Don't know much about housing directly in the city. But, if you can't get directly in the City there's bound to be a shit-ton of spots in Queens, where you can take an easy commute on the LIRR into Penn Station (34th Street and 7th Ave)

Continuous effort - not strength or intelligence - is the key to unlocking our potential. -Winston Churchill
 

Thanks for all the responses, guys!

I've been doing some research, and it seems that Hunter College's summer housing is ridiculously expensive considering what you get. It's $2000+ a month, and I'm sure you can find much nicer places than a dorm room for that price.

How do you guys feel about Columbia summer housing? It's located in Morningside Heights, and the place that I'll be working at is right next to Grand Central, or Midtown East. Is this viable for me? The best thing that it has going for me is the convenience -- I don't have to worry about getting internet set up, or my toilet breaking down. I especially don't have to worry about some shady landlord, since I'll never even be able to check out the place.

I appreciate all the input, gents. Keep it coming, please!

 

Share an apt. Go on Craigslist and look under shares. Save yourself some money, after all, we are not making money for quite some time. And even then...

Fibows, Hoboken is cheaper, but it is not super cheap either. Plus, dealing with the PATH is the last thing you want to do at 2am. Even on a weekend not as a banker.

 

Live close to your bank, not necessarily fidi. Most analysts I know try to live near work.

This is the type of question where you have to step back and ask yourself, is this relevant to bankers only, or is this just common sense?

 
Funniest

Tell some girl at the bar in Manhattan that you live in Jersey and you will never get pussy in Manhattan. Hey baby, want to wait for the PATH train with me for 45 minutes and go back and fuck me? Your dick better taste like strawberries.

 
PoolSideBanker:
Tell some girl at the bar in Manhattan that you live in Jersey and you will never get pussy in Manhattan. Hey baby, want to wait for the PATH train with me for 45 minutes and go back and fuck me? Your dick better taste like strawberries.

Best post I've seen on here in a while, lol.

 

I wish I could laugh, but the Jersey cock-block happened to me a little over a year ago. Needless to say, my dick doesn't taste like strawberries...(i've heard). I quickly found a place in Manhattan.

 

I am living with 3 other bankers in SoHo for 1500 each. Most people live in Midtown East (Murray Hill) or West (Hell's Kitchen).

As for living near work, I hear that people who did that said it was the worst decision they ever made. Living farther away allows yourself to mentally leave the office. If you are in the same neighborhood you work, every time you walk down the street you will think about stuff you should be doing for your boss. This was told to my group by numerous people!

 

You can get a MUCH bigger place in Hell's Kitchen than in Soho for the same dough. Some of the SoHo places I saw were really absolute shite. Also, being close to work is HUGE especially when the weeks get long.

If you're in Murray Hill, the "not being able to leave work" thing does apply to some extent. In my opinion, Hell's Kitchen has a completely different feel to it than Murray Hill .. I would suggest you take a look.

Don't even think of Jersey.

 
Best Response

I'm not sure what you are asking as you seem to have it down. Tribeca is the most expensive neighborhood in the city but you can absolutely find nice 2 bedrooms in doorman buildings around 5k-5500 in the Fidi/Battery Park City/Tribeca area. You won't be in the absolutely best buildings but in good luxury buildings for sure. Same with 4k Hoboken even right around the Ferry/PATH terminal. If you live uptown like UES or UWS you could find the same with a more residential feel if you want that. If you work around like world financial center I think Hoboken is actually more convenient than brooklyn/uptown because the ferry let's you off right there and is a much more pleasant experience than the train on top of being a quicker commute than brooklyn/uptown to that area around WFC.

If your company will pay for a broker than just go that route but otherwise just Google around for luxury buildings in areas you like and contact their leasing offices directly because they'll gauge you for 15% of the lease amount in some cases now. You do save on the 3.5% city tax if you live in Hoboken. Lastly I know you said your total income will be 300k but it does matter how much of that is bonus because if your base is 180 you wont qualify for a 5k apartment in the city. At least 40x is the standard.

 

Thanks, what I am looking for is just general feedback on neighbourhoods and any info on other areas or things that I may now know about being an outsider that I could consider given my situation. For example you mentioned that UES and Brooklyn will be more of a hassle to get to WFC than from Hoboken/JC. I guess a follow up question is also then can I really experience NYC life (restaurants, bars, events, etc.) with the same convenience from Hoboken/JC as-well?

