Sophomore struck out for IB, signed BofA S&T, how realistic is senior-year re-recruiting for NYC banking?
Hey everyone, looking for honest advice from people who have seen this path before.
I’m a sophomore at a semi-target, roughly Emory / Notre Dame / WashU / Vanderbilt tier, and I came up short in banking recruiting this cycle. I had superdays at Leerink and Allen & Co., plus first rounds with Jefferies, BofA IB, Evercore, and Houlihan Lokey. I walked away feeling pretty good about a lot of those processes, so I’m trying to figure out whether I missed on interview execution, positioning, or if NYC was just that competitive this year.
I ended up signing Bank of America Sales & Trading in NYC for sophomore summer. I’m grateful for it and I know it is still a strong seat, but long term I know I would rather be in a deal-oriented role, ideally something like TMT or M&A rather than ECM or other capital markets paths. I also do not really feel like doing the whole MBA route later, so I’m trying to understand what the most realistic path looks like from here if I want to end up in banking.
A few things I’d really like input on:
- How realistic is senior-year re-recruiting for full-time IB after doing sophomore summer in S&T?
- Is it even worth trying at all, or is the odds-adjusted path just too weak compared with other options?
- Am I basically dead on arrival compared with people coming off junior summer IB internships, or does this happen more often than people think?
- If you were in my shoes, how would you spend the next 12 months to maximize my chances?
- How would you position the BofA S&T experience when networking for IB later, especially if my end goal is more TMT / M&A oriented?
- Is there any real value in keeping the Economics/Math + CS story, or by senior year does that not move the needle much?
- Would I be better off simplifying the story and just going down to economics?
For context, all of my recruiting was for NYC. I’m from Westchester and have a pretty solid NYC network already, so networking access is not the main concern. The bigger question is whether this path is actually realistic and worth pursuing, or whether I should be thinking about a different route entirely.
Also, if anyone has seen people make this move successfully, I’d be very interested in hearing what their strategy was, whether that meant senior-year re-recruiting, lateraling after graduation, or something else entirely.
Would appreciate blunt advice.
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