1 / 21

Finance 101

Finance 101. Executive Board. President-Anna Mayr Exec VP- Sam Pulitzer VP of Finance- Jeff Williamowsky VP of Administration- Matt Captline VP of Marketing- Matt Bromiley Corporate Liaison- Josh Pupkin SUSA Rep- Paul Abel FMA Rep- Webster Hughes Webmaster- Eric Kuang.

umed
Télécharger la présentation

Finance 101

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Finance 101

  2. Executive Board • President-Anna Mayr • Exec VP- Sam Pulitzer • VP of Finance- Jeff Williamowsky • VP of Administration- Matt Captline • VP of Marketing- Matt Bromiley • Corporate Liaison- Josh Pupkin • SUSA Rep- Paul Abel • FMA Rep- Webster Hughes • Webmaster- Eric Kuang

  3. Financial Consulting • Advise corporations on financial issues • Review business plans and decisions • Suggest methods to improve valuation • Assess business and capital structure • Provide useful advice for • Risk management • Government regulations • Industry trends • Provide independent evaluation of potential options

  4. Financial Consulting • Profitable industry • Intense travel schedules • Team-oriented environment • Major firms • McKinsey • Bain • Boston Consulting Group • Deloitte

  5. Financial Advisory • AKA financial planning; help clients select appropriate assets • Education: Pass the Series 7 broker/dealer exam; possibly obtain CFP designation and/or MBA • Responsibilities: Find clients and help them understand investment opportunities; monitor markets and make quick decisions; have strong people skills and be able to sell your ideas; initially work long hours to find clients • Pay: According to BLS, as of May 2009, median compensation was $68,200; top 10% earned over $160,000; financial advisory is very strongly commission based

  6. Wealth Management • Combines financial/investment advice, tax services, and legal/estate planning; financial advisory for clients with higher net worth; often employed by banks and investment firms • Education: Pass Series 7 exam; possibly obtain CFP designation, law degree, or an MBA • Responsibilities: Find clients and provide them with personalized advice; sustain and increase clients’ wealth over time and help them plan for the future; after clients have been acquired, work as long as it takes to meet their needs • Pay: Typically between $65,000 and $85,000; once again, strongly based on commission

  7. The “Big Four” • All firms offer areas specializing in finance • PwC – Financial Consulting • IPO readiness, risk & capital management, finance function systems & applications • Financial Instruments & Credit Group (FICG) • Deloitte – Financial Advisory Services • Business valuation, forensic center, capital projects consulting • Ernst & Young – Advisory for Financial Services • Performance improvement, risk management, capital & transaction management • KPMG • Private equity consulting, banking & finance restructuring

  8. The “Big Four” • Work Load • Internship: 10 weeks, 40-50 hrs. per week. Limited responsibilities, but very informative • Full Time: 50-60+ hrs. per week, specific responsibilities. Travel may be involved. • Salaries • Internship: $23+ per hour • Full Time: Many factors influence, but median starting salary is $59,000 (2010) • Career Paths • Pre-defined track in each company. • Analyst – Consultant – Senior Consultant – Manager – Senior Manager - Director/Partner/Principal • Culture • Culture is important aspect in all companies • Intra-company clubs, community service activities • Important work/life balance through telecommuting, on-site options • Continuing education – Tuition/Certification options for all employees

  9. The “Big Four”

  10. Sales and Trading

  11. Sales and Trading Is Sales & Trading Right for You? • Skills/Traits Needed: • Highly focused • Excellent quantitative skills • Thrive in fast-paced, stressful environment • Ability to multitask & prioritize.

  12. Sales and Trading Exit Opportunities Few Exit Ops outside trading Can move up the ladder Trading at Hedge Funds Professional Areas • Sales • long term client relationships • Present investment ideas • Sell and cross sell firms products • Trading  • Develop and execute trading ideas and analysis • Market Making trade execution process

  13. Investment Banking • Help companies raise debt or equity • Advise companies • Mergers & Acquisitions • Restructuring • Analyst, Associate, Director, Managing Director • Analyst Responsibilities: • Presentations, Pitch books • Valuation & Financial Modeling • Industry/Company Research *Investment Banking Interview Prep http://investmentbankinginterviewprep.blogspot.com/2008/02/citigroup-profile.html

  14. Investment Banking Cont. • Pros • Deep understanding of financial statements and valuation • Great exit opportunities (Private Equity, Hedge Fund, etc) • Experience • Salary (entry level: $90K- $150K) • Cons • 80-100 hrs/week • Hours vary • Stressful *Investment Banking Interview Prep http://investmentbankinginterviewprep.blogspot.com/2008/02/citigroup-profile.html *http://www.careers-in-finance.com/ibsal.htm

  15. Introduction to Corporate Finance • Responsibility - Corporate Finance addresses the following three questions: • What short and long-term investments should the firm engage in? • How can the firm raise money for the required investments? • How much short-term cash flow does a company need to pay its bills? • Early Career Path - Many firms hire undergraduates and MBAs for training programs in corporate finance; some programs are finance and accounting-specific, and others rotate trainees throughout the company. • Education - To advance through your career, you will eventually need an advanced degree or certification (MBA, CFA, CPA, etc.) in addition to an undergraduate degree. • Compensation - Corporate finance compensation will vary by seniority, region, size of company, and industry. • The median expected salary for a typical Entry Level Corporate Finance Analyst in the US is $55,970, according to vault.com

  16. Corporate Finance (cont.) • Life Style: Hours Per Week depends on seniority, region, size of company, and industry. • Generally can be demanding for entry level positions (anywhere from 60 to 65 hours per week) • Jobs in corporate finance are relatively stable. • Benefits of working in the field include: • You generally work in teams which help you work with people • Responsibility is to tackle business problems that make a difference • Opportunities to travel and meet senior people in different industries • Pay is generally quite goodrelative to entry level positions in other industries

  17. The MBA • What: 2 year program • Admissions based on resume, GPA, GMAT scores, work experience & essay responses • When: 3-5+ years after Undergrad • Why: • Exit Opportunities & alumni network • “Reset Button” • Top schools: • Harvard, University of Chicago, Wharton, Stanford, Northwestern, Columbia, Michigan, NYU, etc.

  18. The Buy Side: Private Equity & Hedge Funds • The Buy Side: No clients = less “fire drills” • Mostly only experienced hires & MBAs • Better pay & hours (sometimes) than investment banking • Private Equity: • Firm buys part or all of a company and later resells for a profit • Top firms: KKR, Blackstone, Apollo, TPG (more hours here) • Hedge Funds: • Comparable to Mutual Funds but more advanced strategies & exclusive • Thousands of HFs in the US • Positions: trading, risk management, quant analyst, fundamental analyst

  19. Upper Finance Courses • BMGT443 Equity Analysis & Portfolio Management • BMGT 444 Futures & Options Contracts • BMGT 445 Banking and Financial Institutions • BMGT 446 International Finance • Lemma Senbet Fund

  20. What Should I Be Doing Now? • Get some sort of experience (business preferred) the summers following your freshman and sophomore year • Start reading + become familiar with the terms! • Learn about the industries…the vault guides are a good place to start • Fellows Programs

  21. Resources • Available on HireSmith (for free) • Vault Guides • WetFeet • Mergers & Inquisitions (also have courses) • Wall St. Journal • Economist • Investor’s Business Daily

More Related