Also thanks for info on the 40x rent. I had read about this but always understood it to mean 40x rent in total income. Not just base salary. In that case my base will be around 150-160K but the employer said they would give me a letter with total expected income which I could use to show buildings/landlords when renting out.

Regardless I will use the broker but just want to do some diligence for before my arrival.

 

Personally I like Hoboken. It's a more village type feeling. Trees, brownstones, small pubs and shops everywhere, etc. PATH runs 24 hours to the city but it is annoying late at night because it's only every half hour. You can of course get cabs back but that'll run you around 40-50 a trip. Very convenient to take the ferry to work if you work around the world financial center. I just moved from Chelsea to Hoboken and my commute time stayed the same (20-25 minutes door to door) for a building in that area. Ferry is more expensive than the subway but I live in a nicer place than I did in NY for less money and i'm 3 blocks from the PATH/Ferry. Jersey City dies at night so I wouldnt live there but if some people like how quiet it is and there are nice luxury buildings there.

Tribeca is a great mix of offices, trendy bars/restaurants, shops, etc. It's just become the most expensive neighborhood in the city. Battery Park City is right there and is nice and on the water. If you value your green space there is a decent amount there. It's very family heavy and not tons of night life but you can obviously subway/cab easy to nightlife. Fidi similarly has a lot of nice places to live but dies after happy hour. The village is your most trendy location with everything you could possibly want. West village is a little more upscale IMO. Chelsea, Murray Hill, and Gramercy are all pretty interchangeable to me. Nice places, some green space, some ok nightlife, etc. Probably good middle ground. Murray Hill is a little too midtown for me as I try to avoid midtown at all costs because of it being flooded with tourists. And then of course you get to the UES and UWS which are more residential and family friendly. A little quieter but good food and ok nightlife. I like the UWS more than the UES because I think there are more good places to go out and better food overall. The UES is kind of a barren wasteland of shops, nice buildings, and families between like 64th and 86th which isn't really my style. But I do really like the area around the 86th street stop in the UES. Tons of new construction and cool new bars/restaurants between like 82nd and 90th. I can't speak to Brooklyn so much because I dont spend time there. The only place i've spent time is Williamsburg and it's kind of a pain in the ass to commute for me to that area.

Also, for the 40x thing. If your employer is willing to put on paper "Expected annual income of 300k" you should be fine (can't promise as I haven't been through this). The problem often becomes when your bonus is really variable (which happens with finance types). My employer wont give an expected income this year (though they'll give prior years bonuses) and that did cause me an issue when I was looking before because my base was like 35x. It'll be something to think about and it wont be uniform across all places you see.

HTH

 

That's a ton of great information. Much appreciated. I'll adjust my visits to the neighborhoods and discussions with the broker, etc. based on feedback such as this so this should be very useful.

 

You can easily get a luxury apartment in Hoboken with everything you want in your price range. I really can't comment on NYC as I don't really know what you can get for that price and have never lived there.

As for Hoboken, you can either live downtown by the train station which gives you access to the PATH, Ferry and NJTransit Bus and train services or Uptown where you have the Ferry and Bus. Downtown has a younger crowd, is louder by all the bars and the buildings are a bit older. Uptown is quieter, newer and you see a lot of young families around. You can find a place by the water (right by the ferry) that will run you around $3,000-$4,000 for a 2br 2ba 1100-1300sqft, a lot of these place also offer a shuttle service to the PATH. The Shipyard and Maxwell Place are two places that come to mind.

 

yeah with NYC you gotta dial down your expectations.

Craigslist is the best, check the roommates section because there is really no reason to rent something solo for a 3 month stay


Disclaimer: The post above has been made by someone who is not currently employed in IBD, and has not had an interview yet...

 

depends what youre scene is and what area you enjoy. def get roomates, and you can generally live most places on 60k.

midtown and UES will give you the most bang for your buck, but if you're downtown always, might consider evillage or LES. i lived in a nice tribeca doorman high rise with a roomate (converted 1br) on 70k just fine.

 
weeds499:
depends what youre scene is and what area you enjoy. def get roomates, and you can generally live most places on 60k.

midtown and UES will give you the most bang for your buck, but if you're downtown always, might consider evillage or LES. i lived in a nice tribeca doorman high rise with a roomate (converted 1br) on 70k just fine.

