bb chicago or mm chicago for IB?
I received offers for analyst from a BB (think CS, UBS, Citi) and a MM (Baird, Blair, Piper) both located in Chicago. Which would be better in culture, deal quality, exit opps etc?
I received offers for analyst from a BB (think CS, UBS, Citi) and a MM (Baird, Blair, Piper) both located in Chicago. Which would be better in culture, deal quality, exit opps etc?
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As far as chi goes, I’d take Baird/Blair > Citi > CS > Piper > UBS. Baird/Blair b/c Chicago is their IB hub. Really depends on what sector you want for these two. Baird has robust Industrials group and WB used to have great tech group, but recently, two rainmaker MDs left to start Gugg Chi. Citi has a large presence compared to other BBs. CS rainmaker MDs left and went to GS. Piper if it’s okay the Sandler group (believe they’re still in different offices) and your interested in FIG. UBS’ group there is like 5 people.
UBS Chi was looking for a few lateral analysts/associates in the beginning of the year
Yeah apparently the UBS office doubled their intern class for this summer and hired a couple laterals.
Spoke with the MD running the Chi office, they are overly staffed. During the conversation, the lateral analyst haven't start yet, and he's thinking about cutting him b/c they are over staffed. They also over hired SA, so not everyone going to convert. As per conversation that took place few months ago, they aren't going to hire for at least 2-3 years on the analyst level.
If they’re overstaffed, why were they hiring 1 month ago?
*2-3 months ago
(won't let me edit)
yea , no bank will hire a lateral analyst/associate and let them go because they’re over staffed.
There is no hiring at the UBS Chi town a month ago, the hiring was done Q4'19 if I recall correctly. I'm just providing information from the man who's running the group. If he decides to lie to me and provide me with wrong information, then I don't know what to say.
Sorry, not saying anyone is lying. They were still looking to hire at the beginning of Q1, so either the virus really messed up deal flow or something's not adding up.
Doesn't sound right, I didn't see any posting in Q1 at UBS. Spoke with the MD during Q1. He told me they hired an analyst several months ago for a lateral position and still don't know if they will have him start, because they are over staffed.
Why has he still not started by now if he is a lateral but was hired several months ago? I thought the lateraling process generally was relatively quick.
No idea, didn't ask because it was a networking call. The conversation was more me pitching him why i will be a good fit for his team. But, toward the end of the conversation he did mention how they don't expect any lateral spots to open up for a good while. Assuming they are impacted by the COVID like the rest of IB, I doubt they will ever start hiring anytime soon.
I don't doubt that the lateral market will be very grim for the next year but banks will always need new analysts as existing ones leave for PE, corporate, or b-school.
-- deleted --
You obviously no nothing about Chi banking bud
Congrats! My take:
Culture: Baird and Blair are known for their culture. Nice people, generous pay, structured work/life balance within reason. Citi Chicago has a solid, pretty fun group as well. Not enough intel on CS/UBS. Heard mixed reviews on Piper (more group dependent, less support).
Deal quality: Mixed--the Chicago BBs can at times play more like MMs. But, the upside is higher, so the chance to work on larger, more complex deals is there. Deal flow on the other hand will probably be stronger at Baird/Blair, depending on group.
Exit Opps: I would argue Citi would have the best. Analyst exits, the edge is usually to BBs but with these other names potentially group dependent, a bit lower for Piper. As you probably know, BB name recognition helps in PE recruiting (especially NY) as there can be a MM bias, albeit perhaps slightly less so at these MMs--and certainly less so for Chicago recruiting.
Do you have a group preference? Do you for sure want to go PE? If you have any interest in A2A, both Blair and Baird offer that much more often.
I think this is pretty accurate. I know a couple of the analysts at Chicago BBs have gotten MF offers, while Blair/Baird will basically only send to MM PE. So if you're looking to maximize your exit opportunities, probably Citi > CS > Blair/Baird > UBS > Piper.
