|
|
|||||||||||
|
|||||||||||
|
|
TOP STORIESHow long before banks go back to hiring experienced juniors?22 June 2009By Sarah Butcher COMMENTSWill be awesome in a couple of years when there's huge demand for VPs and not many people.. :-D Read all comments »Banks are recruiting senior staff and taking on university leavers and MBAs, but the hiring action around experienced analysts and associates remains negligible. And despite claims that M&A is picking up, recruiters say there’s absolutely no indication when hiring at this level will resume. This is partly because recruiters don’t know what’s going on: there are so many people on the market that banks are able to hire directly. It’s also because it takes a big pick-up in activity to drive recruitment of experienced juniors: it can be easier to reallocate people internally.
“Most places have enough people to support the deals that they’ve got, and enough slack to support a small increase in any extra deals that come in. If there is a step change in flow then the case for revisiting their junior resource needs will have to be revisited” says Jim Nairn at recruitment firm The Cornell Partnership.
“Banks are only going to hire at this level when activity picks up significantly,” says the head of HR at one European bank in the City. “It will be next year before we’re likely to need any experienced analysts or associates.”
The head of recruitment at one major US bank says junior hiring tends to be driven mostly by poaching. He also says that it lags mid-ranking and senior hiring by a few months, implying that it will happen in the near future. “The surge of refinancing coming out of the credit crunch means that our capital markets business is now firing on all cylinders and we’re focusing recruitment at the mid-ranking and senior level.” In the meantime, the head of HR says redundant analysts and associates should make the most of their time off: “You should be studying, travelling, and living somewhere very cheap.”
COMMENTSMicheal, Trading, Tue 23 Jun 09AG, refugees, are you for real? Did you work ten jobs as well while caring for you sick parents while at the same time develope a cure for cancer? I thnk you are telling a few porkie pies myself. What is all this "I deserve six figures"?. You need to prove yourself first. Really, do any of us "deserve six figures" for what we do? I think we know the answer to that. Maybe given the excellent education you got AG maybe you should go into teaching and give something back to all those other "inner city" kids or at the very least donate your bonous to oliver and the other orphans.
Fred the Shred, Public Sector, Tue 23 Jun 09To a certain extent I have to agree with Flabbergast. However, everyone knows the majority of people that go to Oxbridge go to private or grammer/selective schools. Everyday comphensives don't have the time or resources to prep people from the age of 12 plus for there interviews nor do they get the extra curricular activities that are avaliable to us who went to the better schools - which are so important in character building. People on here, deep down, know that if they had gone to a crappy school, through no fault of their own they would not have got into a decent uni - without some positive discrimation. Add your comment »AG, Student, Tue 23 Jun 09"People on here, deep down, know that if they had gone to a crappy school, through no fault of their own they would not have got into a decent uni - without some positive discrimation."
Niv, Quantitative Analytics, Tue 23 Jun 09@Fred the Shred, what's your definition of a decent university? Could you enlighten us? Add your comment »Sam, Debt / Fixed Income, Tue 23 Jun 09Interesting thread.
Fred the Shred, Investment Consulting, Tue 23 Jun 09Niv, if you don't know what the decent universities are, you are on the wrong job site. Add your comment »Niv, Quantitative Analytics, Wed 24 Jun 09Fred the Shred, I know what a decent university is, but I'm interested in your definition of a decent university. It might be different from mine. Add your comment »ATL, Asset Management, Thu 25 Jun 09It's amazing how a story like this, which should spark an interesting debate, somehow always degenerates into immature self-promotion. Why don't the clever-clogs who profess to have attended world-class institutions actually contribute rather than pontificate over and over about how great they are. In my opinion, and I'm sure most readers, these individuals are spouting the highest order of BS. Add your comment »SP, HR & Recruitment, Thu 25 Jun 09AG - if your posts are to be believed then you've worked hard and got yourself into a good firm, so well done. Not so well done on the arrogance and unjustified sense of entitlement though I'm afraid. You'll be working in a meritocracy soon, and LSE attendance does not a superstar make. That attitude will get you nowhere fast. If you want respect - earn it. Don't spend your time stroking your own ego on an internet message board.
|
|
|||||||||
|
|
|||||||||||