The MBA courses that are most likely to lead to investment banking jobs

Investment banking is not a hip career choice for MBAs.
by IFSC News
03 Mar 2015
IFSC

International Financial Services Centre

The number of new graduates choosing to enter the sector is on the decline, outside of the US investment banks are recruiting fewer business school graduates on to their associate programmes and the pay gap is narrowing.

And yet. For all the talk of tech firms hoovering up all the best MBAs, the biggest individual sector hiring business school graduates is consulting. Outside of this, finance – and investment banking in particular – still represents a significant proportion of new recruits, albeit a falling number. How do we know this? Over the past few weeks the large business schools have been unveiling their employment reports for the class of 2014.

We have analysed these reports and looked at the proportion of individuals moving into investment banking, as well as how much they got paid.

The results suggest that New York Stern is the best place to study if you wish to enter investment banking. It should be noted, though, that the proportion of MBAs from NY Stern entering finance is on the decline. Not only did fewer people go into investment banking this year, but the proportion going into hedge funds and private equity was so low that it didn’t even register a single percentage figure. Last year 3% entered the industry.

Generally, studying at a US school is the best route into investment banking. Only two of the large business schools in Europe made it into the top 20. London Business School claims to provide 40% of all MBAs recruited into investment banks in EMEA and yet just 12% of this year’s class entered the sector.

This list contrasts with our own rankings of the best MBAs for getting into investment banking. Our data covers a bigger timeframe and focuses only on those securing front office positions, rather than entering the investment banking sector as a whole. While Columbia Business School tops this list, the eFinancialCareers ranking does show a similar dominance among U.S. business schools, with London Business School the only university to make the top ten.

By Paul Clarke of eFinancialCareers.

More News

  • NAMA Publishes Final Annual Report
    IFSC News
    NAMA Publishes Final Annual Report
    Learn More
  • Executive exposure: 7 in 10 directors in Irish organisations are “concerned” about AI-enabled attacks 1 in 6 Irish executives report high exposure to kidnap-for-ransom risks
    IFSC News
    Executive exposure: 7 in 10 directors in Irish organisations are “concerned” about AI-enabled attacks 1 in 6 Irish executives report high exposure to kidnap-for-ransom risks
    Learn More
  • Only One Third of Financial Firms Fully Prepared for EU AI Act Requirements
    IFSC News
    Only One Third of Financial Firms Fully Prepared for EU AI Act Requirements
    Learn More
  • Tánaiste & Minister for Finance meets with the main pillar banks to discuss the roll-out of the new Investment Account framework and the emergence of new online harms to children
    IFSC News
    Tánaiste & Minister for Finance meets with the main pillar banks to discuss the roll-out of the new Investment Account framework and the emergence of new online harms to children
    Learn More
  • Ireland - €2bn no-grow tap of October-43 Green Benchmark
    IFSC News
    Ireland - €2bn no-grow tap of October-43 Green Benchmark
    Learn More
  • Tax revenues up by just over 4% to end-April; expenditure reflects implementation of budget priorities
    IFSC News
    Tax revenues up by just over 4% to end-April; expenditure reflects implementation of budget priorities
    Learn More