be settling for scraps
my brother is making ~250TC out of undergrad as an SWE at large tech company (non-faang) and takes as much vacation as he wants. if it's something you enjoy it's hard to beat
IB fucking sucks and no, I would not recommend anyone do it. It ruined me for the years that I was in it for all the reasons that have been spelled out on here thousands of times.
What I find fascinating about IB is the prestige and respect people going into the industry think it’s going to garner them, but in reality, it’s totally different. In the financial universe, no one respects or gives a shit about IB. Corporates view you as a cost center to raise financing or sell something. PE firms view you the same way, and do not give a shit about the “relationships” that bankers love to talk about - they care about fees and if they can get cheap debt out of you. Absolutely NO ONE on the buyside I have come across cares or even thinks about “expertise” or “value add services” from investment banks.
It’s comical - the work bankers do is so meaningless and self aggrandizing. “We are experts in the space because we have sold x,y,z!” LOL oh really? Have you ever sat through a management presentation or done due diligence through a bank? Banks punt everything to management / consultants / lawyers. And if you’re an investor, it makes complete sense; who are you going to trust - the 65 year old CEO who’s been working in manufacturing since he was 20 years old, or some dipshit industrials MD who went to Wharton and has never seen the inside of a factory outside a site tour, yet claims to be an “expert”.
Investment banking is a glorified middleman service that has become highly commoditized. A complete joke of a profession in my opinion. Would not recommend, would never do again.
Agree with all of this although I would do it again because for me personally it was the most sure fire way to make money out of school and have some optionality.
Does absolutely suck though and understand during your junior years you will just be doing never ending iterations of PPT slides. Even the ‘modeling’ is basic algebra.
Yea learning to model was more like what same 3 analyses do we do for every deal and how do you get quick at using excel and setting up checks to make sure stuff balances
Yeah I mean this is just not true. It’s easily to get jaded as an analyst and have this viewpoint (believe me I was there).
There’s a reason IB’s get hired to help think about complex transaction structuring strategies and all sorts of areas of deals where yes certain investment bankers are actually among the most knowledgeable. I don’t think you realize the breadth of topics you have to know about to be even a middle of the road coverage IB guy at the senior level.
Yeah I’m not saying they are masters of the finance universe and they’re not an Apollo partner or some hedge fund BSD, but this post I’m sorry is just blatantly uninformed naive view
Also you’re missing the point of being an industry banker the value add - clients and corp dev people take meetings a lot w you since they want to hear what you are hearing from other competitors / targets. You interesting as a banker bc you talk to a lot of relevant parties in the space.
Just last week we had an hour session with head of corp dev at F500 to go over latest target list and news (valuation expectations, what they do, growth, etc.). They learned stuff from us they didn’t know and we learned some stuff too.
Of course we are not going into meetings acting like we know how to run the company better than the 60 year old CEO. It’s intel and relationships, at least on the target m&a front.
Reading post more, your viewpoint reminds me of that I had when I was a 2nd year analyst. Don’t think you have much perspective tbh
Also you’re missing the point of being an industry banker the value add - clients and corp dev people take meetings a lot w you since they want to hear what you are hearing from other competitors / targets. You interesting as a banker bc you talk to a lot of relevant parties in the space.
Just last week we had an hour session with head of corp dev at F500 to go over latest target list and news (valuation expectations, what they do, growth, etc.). They learned stuff from us they didn’t know and we learned some stuff too.
Of course we are not going into meetings acting like we know how to run the company better than the 60 year old CEO. It’s intel and relationships, at least on the target m&a front.
Reading post more, your viewpoint reminds me of that I had when I was a 2nd year analyst. Don’t think you have much perspective tbh
Also you’re missing the point of being an industry banker the value add - clients and corp dev people take meetings a lot w you since they want to hear what you are hearing from other competitors / targets. You interesting as a banker bc you talk to a lot of relevant parties in the space.
Just last week we had an hour session with head of corp dev at F500 to go over latest target list and news (valuation expectations, what they do, growth, etc.). They learned stuff from us they didn’t know and we learned some stuff too.
Of course we are not going into meetings acting like we know how to run the company better than the 60 year old CEO. It’s intel and relationships, at least on the target m&a front.
Reading post more, your viewpoint reminds me of that I had when I was a 2nd year analyst. Don’t think you have much perspective tbh
Also you’re missing the point of being an industry banker the value add - clients and corp dev people take meetings a lot w you since they want to hear what you are hearing from other competitors / targets. You interesting as a banker bc you talk to a lot of relevant parties in the space.