Hey weeds, I'm thinking of moving to tribeca but didn't see any affordable doorman buildings. Can you share (or PM) the name/address of that building, or some other luxuries you may know of?
 

yeah, it totally depends on how much you're making remember, the rule for rent is:

SALARY PER ANNUM/40= rent per month

so... if you're making a nice, round number... 40 k per year? then that means you have $1000 for rent per month

assuming you want to live somewhere nice, you might need to get a roommate if you're in finance and can afford places on your own, look into places in midtown

I'm not concerned with the very poor -Mitt Romney
 
Mitt Romney:

yeah, it totally depends on how much you're making
remember, the rule for rent is:

SALARY PER ANNUM/40= rent per month

so... if you're making a nice, round number... 40 k per year?
then that means you have $1000 for rent per month

assuming you want to live somewhere nice, you might need to get a roommate
if you're in finance and can afford places on your own, look into places in midtown

is this rule on an after-tax basis?
 

How would you describe yourself: a. Frat bro b. Hipster c. Yuppie d. Other (please explain)

"For I am a sinner in the hands of an angry God. Bloody Mary full of vodka, blessed are you among cocktails. Pray for me now and at the hour of my death, which I hope is soon. Amen."
 
Higheck123:

Can anybody chime in on what my options would be at 55K? Probably no bonus and the office is in midtown.

Will really depend on how many people you are living with.

Assuming one roommate: FiDi, Harlem or outside Manhattan. Maybe some places in the LES or close to the FDR/West Side Highway.

"For I am a sinner in the hands of an angry God. Bloody Mary full of vodka, blessed are you among cocktails. Pray for me now and at the hour of my death, which I hope is soon. Amen."
 

Im going to be working in World Financial Center, kind of in the same situation. I am willing to commute a bit (no more than 5 stops on subway though). What areas of Brooklyn would you recommend, I am definitely interested if it isnt to far and saves a good amount of money. The places in FiDi I saw are pretty damn small, found the murray hill/gramercy park area much better bang for my buck, will brooklyn be even cheaper then those two areas?

 

From my experience Park slope seems to be the best spot as it is right across the bridge, also Williamsburg. I know park slope is considered one of the nciest parts of brooklyn. The subway is 1-2 stops away and take 10-15 minutes from FiDi

Brooklyn will definitely be cheaper, or you will end up getting 1.5-2x more space for the same price. Unfortunately because of my midtown location I find it not as accessible.

 

Queens, all the rich people/royalty go there to find their wives.

"You stop being an asshole when it sucks to be you." -IlliniProgrammer "Your grammar made me wish I'd been aborted." -happypantsmcgee
 

this has been discussed a few times. run a search.

i would avoid brokers since you will end up paying them anywhere in the neighborhood of $3-6K

at my old firm, we used to shoot out emails to each other for people looking for roommates (roommates were moving out and needed new blood, etc).

depends where you work as well. I've seen more and more people living in Jersey City if they're working downtown (DB, Citi, GS).

Some people made the journey from JC to midtown as well. They all run relatively about the same. Murray Hill/Union Square tend to give you less bang for your buck making them more expensive than the UES (see 80s and above).

The world has changed. And we must change with it.

------------ I'm making it up as I go along.
 

The mkt in NYC is really soft. You will find a ton of no-fee brokers these days... the caveat is that the buildings they take you to are "no fee or 1 month free." Meaning if you walk into the building on your own the apt will be 1800/month, with 1 month free. If you walk in with a broker, the building will pay the broker and you will not get a free month since the building paid the broker fee.

Best way to do it would be to check out CL... if you're close by and you have a friend in NYC, stay at their place for a few days and walk around the city and walk into random buildings.

As far as what areas.... depends where you work.

 

I'd strongly recommend using craigslist. Always some decent sublets and apartments posted there.

As for where you want to live, it really depends on where you're working, the hours you're working, and how convenient you want everything to be. If you're working 80-100 hr weeks you'll want some place closer to work even though rent will be more in the financial district. If your hours are more chill, you can move further from work.

