Sunday, October 17, 2010

How to make your 4th Year in a Finance Undergrad Count

So you've spent 3 years in your BComm and you've just started to get into the exciting stuff. You've cruised through your foundation accounting courses, and finally gotten through the marketing, ops man, and info tech courses that round out your BComm requirements. Now you get to finally get to the meat, advanced investments classes, fixed income, derivatives. Having just graduated, here's what I think makes the most powerful 4th year BComm if you want to move into a i-banking role, or back office investment role.

Lets start at the end of your 3rd year. Hopefully you've been very involved with finance and investment clubs so far, and have taken - and aced - every quant pre-req you could get your hands on. Also (unlike myself) hopefully you have interned at a firm and made a connection that will push your resume forward come September when Analyst recruiting starts. Either way at the end of your third year you need to strongly settle on your goals. What job do you actually want? Can you get it with a BCom education? Do you have a connection that will vouch for you come September - don't be fooled by those online applications, if you're shooting high enough they are merely a facade; all the hiring happens through personal recommendations. So line up your contacts, grab that internship and work your but off.

Even if you think you can get this job with an undergrad I'd hedge your bets. Take kaplans GMAT prep course in the evenings after-work during the summer and plan to write that ungodly demoralizing test sometime in September. Obviously if you've decided you want to be hard-core quant back office you're going to need a masters in financial engineering or financial economics and so you should be looking at either the GMAT or the GRE.

Come August start making your push for that September Analyst hire (they hire in September for a July start the following year). Reach out to your network and try applying to 5-10 of the top firms that hold your job of choice. Enroll in the CFA level one for a June test date and put it on your resume. If you've got the connections and/or the grades you'll get picked up, if not you're preparing for the +1 lap.

So assuming things didn't pan out, pour your heart into GMAT prep and try to grab a 700+ score. Then apply to an MSc program that will give you that added push (see previous post). Don't forget the extracurricular's; for me my GMAT was nothing to brag about but experience I had outside of class opened doors to the right MSc program. Finance specific stuff is a plus, especially research based. Get on a project with a prof, or your schools pension fund, and make it as quant heavy as possible. You want to be talking about modeling in your interview, not how you proof read some technical writing. Case competitions are good to hone public speaking, and they are usually a welcome break from the grind as they often involve travel.

If you can, line yourself up for 4th year Economics courses in modeling - Econometrics classes. These classes are often qualifying courses for Masters degrees in Economics and they are tough but extremely valuable. There is really only a couple of 'good' times to learn about heteroskedasticity, autocorrolation, GARSH models, unit roots parameters, and ridge regressions, and the leisurely pace of an undergrad class is one of them. Obviously knock yourself out with every finance course offered, and if you can stomach it, take intermediate accounting as well.

As the year trickles on apply for the November cycle of grad school apps and start plugging time into the CFA level 1. It will generally parallel your 4th year classes nicely but it takes a lot of time and to fail would unravel an important part of your whole brand package.

Looking like your hot shit to a firm is really all about momentum. Because many students - especially from mid teir schools - don't land in the September of their 4th year it's really easy to lose momentum when you know you're going to have a whole year between undergrad education and your eventual hire. If you can pack that time with as much finance as possible you'll A) commit mild social suicide amongst your non finance friends and B) look really hungry for a job, the hungrier the better in an employers eyes generally.

2 comments:

  1. I don't know if you will be notified of this comment, but I just read some of your posts and they are hilarious in a good way.

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  2. Entertainment on any level is what I shoot for!

    ReplyDelete