Just last week we had an hour session with head of corp dev at F500 to go over latest target list and news (valuation expectations, what they do, growth, etc.). They learned stuff from us they didn’t know and we learned some stuff too.
Of course we are not going into meetings acting like we know how to run the company better than the 60 year old CEO. It’s intel and relationships, at least on the target m&a front.
Reading post more, your viewpoint reminds me of that I had when I was a 2nd year analyst. Don’t think you have much perspective tbh
Also you’re missing the point of being an industry banker the value add - clients and corp dev people take meetings a lot w you since they want to hear what you are hearing from other competitors / targets. You interesting as a banker bc you talk to a lot of relevant parties in the space.
Just last week we had an hour session with head of corp dev at F500 to go over latest target list and news (valuation expectations, what they do, growth, etc.). They learned stuff from us they didn’t know and we learned some stuff too.
Of course we are not going into meetings acting like we know how to run the company better than the 60 year old CEO. It’s intel and relationships, at least on the target m&a front.
Reading post more, your viewpoint reminds me of that I had when I was a 2nd year analyst. Don’t think you have much perspective tbh
agreed with the other replier. You have a very limited knowledge on the value that bankers provide for C suites. The non-public information that gets discussed can be very helpful for investors and operators and bankers have a lot of info on the sector by the virtue of talking to a lot of leaders in any sector.
6 years of BB/EB experience here. Quit finance entirely earlier this year.
I can’t say I regret it because we all make decisions based on the circumstances at a given time. Everything is easier to evaluate in retrospect.
That said, IB pays pretty well on a risk-adjusted basis because you are simply sacrificing your entire life to the job. If you have anything worthwhile to pursue outside of a career, I don’t see how those goals can be accomplished working even 60 hours a week. I commend those that can still keep their life together after coming home at 10PM everyday.
Anyway, it’s still a good gig out of college. I did my gig in a tax haven city so was able to stack some good paper.
Wouldn’t recommend doing more than 3-4 years to be honest.
What do you do now homie
crypto + self-run online biz
I grew up lower income in one of the poorest communities in America and went to a nontarget and grinded hard to become a top bucket analyst at a top group at a BB/EB. It’s taken a pretty big toll on my mental and physical health and relationships. Has it been worth it?
I honestly don’t know lmao. The initial grind and dreams of getting where I am today was way more rewarding than where I actually am today - and that’s in the middle of a pretty boring soulless grind with long hours and no meaning. I’m like a dog who caught the car he was chasing, and trying to actually think carefully about what I actually want out of life now.
Will I end up better off in the long term because of IB? Probably but there are many other paths to take in life and I don’t think this is a particularly good one.
I resonate with this so much. I pushed so hard for what seems like so long (in reality about 10ish years including college) grinding at a non target to get a banking job, then in banking to get a pe job, now in pe with no idea what to do next.
As you said, the chase is so rewarding - no better feeling than getting the offer or advancing to the next stage of the interview, getting promoted, etc.
Now that I see that the grind doesn’t really stop ever in this industry I don’t really know what to do. I’ve been feeling very lost and without a sense of purpose because I’ve essentially built my life around this career and never explored anything else.
I resonate with this so much. I pushed so hard for what seems like so long (in reality about 10ish years including college) grinding at a non target to get a banking job, then in banking to get a pe job, now in pe with no idea what to do next.
As you said, the chase is so rewarding - no better feeling than getting the offer or advancing to the next stage of the interview, getting promoted, etc.
Now that I see that the grind doesn’t really stop ever in this industry I don’t really know what to do. I’ve been feeling very lost and without a sense of purpose because I’ve essentially built my life around this career and never explored anything else.
I resonate with this so much. I pushed so hard for what seems like so long (in reality about 10ish years including college) grinding at a non target to get a banking job, then in banking to get a pe job, now in pe with no idea what to do next.
As you said, the chase is so rewarding - no better feeling than getting the offer or advancing to the next stage of the interview, getting promoted, etc.
Now that I see that the grind doesn’t really stop ever in this industry I don’t really know what to do. I’ve been feeling very lost and without a sense of purpose because I’ve essentially built my life around this career and never explored anything else.
I resonate with this so much. I pushed so hard for what seems like so long (in reality about 10ish years including college) grinding at a non target to get a banking job, then in banking to get a pe job, now in pe with no idea what to do next.
As you said, the chase is so rewarding - no better feeling than getting the offer or advancing to the next stage of the interview, getting promoted, etc.
