have a look atCookie182 said:Affinity- yea of course i get that completely- people think the word finance= million dollar salary.
I think wat i need (and im prob not alone- had a terrible careers advicer and it can be a confusing field) is a real run down on the Investment Banker's ACTUAL role. As in, i know that within a bank there is front and back office. Im talking about the market makers or trader (or are they different) and the quantitative skills they need. i said financial calculus as i thought they were using models lik the black-scholes model and pricing financial derivatives such as options and informing stockbrokers who find out on behalf of clients??? Or is there back office ppl doing that? Who makes the big salaries then and what maths is prerequisite for the front office traders????
http://www.macquarie.com.au/au/about_macquarie/company_profile/mgmt_organisation.htm
http://www.morganstanley.com/about/company/governance/orgchart.html
To get you started, from what I know,
Most money are made from advising on deals, mergers share and debt issues and that kind of thing most work would involve deciphering accounitng reports (to get meaningful numbers) then using available data to calculate things like cost of capital, rates of return, discounted cash flows and sometimes to forecast growth etc, then the big shots in the bank make an advice on whether to do things and how to do things to hmm clients. It is these people that "bankers" usually refer to.
Sometimes the bankers also gets specific requests for an exotic derivative product which gets passed on to competent people in the bank to price.
Then there are the asset managers (fund ppl , real estate etc) not quite sure about how those ones work.
Trading is probably not as hot. True, bonuses can be huge, but I heard the bottom 10% gets fired every year from some places. Ofcourse you can try it if you think you are up for the challenge.
There are also businesses such as brokerage, etc.