Wealth Management vs Corporate Banking? Need advice
I’m currently facing a career crossroads and would appreciate some guidance from the experienced members of this forum. I have received two job offers from midsize banks (similar to Lloyds, NatWest, etc.) - one in Wealth Management/Private Banking and the other as a Corporate Banking Analyst.
I’m trying to evaluate which path might be more beneficial in the long term, considering factors like salary potential, prestige within the finance industry, career progression opportunities, and exit options.
Could anyone share insights or experiences related to working in these fields? Which role typically offers better prospects for growth and fulfillment in the areas mentioned above?
When comparing Wealth Management/Private Banking and Corporate Banking, each path offers distinct advantages and career trajectories based on the WSO Dataset. Here's a breakdown to help you evaluate which might align better with your long-term career goals:
Wealth Management/Private Banking:
Corporate Banking:
Decision Factors:
Ultimately, both paths offer rewarding careers, but the best choice depends on your personal preferences, career aspirations, and lifestyle goals.
Sources: Private Wealth Management/Private Banking Guide for Associates, Is Corporate Banking that much worse than IB?, Why corporate banking instead of investment banking?, Q&A: Former MBB Consultant, https://www.wallstreetoasis.com/forum/investment-banking/corporate-banking-vs-management-consulting?customgpt=1
Been in corp banking for a bit less than a year and I don’t know much about wealth mgmt, so there are likely others who are more qualified to give advice.
That being said, I personally think corp banking has more optionality regarding potential exits (That is if you ever want to jump to another role - a lot of ppl in corp banking become career bankers).
Main tasks as a junior corp banker include making pitch decks, creating company/industry overviews, performing leverage analysis on clients, modeling loan returns, coordinating product teams, etc.
The primary product you will be working on is credit (TLs, RCFs) - for obvious reasons - but you will probably get some exposure to other services such as DCM, treasury sales, market derivatives, etc. How frequently you work on any of the previously mentioned products is going to be coverage-dependent (I know some teams that mainly work with credit and DCM while others focus almost entirely on treasury and derivatives).
Hours tend to be bank and coverage dependent. For example, my group prob averages 65 hours per week (which is about 15 hours less than what the IB does on avg) - but the overall sentiment is that most other banks tend to do less than that.
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