OP here! Thank you for that information, it's definitely helping me make a decision. I don't have a group preference, but industrials is an easy option since it's Chicago and I have a background interning at manufacturing firms so I've always found it interesting. I don't for sure want to go PE since I'm still exploring my options, and I have the time to do so, but if I had to pick today where I'd be in 5 years, PE sounds like a safe bet. In that case, it sounds like the BB is the better choice?
Definitely not Piper. Piper Chicago is weak compared to Minneapolis, SF, NY and not even in the same league compared to Blair / Baird in Chicago.
This is a damn train wreck in here. Citi will have your "best" exit opportunities given their presence and commitment to Chicago as well as the fact that their Co-Head of Global M&A, Cary Kochman, sits in Chicago. UBS is a shell of its former Chicago self, and CS is a large group of Chicago Booth associates and senior bankers that are pleasant enough. If forced to decide between these three platforms, you should take Citi and never look back. For others lurking online, Barclays and J.P. Morgan have very built out Chicago presences as well.
Baird and Blair in Chicago will be group dependent although both firms will give you plenty of deal experience during your analyst stint. Yes, Guggenheim began a middle market practice in Chicago with two ex-Blair senior bankers and one ex-Lazard senior banker. Guggenheim will play in certain niche technology spaces. As others have mentioned, Piper is quite strong outside of Chicago, especially in Minneapolis. Baird and Blair will continue to lead the Chicago banking scene, especially in the middle market.
Any opinion regarding the smaller Chicago offices of NY places, like Greenhill vs. Guggenheim vs. PWP?
Guggenheim appears to be beginning an effort to expand upon their Chicago banking presence. Greenhill has had some semblance of a Chicago presence for quite some time; everyone in this office seems pleasant as well. PWP is probably one of the smallest boutiques in the Chicagoland area with the exception of Evercore.
Could you tell me about BofA's presence in Chicago?
Solid point. They're a strong group in Chicago as well. Industrials presence with some focus on the middle market too. Significant Indiana Hoosier presence.
To be clear, the Lazard banker was an LMM MD focused on Consumer, wasn't he?
What's you take on these smaller advisory firms during this disaster of a time when there's no M&A work? Do you have any idea how they're doing, or if they can shift on the fly to RX work?
Yes. Apologies. I do realize the post above may read a bit vague. I presume he is covering the same verticals on the Guggenheim platform.
CS only do pitch and no execution in the Chi office. Source from a MD that was from CS Chi town.
Citi's Global Head of Industrials, and their head of Automotive also sit in Chicago.
UBS isn't a BB. Go with Blair/Baird whichever culture you like better at that point.
CS is very good in Chicago, underrated on WSO. Had exits to GTCR, KKR in the past few years.
Citi is solid in Chicago, can’t go wrong there but something to be said about a satellite office vs HQ for a major US bank like that.
Blair is really good, great culture and major hub is Chicago. Baird UBS and Piper below these three.
I’d go CS/Blair>Citi>Others (dependent on fit of course)
Valid concerns regarding American BB satellite offices; however, two managing directors in Chicago began their banking careers with Citi in Chicago. Outside of the Global Head of M&A sitting in Chicago, I believe Chicago is also one of their Global Industrial hubs.
Are u two taking into account CS lost two big shot MDs in business services to Macquarie a year or two ago?
I haven’t heard much of MCQ, but that doesn’t mean they aren’t keeping busy.
If he is interested in Industrial Baird > Blair
I think beyond what @Perfunctory" has already said about Citi Chicago (incredibly comprehensive), the office operates in a generalist model (M&A modeling because of Cary and traditional coverage). Effectively Midwestern coverage-- Industrials, metals & mining, consumer, a little healthcare.
I'd qualify it as a boutique experience in a bulge bracket setting.
what are peoples thoughts on HL and GS in Chi? - deal flow, exits, culture
Goldman Chi is pretty good, 1 or 2 groups with about 25 employees. Similar to other BB satellites in Chi. HL Chi is a sweatshop, but has great deal flow and one of the top Food & Bev groups in the country.
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