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Young Money
Book

Young Money

Inside the Hidden World of Wall Street’s Post-Crash Recruits

Grand Central, 2014 подробнее...


Editorial Rating

7

Recommendation

New York magazine business writer Kevin Roose chronicles the lives of eight young Wall Street workers from 2010 to 2013. He changed their names to encourage them to share their honest thoughts and feelings about working for major investment banks. Their true stories feature common threads, notably the long working hours, handsome pay and mixed status of Wall Street analysts. The author also tells a bigger story about Wall Street. Major investment banks, which the public widely views as the primary movers behind the 2008 financial crisis, must change their approach to recruiting top college graduates. For example, the practice of hiring graduates as analysts for a grueling two-year tryout will become less common. Despite – or due to – the main characters’ anonymity, getAbstract recommends these portraits as a revealing look at post-crisis Wall Street.

Take-Aways

  • Wall Street firms treat every employee as expendable.
  • They hire top college graduates as analysts who work as many as 100 hours a week for two years and have no guarantee of a permanent job in year three.
  • However, young analysts who spend two years with a major investment banking firm gain many career options in finance.

About the Author

Kevin Roose is a business and technology writer for New York magazine. He covered Wall Street for the business section of The New York Times and wrote The Unlikely Disciple.


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