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2 Weeks Ago: 4th November 2009 20:50
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#11
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Full Member
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Join Date: Nov 2006
Location: london
Posts: 134
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Re: IB vs AM Research
Originally Posted by ReverseConvertible
Well, even if I agree that you need someone to look at the clouds and predict next year's weather... there is way too much research out there adding little if no value, and moreover, there are a ton of accountants in the Big 4 willing to do the same job (probably better) for half the price.
Interesting, is the emboldened comment fact or is it, direct comparison to your analogy, mere speculation? Researchers working in IB will always command a premium; their hours are much longer and their output has greater potential to generate income, through trading, based upon the insight. Furthermore, the job security afforded to the Big4 payroll is why they can afford to pay less than banks, where job insecurity is an inherent and all to obvious risk to be faced with.
Back to the thread. If you are able to get into a substantial buyside fund with good development opportunities it may be worth taking, these opportunities are hard to come by. The job is pretty well paid and the trajectory(fund manager) is pretty sweet The fund manager path is better than at an IB, here you only ever manage research unless you work for in-house asset manager. The research will have more long term implications than sell side research, which is what alot of people want in their roles. Buyside, at a good firm, is harder to get into than sell side IMO. Some funds seem to be exclusively oxbridge especially many of the of the edinburgh based funds. But if you get into either than you are doing well but if you get both, then it is a good decision to have to make between the two.
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