Now that I see that the grind doesn’t really stop ever in this industry I don’t really know what to do. I’ve been feeling very lost and without a sense of purpose because I’ve essentially built my life around this career and never explored anything else.
Yes. I kind of love to work so I don't mind the hours that much, but I wish I did consulting to work on more interesting problems. I'm sick of working with boring finance bros with broken marriages and lives.
4 month FT following an internship conversion in 2023. I still can’t believe how boring the work is, I’m hoping it gets better but I’m seriously struggling to see how it could. I spend 90% of my day doing basic monkey analysis that is forgotten about the next day…and the crazy thing is that I’m in line for top bucket. I’m 99% sure high-finance is just being an enjoyable person to be around, but when you work with the people this industry tends to attract…that is a lot easier said than done.
Yes, primarily because my physical health has declined so much as a result of the hours I spend at the desk. I would say my body has handled it worse than everyone else in my analyst class though.
if I was still in good health, I would probably be looking to lateral or stay until associate, but I can’t justify staying in IB much longer. Would definitely have taken some easy corp banking, Asset mgmt. or FP&A job right out of school if I could do it over again.
as someone who grew up dirt poor, working manual labor jobs from a young age, NO, I DO NOT REGRET IT!!!
i had zero opportunity growing up and most of my childhood + high school friends either went down a dark path in life or are dead.
after grinding for many years in awful public schools, i was very fortunate that a target school took a chance on me and gave a full ride, where an alum from a similar upbringing was generous enough to hook me up with an lmm pe buyside gig sophomore year and help me land an eb ibd gig junior year in a top group.
i will admit that i was definitely not ready for the eb my junior year, was likely the worst intern in the firm's history (probably still am), and, not surprisingly, i did not get a return offer, in addition to graduating into 08, with no job and my family unable to take care of me.
i was jobless for more than a year, working a series of odd jobs, from call center to tutoring, before an lmm ibd took a chance on me.
the lmm ibd i worked at was a complete no-name in a lower tier city and management was both hostile and toxic. the founder was notorious in his industry for being hard to work with, and i worked on so many materials of deals that never came to be. coming from my internship experiences, target school, and dysfunctional upbringing, i felt like i was flying so high up in the sky and then fell down to earth to work with a bunch of miserable peasants. regardless, i put my head down, did my part not to rock the boat and do exactly what they told me without question, which allowed me to go unnoticed, before, after a long and grueling process of multiple months, i was offered a better spot with an eb lateral position.
from the eb, i made it to mf pe, and then to a sm hf.
while the eb, mf pe, and sm hf were all worlds apart better than the lmm ibd, all of them shared the common factors of grueling levels of work, toxic and hostile co-workers and managers, as well as failed deals.
in retrospect, my experiences allowed me to develop myself to the point where i was able to succeed at better firms, while also balancing that with providing for my family and enjoying all the little things in life.
above all else, i was very fortunate to have experienced failure while i was a junior in college and as a fresh graduate in 08 because it made me understand the industry and office politics better.
hear me out: it is MUCH BETTER to fail early on than later, especially down the road when you have a family and people who depend on you.
yes, my years in IBD + PE were indeed demanding and i was very tired, but it was and still is a lot of fun. i still am very tired, but i have no complaints and im glad that i did it.
bottom line, i am beyond grateful to the universe to work in a career that has been the greatest learning experience for me and one that allowed me to break the cycle of intergenerational poverty that has run deep in my family for so long.
im also very fortunate that my kids will never have to experience the struggle that i grew up with.
so NO, I DO NOT REGRET IT AND WOULD HAPPILY DO IT ALL OVER AGAIN IN A HEARTBEAT!!!
further adding onto my above comment, i DISAGREE with everyone who thinks that you are a process monkey in IB and that you do more interesting work in PE.
as someone who went from jobless 08 grad --> no name lmm ibd --> eb ibd --> mf pe --> sm hf, i would like to say that my IB experience is what helped me succeed at my sm hf, learn how to understand a business from the ground up, and survive multiple rounds of layoffs.
i felt more like a process monkey at my mf pe role and was given more responsibility in both my lmm and eb ibd roles.
of course, my mf pe experience was very formative for me, but i got a lot more out of my time in IB and in addition to being the first step to breaking the cycle of intergenerational poverty, IT WAS THE GREATEST LEARNING EXPERIENCE OF MY LIFE!!!
if you disagree with me, you are entitled to your opinion, but i am so grateful for my IB years, which were some of the greatest of my life in retrospect.
May I ask what are you doing now after sm hf? curious since I have a similar background and am doing IB.
