LatAm DCM Exit Opps ?
Current S&T Summer Analyst at a BB, but I am not enjoying the group I am in. I find LatAm DCM is very interesting. However, I wanted to know what sort of exit opps I could expect in a few years, from the following group. I speak fluent spanish, and I'm interested in applying to the following group for FT next year: (Job Description) "The group helps its clients raise debt in the international debt capital markets (DCM) and/or in the international bank market (syndicated loans) providing advisory, structuring and executing bond and syndicated loan issuances, acquisition finance, leverage finance, project finance, and liability management - including corporate and sovereign restructurings - for Latin American sovereign, financial and corporate issuers across a broad range of industries and across the credit rating spectrum from investment grade to high yield.
Throughout the deal origination and execution process, we work closely with a number of internal partners, ranging from specialist product groups in Capital Market Origination (such as Liability Management or Project Finance) as well as partners in Debt Syndicate and Sales & Trading. We are based in New York, although certain colleagues are based out of Mexico, Brazil, and Colombia.
As an Analyst you will be joining the #1 Latin America Debt team on the street and have the opportunity to work on transactions involving both the public and the private sectors, across all industries and exploring the broad palette of debt financing products."
Any insight would be appreciated!
On the markets side I think people stay in for the longterm, and continue to cover Latam either at their bank or move around to other banks as they get promoted as there are obviously a lot less roles as you progress. I've noticed people exiting to the buyside and cover some sort of emerging markets debt (sovereign or corporate and Infra/PF but thats a different beast), as more asset managers continue to search for yield in Latam as the US markets are beginning to get over saturated. The problem with this is, is that there are just a lot less roles since very few funds have dedicated Latam funds. As the startup space continues to develop more in Latam, I've also seen people make the switch to finance oriented roles (treasury, controllers, etc) as the companies want someone who understands both US and Latam markets, so its def possible to switch over to that but obviously have to be comfortable with relocating to the region.