 

Rental prices are dropping across the city, but there are plenty of landlords still trying to charge prices that are way too high. Large complexes are the best bet right now, because they don't tend to hold out like the small landlords do. So you can get reduced rents, get them to pay the brokers fees, and also get 1-2 months of free rent.

An example are the Trump buildings on the water front on the west side. All of them have tons of vacancies, no brokers needed to rent, 1-2 months free rent, and even their own agents clearly state that all rents are negotiable.

Cheapest neighborhoods are still: Financial District, UES (east of 3rd Ave, and way north). Then probably Murray Hill. That said, LES is now cheaper than all of them, but fewer large buildings means your search will be tougher.

Financial District is a pain because so few people work there anymore (almost everything is in Midtown), but prices have always been cheaper than the rest of the city, and they way overbuilt luxury condos there. Those are in turn going rental, and prices are dropping like a rock.

On Central Park itself (UWS or UES), SoHo, West Village, and Tribeca are mixed bags. Lots of places maintaining high rental prices, but also lots of deals.

Craig's List is a great resource, and so is contacting large buildings directly. Brokers could be worth it if you can get their fee paid by the building. For an internship I'd just stick to Craig's List....

 

Negotiated price down by $300 a month, plus no brokers fee and 1 month free on a nice hi-rise in UES 80s. Inquired to a post on Craigslist, which are normally posted by brokers but mostly all are no-fee. I decided on this one after 4 months of looking online everyday and seeing ~25 places in person on UES, UWS, Murray Hill, and Midtown on both sides. Chose based on best combo of area + apartment/building + rent.

Don't work in the city and have a car, so didn't need to be very close to subway and made the tradeoff of taking a nicer place further away. If commuting within the city, I def. wouldn't want to be more than a couple minute walk from subway.

In my 4 months of looking, I've seen the most bang for buck in the past 2 weeks. Places are going for hundreds less than same time last year and even compared to just a couple months ago. Spring is normally a time where the market picks back up, so either this development will soon temper OR the environment will continue driving places down.

Also, if looking for a roommate, checkout the "Rooms/Shared" section on craigslist.

 

I had a question - I heard in the boom days, landlords would simply accept offer letters for proof of income needs. With a salary of only 60k, how are people supposed to lock down an apt when you need to make 40x the monthly rent, of say, 1700?

Besides a good credit score, what other documents do you need to produce? From some of my reading, it seems like you need to have held down your job for at least 2 years, make much more income, and have supplementing paystubs and tax returns. How is a recent college graduate supposed to get an apt? Any insight is much appreciated.

 
werdwerd:
I had a question - I heard in the boom days, landlords would simply accept offer letters for proof of income needs. With a salary of only 60k, how are people supposed to lock down an apt when you need to make 40x the monthly rent, of say, 1700?

Besides a good credit score, what other documents do you need to produce? From some of my reading, it seems like you need to have held down your job for at least 2 years, make much more income, and have supplementing paystubs and tax returns. How is a recent college graduate supposed to get an apt? Any insight is much appreciated.

You'll also have your $10k signing bonus, so you get bumped up to $70k, so the 1700/mth is now doable with the 40x requirement. But really, while they say 40x, it's not really a strict rule (at least, that's not what I faced with my building mngt, and also I know a colleague who was able to get a 2000/mth place without a co-sign). So long as you show you're employed with a steady income, that's good enough for them. I imagine it should be even easier now given how soft the nyc market is now.

All I had to show was my offer letter with proof of base salary and bonus. Also confirmation of my visa status. I didn't even have a credit score since it takes awhile before you can get a credit card if you're not from the country...

Honestly, it's much easier to get a place with a roommate - esp. where the person is already living there and they are just looking for someone to resign a lease with.

Wherever you decide to live... it's key to be close by a subway (under 10 mins).

 

I would echo the advice given here.

