twofish-quant said:
And astrophysics happens to be one path into investment banking.
It's not the easiest path to take if you want the most amount of money for the least amount of work. I'm doing engineering - a popular degree in investment banking - and it's hard work. Physics is even harder work, because when us engineers are getting a break from the hard stuff by doing the management and finance and ethics stuff, the physicists are doing yet more tough maths.
An easier option would be sociology or something else that's quite easy at a "target" university, with massive emphasis on "target university".
Not true at all. For the work that I do, we pretty much require some sort of hard core math/engineering/science degree, preferably a Ph.D. Also there are other parts of the firm that do different things, and so the requirements are different.
I was referring specifically to entry from an undergraduate background, sorry if I did not make this clear.
Sort of, but there are some universities that no one has heard of that have very good placements, and some big name universities that have horrible placement. If you want to figure out what universities are good for career placement, the best people to talk to are alumni, since they aren't going to make more money if you decide to go to the university.
I don't know of any British universities that have pre-agreed placements with investment banks for their students, which is what I think you are referring to. And even then, a placement is no guarantee of getting recruited as a graduate. If such pre-agreed placements did exist then I'd question why graduates from these universities do not appear on the recruitment lists.
Ummmmm... How do you know this? I have the advantage that I actually have worked in investment banking.
I know this because data is released each year showing where the investment banks recruit graduates from and only a select few universities appear on that list, and I've never seen anything to suggest anything otherwise.
Who is "we"? My first job after I got an astrophysics Ph.D. was in a major oil and gas company.
We refers to the companies located in Aberdeen, the oil capital of Europe, and this includes all six of the supermajors. I've never came across an astrophysicist during my years here and as such I don't feel comfortable in honestly saying that the oil & gas industry, here, is a route for an astrophysicist. Of course, I haven't met everyone here and there might well be astrophysicists here but if someone wants to make good money from doing a technical job then I'd have to recommend some sort of engineering at a university that is geographically close to the companies that are most likely to need highly skilled engineers.
Also, I'm talking about the US market and things might be different in the UK.
I don't know how things are in Wall Street, and I don't know how things work for experienced and PhD hires in London either.
I do know a little bit about how hiring works for undergraduates in London (mainly from a "what not to do" perspective rather than a "what to do one" since I'm barred from life from an investment bank because of my university choice) though, mainly from people that were "lucky" enough to get these jobs themselves and I've never heard anyone of them ever say that the name branding of the university is anything less than a huge factor in determining whether HR puts your CV in the bin or let's it through to the next stage.
But you can move... One thing that is nice about the US is that you have lots of people that ended up here because they didn't have the "pedigree" to make it in their original country.
There certainly exists a lot more class prejudice in the UK and as such I'm not surprised that the investment banks recruit almost solely from the universities which have the highest amount of privately educated students (as well as the hardest working most naive Asians).
That's why I'm probably moving to the US or Canada at some point.