SF Tech Banking Update

Hey guys,

I was hoping to get an update on the tech banking scene in San Francisco. How do these shops fair now? Well aware of the dominance of Q, MS, and GS but was hoping to get more insight on any up and coming players. Also, relevant info on these offices (comp/culture/exits) would be appreciated as well.

Thanks!

27 Comments
 

You listed a few, but as a whole, MS Menlo Park, Qatalyst, GS TMT, CS SF, Jefferies Tech, Baml Palo Alto, and Evercore Menlo Park handle most of the large cap deals/ECM activity.

There are smaller boutiques that focus on specific sub verticals within tech (FTP in fintech comes to mind).

There hasn't been a dramatic slow down in VC activity, so M&A is still strong. There used to be a user on here (techbanker) that knew the scene cold, so he'd probably be a good resource to ask. Also, if anyone else knows other shops that have strong dealflow in the space feel free to chime in -- this is my understanding of the major players as of now.

 

To add, here are some well-known tech shops in SF & SV but in no particular order within each deal size:

  • Larger Deals: Qatalyst, MS Menlo Park, CS, GS, BAML Palo Alto
  • Mid Range: GCA Savvian, Union Square Advisors, Allen & Co, Centerview
  • Smaller to Mid: Code Advisors, Pagemill, Atlas,

I would say for the "stand out" or "up and coming" groups you mentioned I would say Union Square, Centerview, and Code fit this bill. That being said I think a lot of these groups tend to foster more of a "career banking path" but of course a quick linkedin check will show you some do make the move to PE or VC. Would be curious if people have seen the same or different.

In regards to comp... I think groups generally pay the same as the street for Analysts but your boutiques like Qatalyst or Centerview tend to compensate their Associates and up quite well. Just the nature of being a smaller shop with high deal flow.

 

From talking with alumni in SF IB, I have heard that William Blair is quickly rising in the LMM and MM space. BMO has a pretty decent LMM-MM presence as well.

MS is the clear equity leader, and Goldman is the M&A leader. Obviously they both do the other often but they lead in those respective spaces

“If you ain’t first, you’re last!” - GOAT
 
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Goldman, MS (Menlo Office), Qatalyst — Evercore (Menlo), JPM — Centerview (Palo Alto), BAML (Palo Alto) — CS, Citi, Jefferies (although Jefferies places on buyside like the tier above^^) — Barclays, UBS, DB, Lazard, etc.

Notes: -This isn’t necessarily indicative of how well these shops place people on the buyside (Jefferies for example) -Lazard does mostly consulting work for clients they have on retainer -DB is somewhat strong in the semi space but struggles elsewhere -Centerview does a lot of consulting work, but they do some big transactions for clients like Seagate -CS used to be a top shop but they have really struggled as of late with tons of senior bankers leaving to other shops like Jefferies -BAML uses its balance sheet a lot, however, they do a solid amount of M&A (Salesforce & MuleSoft acquisition for example) -MS is probably the best for IPO processes and is also strong everywhere else -Goldman is the most well-rounded bank and best in my opinion for tech

 

Non-transaction ongoing advisory for close clients. In and of itself it's not a good or a bad thing. I know some guys at these shops that really enjoy it because they get a different skill set that goes beyond the typical M&A sell-side process. On the other hand, I know someone who was at the Lazard SF shop a few years back and he was disappointed in the lack of M&A transaction experience he got. Recently, Centerview Palo Alto does more transactions than Lazard in SF from what I've gathered.

 

Centerview does a lot of work with clients around their other needs. For example, helping prepare announcements, earnings releases, earnings call responses, etc. which is beyond the typical IB advisory you would think of

Source: campus presentation

“If you ain’t first, you’re last!” - GOAT
 

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