Plan out your budget. I would not plan on spending more than $1,500 a month on rent. You're after tax pay check should be around $3k month after taxes. Think of all the extras you need to spend on. Metrocard ($81/month), dry cleaning/laundry ($100/month), health care premiums and co-pays, 401-k matches, gym memberships ($100/month is typical, some spend less, some more), utilities ($200+ month, can be split with roommates). Then take out $20/day for breakfast/lunch/starbucks/snacks. Then take out the sorta discretionary spending: drinks, dates, clothes, weekend trips. If you have student loans, take out a payment for that. Then whatever you have left (if any) can be spent on models and bottles.

The "free month" rent scenario does reduce your effective rent, but remember that your current income needs to be able to support the monthly payments not factoring in the free month. the free month is typically the last month of the lease. I had issues with my landlord accepting my relocation bonus as part of my income, some are more flexible, but most if not all landlords know that wall street jobs aren't that stable right now.

Not to be pessimistic, but your first year is going to be TIGHT on cash. Your first bonus payment will make things much better, but until then, it's going to be tough unless you have mommy and daddy chipping in.

Some tips: 1) Avoid brokers, you'll pay for them somehow 2) Be realistic about travel time, if you're working a lot, you don't want to be far away from the subway to get in. Budget in a few cab rides to work because you're simply too tired to walk or take the subway. Budget in a few rides back from a night of drinking. No matter where you live, you're likely to be drinking on the other side of city. 3) Get a roommate. It is very difficult to get a decent studio for under 1500. Ideally, you want a doorman; you need someone to collect your laundry and any packages (online shopping)

Many analysts (including myself) live in converted apartments. NYC has zoning laws on the minimum square footage a room can be before it can be considered a room. To get around this, many people put up a pressured wall in the living room to create a second bedroom. Look for a living room that is long enough to be split. My current apartment is 24 feet deep, creating a sizeable living room and extra bedroom. Most apartments in New York city are between 18-22 feet. You don't need a dining room in your apartment, just enough room for a couch, coffee table and a nice flatscreen tv.

I would also plan to visit new york once to get a feel of different areas and to see a few apartments. Then select an area that you want to focus on and come back and select your apartment. There are many cheap hotels that you can stay in on hotwire/priceline and there are also hostels available if you want to save even more.

PM me if with a few details if you need some more help. Where you're working (cross streets) and where you are looking. I know of a few 1st and 2nd year analysts leaving and may be able to point you in a direction of open rooms or open apartments that work well for bankers.

 

Hey Guys,

I'm also a senior looking into apartments in NYC, and I was doing a search for threads on this topic. A lot of the advice on this thread is great, but I had a question about furniture. Are most apartments already furnished? If not, where do people usually get furniture? I'm thinking moving in without furniture would be a real pain... Any advise appreciated. Thanks!

 

Entry level leased apts usually come absolutely bare. If you don't come to ny a few days before you start, you can use online mattress places like 1800 mattress, i'll let you google, they'll deliver the same day. Best place I found to get furniture is craigslist. Lots of nice couches people are looking to just get rid of. Other than that, Ikea, even though I hate the cheap crap, it's the only thing you can probably afford to furnish everything.

 

It honestly is all dependent on luck. I don't care what anyone else tells you, it's luck.

I live in Greenwich Village in a full 1 BR with a separate full bathroom, kitchen, and living room. I live with my girlfriend and we split a $2200 rent. The apartment is awesome size, walkup building, awesome location.

Then I know someone who lives in Midtown shitty West and pays $1050 for a 3 BR with three other people, a living room/kitchen combo, and like 8 floors to walk up.

It's all about timing.

Frank Sinatra - "Alcohol may be man's worst enemy, but the bible says love your enemy."
 

Agree that it's a lot of luck. Found my apt on my own,but was lucky to view it and grab it before others did. Timing just worked out. Started looking a couple weeks before job started. Would've used a broker if I didn't find on my own fast...but gotta get good word of mouth referral so you get a reputable one. At the price point you are looking at they aren't all that interested in helping you.

 

I'd guess you wanna live as close as possible.

I mean, when you are working 80 to 90 hours a week, you want your home ASAP when you get off from work 3:00 at night cuz you know you'll be abck in the office 8 in the morning.

 

agreed with ziggy, that commute will add up + you really don't save that much money, until you are 40min+ commute or you want to live in the ghetto


Disclaimer: The post above has been made by someone who is not currently employed in IBD, and has not had an interview yet...

