Perhaps no job better embodies
the image of business than investment banking. It's got fancy offices, screens
and those dress shirts where the color is a different color
than the rest of the shirt. You see a fellow wearing one of those
and you just know he's got kids he doesn't talk to. But while the image of investment
banking is common knowledge, the function is much less
common of knowledge. So what the hell do these guys really do? I'm here outside the offices of Goldman Sachs,
just behind these very doors, dozens of my high school
bullies are chained to ergonomic chairs staring at Excel
and crack down on prescription stimulants. Investment banks like these have long been
some of the most prestigious places to work on Wall Street. Landing spots for young people
to make fuck you vest money coupled with long hours and taking loud phone
calls in restaurants, an entire culture has been crafted around
investment banking. Yet the question remains. What do bankers actually do? What do investment bankers actually do? What do investment bankers actually do? Investopedia defines investment banking as a type of banking
that organizes and advises large, complex financial transactions,
such as mergers or IPO underwriting. And they say more, but no chance. I'm reading all that. It's time to stop beating around the bush
and go straight to the source. Someone, a real life person
who actually investment banked. On a high level. Investment bankers advise companies
when they're either trying to raise money, either debt,
or they're selling shares. And then on the day to day.
What does that. Look like? A lot of Excel financial modeling
and a lot of PowerPoint presentations. A lot of that is sitting around
and waiting for comments from your bosses and your boss's bosses. Sounds electric. Steph Moore is the founder
of the financial service company PIN and a former investment
banking analyst at Jp morgan. And it would appear from her experience
that the exciting world of investment banking is actually much more
like the dull world of banking. Any time you want to do anything and investment banking,
it goes through iterative cycles. Your boss sees your work
and then he gives you comments and then your boss's boss is your work
and then your boss has to approve it and then he gives it to you.
And then it just goes in circles. I just don't think it's
that interesting of a job and it's such a small piece
of what you hear about in the news. Hold your horses. I thought investment
banking was the pinnacle of America's financial system, a veritable thunderdome
of dealmaking and drug taking, where razor sharp minds
driven by lust and ego, come together to dominate financial markets
and buy a house in SAG Harbor. When you talk about an investment
banking analyst, essentially what you are doing is you are working
in a very, very high end sales role. So essentially you are at the mercy
of your senior bankers whose job it is to provide
financial advice to large corporations. Liam Killing said, has a mustache. He is also an ex investment banking associate
at Goldman Sachs, and he was kind enough to walk us through a day in his life
as a former SAT Goldman Sachs. Typical day
would be wake up at between six and seven, roll out of bed and immediately
head to the office. 9 a.m. to 10 a.m.. Make sure that you have your inbox
at zero overnight. You're probably going to be
getting anywhere from 10 to 100 emails. That's going to take forever. Okay. Around ten is when the senior bankers
usually come in VP's tend to get stressed out. About 11 a.m. there is a gym in the building shared. You lose a lot of control over your time
and I mean time. Like the time you have to go get dinner
with your friends on a Saturday. I banking is famous for its rise
and grind work culture that has been well documented in countless
films, TV shows and people posting their significant others
on social media. So who are the moolah Caboose
is that these dummies are so smitten with. Investment banking is a fantastic job out of undergrad
for two types of people. The first type is the individual
who has for their entire undergraduate career wanted to go work
in the financial services industry. And then there is the second group,
which I think I fell into, which is the ambitious group of people
who have no idea what the hell that they want to do with their lives
and are aware that the flaw from an earning perspective in investment
banking is relatively high and that the exit opportunities
tend to be relatively extensive. That's right. If you're going to be smart,
young and aimless, might as well do it on a hug of a salary,
which is almost guaranteed to be well over six figures
in your first year as an analyst. Are you done? What's going on here? So, dude, what do you
what do you do for a job? Yeah, I do investment banking. Do it. Do you all do investment?
Is this the whole group here? Yeah, we got the whole group. Oh, Where are you guys? Thank you, sir. No, not you guys out in the vest
or just the chest and not your arms. First year in investment banking. What's the salary expected to be earning. On how the market's going? Yeah, that's a book called Both Go lower book 50 to 200
if it's a really good market. So to translate this for poor people,
buy a book. What do you mean. 100,000? However, for an industry that thrives off the grunt work of those
willing to grind it out for mad bills, threats have been looming in recent years
as interest rates have risen to stamp out inflation. A slump in dealmaking has led to layoffs
across the investment banking industry. And while investment banks have often used massive paydays
to justify their intense culture, young people are beginning to find equally
lucrative opportunities elsewhere. Tech companies
like Metta can offer high pay, and you get to play ping
pong with Mark Zuckerberg. Other
finance geeks can also pay a high salary, and you don't have to play ping
pong with Mark Zuckerberg. It's not the same environment that you saw
a couple of years ago where people were hiring investment bankers, particularly
young investment bankers and math. Shonali Bozek, as the lead Wall Street
correspondent for Bloomberg TV and a writer at Bloomberg News. When I have a conversation with the Morgan Stanley CEO, for example,
I had asked him, you know, can you see yourself
hiring again at scale? And he said,
listen, we've done two acquisitions. Our headcount has already grown so much. When we talked to Blackstone's executives
two years ago, they had 30,000 applicants. This year, 62,000 applicants
more than doubled in two years in terms of applications that private equity,
private credit, real estate. And this has raised the question has one of the most slayed jobs in finance
lost its luster? I don't think Jp morgan's
going to disappear overnight, but for example, a few years ago,
the direct listing, I think Spotify and did that where
they kind of went directly to an exchange and listed their shares and they didn't use an investment
banking process and therefore an investor banker
to facilitate that. And so I don't think it's out of the question that investment
banking as a practice will decline. I do think that a lot of the stuff
that analysts used to do is getting automated away. A lot of it becomes more and more
just like people management, which again is why some of the prestige of
this job is going away. I think you actually lose
some of the learning. The business is under pressure. Can you go to other people that are doing the jobs that investment
bankers used to do? A lot of the big private equity firms
are building capital markets businesses and they are doing business
at significant scales. KKR, Blackstone, Apollo. These are businesses
that used to be inside of Jp morgan. Morgan Stanley. Now Morgan Stanley and Jp
morgan are still doing this at scale. These are massive, massive businesses.
They don't go away tomorrow. But certainly there are other places
that are now doing similar things. Has it lost its veneer? Has it lost its touch? Maybe so. Investment bankers facilitate complex
financial deals at its most entry level. That looks like waiting 8 hours
for your boss to tell you about a slide deck
you have do it at 3 a.m. and then no one will ever
look at the grind. And up until recently, investment banking
could justify its culture by offering uniquely
high salaries and job security. But today, with increasing competition
across financial services, high interest rates and other industries
offering similar pay and better work life balance right out of college,
banking faces an identity crisis. Will college grads continue
to see banking as a top job in finance? Well, analysts keep falling asleep
into their sweet green balls at 3 a.m.. Will major banks continue
to dominate capital market deal flow? And will my high school bully Connor forever remain trapped inside of this building,
adjusting the margins of some useless PowerPoint forever unable to craft
a meaningful life out of the massive paychecks doled out to him
by some stale, lifeless industry. Only time will tell. But for now
and for good work, I'm Dan Toomey. What does your partner actually do? He has multiple laptops. If he works at home,
there is two computers and there's money involved in banks. Well, I think it's actually it's
very clear she is she's. And she invests.