Is it possible to get into investment banking on Wall Street out NYU Shanghai?

I was recently accepted into Fordham, University of Miami, Baylor, and NYU Shanghai. My goal is to work as an investment banker on Wall Street at a big bank after graduation. I realize I might have to work at a smaller bank since none of those schools are really targeted schools, unless I can transfer somewhere else after a year. For now, which one of these schools would get me the best shot of achieving that goal? I am leaning towards Fordham since it has a higher ranked finance program, an extremely loyal alumni network, and is in New York. I have heard some people from the University of Miami have managed to sneak into the big banks such as MS. JPM, Goldman. Citi, etc so I have a conflicting feeling about it. I think Miami would be cooler to attend, but I am going to make the decision solely on which one is better for my career. I had eliminated NYU Shanghai as an option but am giving it some thought again since my other options are great either. If you could provide as much info as possible ( and how you know that, qualifications and stuff) and at the end just flat out say which school you would choose to have the best shot at that goal that be great and would help me feel more confident in making a decision!

 

I heard the nyu shanghai program was 2 years in shanghai and 2 year at the ny campus. If so, it's far better than the other schools on your list and you could try transferring to stern. 

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Unfortunately, they changed it to 1 year in New York and 3 years in Shanghai. I would have access to Stern classes while in New York but wouldn't graduate with a Stern degree. I would graduate with a liberal arts degree from NYU New York and an economics degree from NYU Shanghai which is a Chinese degree. Do you still think it would be worth it over the other schools? Also, you can't transfer to Stern full-time as an NYU Shanghai student, unfortunately. 

 

Never seen anybody transfer to Stern even though a lot of people try. The main reason people transfer is they want to pursue a major that isn't offered at Shanghai. I have seen one transfer to NYU CAS Economics.

 

Haven't seen many Abu Dhabi kids go to US IB. They seem to be more IB jobs in Europe or Asia (sometimes after a masters sometimes not). A pretty common job for the Emirati's is to work at a wealth fund. NYU Shanghai is different. Haven't seen anybody land IB through a summer analyst program in the US for 5-6 years. This is because you can't study away in New York during sophomore spring and recruitment has moved up till then. Most recently, the IB and consulting jobs have been from European and APAC students. Americans, if they can land a finance role, will end up at a firm that recruits later in the cycle (Japanese/Euro banks, asset managers, etc.). 

 

I know a couple of people at NYU Shanghai, as well as NYU proper, and it seems very difficult to make the jump across the Pacific for FT work. My impression on Abu Dhabi (don't know anyone personally there) is that it's a different level of prestige to the other international campuses - most Rhodes per student in the world, for example, and some cool research. I think it might be possible from there, but much less convinced for Shanghai. 

Other people I know at Yale-NUS (which at least has a very prestigious "home" university) have had a similar lack of joy for FT recruiting in the States and/or Europe. 
 

 
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My best guess is it's just as difficult from NYUAD because of the study away rules at the international campuses. However, there seems to be far fewer Americans at NYUAD than NYUSH so smaller sample to go off of. Prestige at NYUAD is definitely high, they have lots of Rhodes, Fulbright, and even Schwarzman. The quality of student there is very high (heard pre-covid they flew to Abu Dhabi to interview before they're accepted). NYUSH prestige is hard to place and the school has definitely taken a hit with all the China travel restrictions the past 2 years. That being said NYUSH is becoming more established (new campus next year, class size will double, good grad school placement for the small amount of internationals that go that route) and has smart people.

 

Oh yeah definitely a difference in prestige and opps. The person I know (who said other people did it too) was that they were on NYU's New York campus junior fall, where they were able to participate in OCR for a few banks (think places like Mizuho or Credit Agricole) that were recruiting then. I believe graduates get a diploma from NYU global (similar to columbia & barnard) also, so you can just put NYU on your resume if you go there 

 

Do we think HR/bankers would get annoyed if you put "NYU" and it turned out to be "NYU [Insert City Here]" though? Even if it didn't become apparent at interview/on transcripts, pretty certain they'd find out eventually once you started working and just having convos.

Whether that's a problem, I don't know. It reminds me of the LSE online degrees or Harvard's Extension School and people labelling them LSE or Harvard without any caveats. I realise that NYU Shanghai is hardly comparable to either of those, it's a very respectable institution in it's own right, but I wonder if HR would take a similar view regardless. 

 

Most students will put NYU Shanghai and NYU/Stern for their study away. The idea behind this is to show the difference in GPA they get at NYUSH and New York. Usually interviewers will ask why and you can simply explain it's a study away.

 
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