 

Manhattan (will vary by area) - Studio $2000+, 1 BR $2500+, 2 BR - $3600+

Jersey City (Newport) and Hoboken - Studio $1500+, 1 BR $1850+, 2 BR $2700+

 
  1. Gold/Fulton
  2. $1900
  3. either 2 subway stops (subway on same block) or 15 minute walk
  4. same
  5. broker
  6. Might save money, but pain in the ass to get home or bring anyone back to your place
  7. not pay a broker fee
 

I left the city a couple of months ago. This data was valid at the time I left.

90 Washington (Washington/Rector)

$2575 -- studio

Walk 20 minutes. Subway took around 12 minutes but I never took it -- why not save four bucks a day and get some fresh air?

Commute sucks and you never go anywhere. Same.

Broker.

Take more time, look at more places.

 

20-30 sounds terrible in the morning (unless door-to-door). at night your bank will comp your car ride back--black cars are cool at first, but eventually you'll just take the fastest taxi home.

best places to live from midtown -- Chelsea, or Murray Hill

 

Great picture, but not sure why Nebraska and Kansas City are there.

Victor, I agree that subway and train nearby are nice. Hiking 15 minutes just to get to the train is what could annoy me.

 

i strongly recommend that you not live that far out.

when you're in NYC, everything you do requires the subway system (unless you cab every time). this means going out to the bar, visiting friends, going on vacation, getting to work, going to the park/museum, concert, everything. so if you live 15 minutes from the subway, EVERYTHING you do now takes at least 30 minutes longer.

in addition, living 15 minutes walk from a subway station does not mean your trip is ONLY 15 minutes longer. there are fewer stations out there and you are only close to 1 or 2 trains, possibly only local. that means you will need to wait longer at the station (SIGNIFICANTLY longer on nights and weekends) and that you will need to transfer to get to where you are going. as opposed to living somewhere with lots of trains (think union square) where you will have a lot of train choice.

unless it's a very tight money situation, you should just look to room with more people in slightly less conditions somewhere more convenient.

 

Really??? This is good to know, I will be on the street for work and thought about Ft. Greene, Prospect Heights, Park Slope areas to live, budgeted around 1500. The max commute I want to take is 20 minutes. From what I always heard FiDi was extremely expensive but I am going to look into it.

Thanks

 

Not in this situation yet, nor will I be in NYC, but when working so many hours a quick walk home would be the longest commute id want.

Can also take a quick walk home on a break if you need anything, shower to freshen up, or take a quick nap and get back to the office.. i dont know, but the last thing you want is another hour/day of commuting

 

Thanks for the insights. My door to seat commute would be 25 minutes give or take. Unless I live in FiDi, my commute won't be less than 15-20 minutes anyways so I'll deal with it. The place is too good to pass on.

 

I am wondering the same thing actually and I hope others offer good guidance. I have heard that in NY, bankers (even analysts) are typically much more cut throat then other locations. Is this true? Would it be more laid back in a office in like Atlanta or Chicago or even Charlotte as opposed to NY?

 

NY isn't all that cracked up to be, its mostly because people associate finance with NYC. I would say go to where you like your GROUPS (you'll work 100 hours with them) and where you like the PEOPLE. Once you start working you'll realize that this is the number one most important. I'd rather be in Ohio with cool people than in NYC with dbags.

 

I have the same decision to make. I'm leaning towards Charlotte for the same reasons already mentioned- I like the group, it's obviously a better cost of living and it's just a more laid back lifestyle. But I'm concerned about the exit opportunities. I feel like it is worth it to go to NY for 2 years because of how much it will help with PE, etc. Does anyone have any input on this?

 

I think I'm with 1styearBanker on this one. Your first priority should be to like the people you work with. If you can't stand them it's going to be miserable for you. Plus, working in NYC is really no big deal. I don't live in the city but I do commute into it. You'll enjoy the first 3 months because its all new to you. Then it'll be really no big deal, and, if you're not used to a big city, you'll get swallowed up into it. It's not for everyone. I'm actually from a small town in upstate NY. I'm only in the city because I work there. Other than that I hate NYC and would take another job at a smaller firm in a smaller city if I had the opportunity. Believe me, you do not want to live in the city. Even living in a place like Brooklyn or the Bronx will quickly break the bank, unless you are bringing in at least $100K and/or have substantial savings already. Unless you want to live in a bug infested shithole, expect to shell out at least $2,000/month for rent.