Yes. It is the greatest regret of my life.
More like I regret working for asshole MDs who enforce gender quotas in hiring and promotions for personal gains while disregarding merit
No becuase I come from a low-income family and IB is one of the safest(relative) ways to escape poverty quickly.
Yes everyday, please do something else. You will not regret it.
Hard to regret a job where I’ve had the opportunity to travel the world, meet super interesting people (many of my clients and colleagues are my close friends), have the money to do pretty much whatever I want when so want it (other than the PJ which is frustrating)), essentially run my own business within a firm, give my kids the best opportunities in life, and have worked on financing and building through M&A some of the most important companies that exist.
On the flip side, is it frustrating to have your net worth capped at max 100mm (and that’s only if investments go very well), to really leave no professional legacy (I haven’t built a company) and to do what I do in the shadows (my clients take all the credit). A little bit. I also never felt that way at the time (had a lot of fun in my 20s and early 30s) but were there travel and other experiences I missed when I worked that hard. Definitely (although had I planned better I could have done those too).
are there other jobs that could have been better? Sure, but who knows.
All in all, like everything in life there are trade offs but if you do IB right, it’s a very good life once you get to the MD level (and can succeed there).
If you were born 20 years later and an analyst today, you would not have made it to where you are today. Full stop. You know it's true. In fact, I guarantee when you were in high school and college, you were off drinking and partying around all day and the last thing on your mind was career success or optimizing your path to get into some target school or top IB program. You, like many others in your cohort, likely just fell into your jobs.
Kids today can't afford to screw around and the margin for error is very thin. Hence why you now see college sophomores who busted their ass off to get into a decent school having a panic attack over not having an internship lined up or even high schoolers on the IB forums.
Therefore your perspective is worthless because no matter how hard you think you worked, it won't match the effort, talent, luck and grit needed today. Half of this forum can't even land a job despite having a profile that was likely 10x of yours when you were a college grad.
Generally losers and whiners don’t get very far in life whether it’s now or 20 years ago.
For what it’s worth, yes I did party a lot in college. I also graduated summa from a top three engineering program and was a varsity athlete and by the time I graduated had done a summer analyst stint at Goldman. That didn’t stop me getting laid off along with 80% of my analyst class after the dot com bust, and having to work for two years at a no name tiny boutique before clawing myself back in to the big leagues.
But like I said being a whiner or a loser gets you nowhere in life.
Debitis in est reiciendis consequuntur ullam dolorem et. Ipsum consectetur dolore voluptatibus omnis et. Quia nihil optio accusantium blanditiis velit impedit. Autem et omnis corrupti quaerat. Facere accusamus eligendi est doloribus nam eius enim.
Vero perspiciatis qui nesciunt reiciendis iure corrupti nam. Natus voluptatibus eos eaque illum voluptate sit. Sunt aut voluptas sed.
See All Comments - 100% Free
WSO depends on everyone being able to pitch in when they know something. Unlock with your email and get bonus: 6 financial modeling lessons free ($199 value)
or Unlock with your social account...
Maiores est corrupti aut ut. Non ut accusamus ratione. Cupiditate rerum voluptate et excepturi ut laudantium labore vel.
Odio id quis perferendis animi in. Nihil non dolorum non aut cupiditate consequatur. Qui voluptatem blanditiis deleniti. Voluptas officia molestiae et vel ut quia saepe est. Totam dicta numquam est veritatis sit et libero.
Quos iusto saepe nihil officia in reprehenderit. Libero alias quam delectus sed iusto iusto in. Mollitia velit consectetur ullam consequatur est aut. Aliquid expedita voluptates vel accusantium ut qui omnis. Quaerat vero enim saepe architecto occaecati beatae. Blanditiis reprehenderit sit at libero.
Et voluptatem atque iste aliquid a voluptas. Aut vero doloremque sint aut voluptas. Impedit optio aliquam odio in molestiae in dolor. Beatae voluptates ratione quo.
Voluptatum quo soluta itaque officia. Quam ipsam pariatur hic exercitationem. Asperiores tempora qui dolores perferendis dolor. Doloremque expedita nihil vel nostrum velit impedit.
Unde odio et repudiandae voluptatem fuga nulla velit. Vel aut aliquid ratione sed est. Delectus voluptatibus dolor earum porro reiciendis veritatis ipsa.
Non voluptates nihil ducimus aliquid maiores. Ratione iste aliquid tenetur qui ea laborum qui. Qui quis aperiam autem qui dolor nisi magni exercitationem.