Become a PWM Analyst
I am looking to enter wealth management and want to become an analyst in the PWM division at a major bank after senior year. I am currently a junior at a top liberal arts school with ~3.5 GPA.
I am curious to know what recruiters are looking at in terms of work experience for PWM first year analysts.
Are they looking for internships beyond PWM? I interned this past semester at a small financial advising firm and have opportunities to work for brokers with Morgan Stanley or Smith Barney this upcoming summer. Should I also be considering internship opportunities in other departments? Lastly, I will probably be interning with the Ayco Company (GS Subsidiary) senior fall semester. --Kinda seems like PWM internship overload to me...
Any advice would be appreciated.
That sounds like a pretty good resume if you're trying to break into PWM. The best way to get a FT offer is to try for an internship in PWM at one of the big banks. Something like 90% of interns at BB PWM are offered the FT position and on top of that you will see how much you like PWM or not. With your resume, you should probably be given an interview by these firms, and from there its up to you. They are looking for someone who can combine a strong analytical candidate with someone who is very personable, easy going, and good with clients. In interviews you do NOT want to be the kid who rattles of different ways to value a company etc. PM me if you have any more in depth questions.
Stros is right.
Don't be a gunner in interviews. Be sharp, be polished, be smooth and confident. You've got a good pedigree. Just ease the ship into port.
Do the internship and get the FT offer.
The opportunities this summer are not for the formal PWM internship offered by the BB. I would be working under either regional PWM branches or in NYC for a very successful PWM Group.
I screwed up with the formal internships offered by the BBs. I am going abroad next semester and leaving super early - Dec 31st and I had not realized this until it was too late-- and I can't get a accelerated interview now. So I won't be in a position to get a FT after my internship. I'll have to apply again and hope to leverage my regional brokers to put in a good word for me
Do you still think these BBs will still respect the internships working for individual groups or brokers?
That being the case, getting a PWM internship somewhere else is your best bet. What do you mean by regional offices? I did not intern with a BB and managed to get an interview and eventually the position. At this point in the process the #1 ultimate, supreme, ideal goal is to get an interview with a firm. From there you have an opportunity to make an impression on them with A. the knowledge you gained from the other firms and B. your personality. Discuss how you can leverage the outside perspectives from other firms and use it to better suit the BB clients (seeing and experiencing different investment ideas is something they LOVE)
I can intern for a PWM group for Smith Barney in Hartford, a Merrill Lynch in westchester, or a Morgan Stanley group in NYC...Two of them are unpaid, and another will offer me a marginal stipend. Are you saying that I shouldn't intern with these groups?
I would go with the MS group in NYC. Morgan Stanley Smith Barney is obviously the same company and therefore the platforms MAY be similar. That being said, I know that for the HNW and UHNW clients they fall under the MS services whereas Smith Barney is just a brokerage firm. MS is definitely going to be you best bet and have the most reputation when looking for a FT position. You might also get a FT offer from MS which would be great. I would not worry about the pay at this point...What difference is a little money going to make in the long run?
Thanks for the advice. If I can find a decent living situation I will probably go the MS route. If that doesn't work out I'll still be happy interning for the other two groups.
4frnt
I was in nearly the exact same situation you were a year ago and I would definitely say go with either the MS or Merrill (I'm partial to Merrill) internships.
I interned with Merrill in GWM and was able to relate a lot of my experience to what they were looking for at the company I am now with for PWM. The key is to network like crazy and keep your GPA at that 3.5 level because a lot of places seem to make their cut off there and it makes getting interviews a lot easier. It seems like you are on the right track and you should be fine. Good luck in your search and your decision.
Hi 4frnt, which AYco office would you be interning with? I have an interview coming up for FT analyst.. it would be good if we could share info and what not
pwm/am financial analyst (Originally Posted: 12/28/2012)
I was considering applying to boutique pwm firm. I was talking with an alum and he said stay away from the sales positions. I am applying to boutique because I was told at a boutique RIA/pwm it would give me more of an AM experience. I plan on studying for my cfa. I ultimately want to go into ibd->pe/vc after business school but because I don't have any business I thought this would be the best path. Is this path bad? Advice please.
any suggestions please!
BB PWM Analyst - NOT a sales role (Originally Posted: 06/21/2013)
I know PWM is usually looked down upon on this forum, but what are your thoughts for a BB PWM FT Analyst position? This isn't a sales role, so there will be no cold-calling. Primary duties entail executing trades (IPOs and secondary offerings included), checking account balances and other general client services. What are the usual exit opps for a position such as this?
Goal is to eventually get an MBA and end up in either HF or investment/Asset Management.
I know there have been some relevant posts in the past, but didn't find exactly what I was looking for.
Thanks
HF is a stretch as an exit opp even post-MBA but with a good MBA long-only AM is certainly possible.
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