 

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"History doesn't repeat itself, but it does rhyme."
 

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Dolores quia earum tempore modi voluptates nobis architecto. Delectus veritatis aspernatur sit pariatur non et temporibus laboriosam. Architecto suscipit hic quisquam optio distinctio. Aut voluptas architecto eum voluptas iusto aut dolorum ut. Quia dolores laboriosam suscipit incidunt est natus. Aut doloremque dignissimos laborum nihil adipisci omnis. Ratione dignissimos enim aut.

 

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Placeat vel molestiae asperiores reprehenderit distinctio. Porro neque ea non accusamus assumenda. Magni dolore soluta numquam sunt culpa eius.

I am permanently behind on PMs, it's not personal.
 

Itaque quam quo animi doloribus. Tempore quisquam dicta consequatur qui amet tenetur quaerat. Repellendus aut qui molestiae aut et ab. Et eos quam aliquam doloremque eum. Veniam eos repellendus a. Animi molestiae qui quas qui unde nam nulla ut. Adipisci eligendi et saepe.

Sed sint repellat omnis voluptas et nihil. Eum maxime vero sequi temporibus temporibus maiores suscipit. Aut laborum repudiandae odio culpa.

Nisi sed dolorem praesentium velit ab cum. Debitis non et eum ratione eveniet repudiandae. Quo debitis nisi doloremque et facilis. Sit ipsum aliquam quam voluptatibus laborum consequatur expedita. Delectus perferendis accusamus voluptatem eum asperiores.

 

Iusto corporis maiores fugit id eveniet quam facere. Quia assumenda et ex est quia dolor. Qui impedit ut et qui. Nihil ea sit voluptatem necessitatibus. Ut adipisci iste rerum exercitationem voluptatem est non.

Magni autem quo praesentium deleniti enim reprehenderit temporibus. Velit officia fuga cumque numquam laudantium qui. Et temporibus nobis harum aliquam.

"For all the tribulations in our lives, for all the troubles that remain in the world, the decline of violence is an accomplishment we can savor, and an impetus to cherish the forces of civilization and enlightenment that made it possible."
 

Qui qui iure quidem voluptas qui recusandae. Amet architecto tempora et dolores. Qui numquam et et fugiat et et est. Dolores beatae maxime sed et ullam consequatur. Et odit amet et velit earum dolor aut illo. Voluptatem quaerat ducimus sunt necessitatibus et aspernatur.

Voluptatibus deleniti a velit. Corrupti quam veniam ratione enim a unde. Sit odio deleniti eveniet sit maxime voluptatum. In quia quibusdam sit ratione dolor qui dolorem.

Career Advancement Opportunities

March 2024 Investment Banking

  • Jefferies & Company 02 99.4%
  • Goldman Sachs 19 98.8%
  • Harris Williams & Co. (++) 98.3%
  • Lazard Freres 02 97.7%
  • JPMorgan Chase 03 97.1%

Overall Employee Satisfaction

March 2024 Investment Banking

  • Harris Williams & Co. 18 99.4%
  • JPMorgan Chase 10 98.8%
  • Lazard Freres 05 98.3%
  • Morgan Stanley 07 97.7%
  • William Blair 03 97.1%

Professional Growth Opportunities

March 2024 Investment Banking

  • Lazard Freres 01 99.4%
  • Jefferies & Company 02 98.8%
  • Goldman Sachs 17 98.3%
  • Moelis & Company 07 97.7%
  • JPMorgan Chase 05 97.1%

Total Avg Compensation

March 2024 Investment Banking

  • Director/MD (5) $648
  • Vice President (19) $385
  • Associates (86) $261
  • 3rd+ Year Analyst (13) $181
  • Intern/Summer Associate (33) $170
  • 2nd Year Analyst (66) $168
  • 1st Year Analyst (202) $159
  • Intern/Summer Analyst (144) $101
notes
16 IB Interviews Notes

“... there’s no excuse to not take advantage of the resources out there available to you. Best value for your $ are the...”

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From 10 rejections to 1 dream investment banking internship

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