CAREERS IN FINANCE
In the United States well
over 1 million people work in financial services, and many others work in the
finance departments of corporations. We
can`t tell you what each person does all day, but we can give you some
idea of the variety of careers in finance. The nearby box summarizes the experience of a small sample of recent
(fictitious) graduates.
We explained earlier that
corporations face two principal financial decisions: the investment decision
and the financing decision. Therefore, as a
newly recruited financial analyst, you may help to analyze a major new
investment project. Or you may instead help to raise the money to pay for it, perhaps by a new issue of debt or by
arranging to lease the plant and equipment. Other financial analysts work on
short-term financial issues, such as
collecting and investing the company`s cash or checking whether customers are
likely to pay their bills. Financial analysts are also involved in monitoring and controlling risk.
For example, they may help to arrange insurance for the firm`s plant and
equipment, or they may assist with the
purchase and sale of options, futures, and other exotic tools for managing
risk.
Instead of working in the finance
department of a corporation, you may join a financial institution. The largest
employers are the commercial banks. We
noted earlier that banks collect deposits and relend the cash to corporations
and individuals. If you join a bank, at some point you may well work in a branch, where individuals and
small businesses come to deposit cash or to seek a loan. Alternatively, you may
be employed in the head office, helping to analyze a $100 million loan to a
large corporation.
Banks do many things in addition
to lending money, and they probably provide a greater variety of jobs than
other financial institutions. For
example, individuals and businesses use banks to make payments to each
other. So if you work in the cash management department of a large bank, you may help companies electronically
transfer huge sums of money as wages, taxes, and payments to suppliers. Banks
also buy and sell foreign exchange, so you could find yourself working in front
of one of those computer screens in a foreign exchange dealing room.
Another glamorous bank job is in the
derivatives group, which helps companies to manage their risk by buying and
selling options, futures, and so on.
This is where the mathematicians and the computer buffs thrive.
Investment banks, such as Merrill Lynch or Goldman Sachs, help companies sell their securities to investors. They
also have large corporate finance departments which assist firms in major
reorganizations such as takeovers. When
firms issue securities or try to take over another firm, frequently a lot of
money is at stake and the firms may need to move fast. Thus, working for an investment bank can be
a high-pressure activity with long hours. It can also be very well paid.
The distinction between
commercial banks and investment banks is narrowing. For example, commercial
banks may also be involved in new
issues of securities, while investment banks are major traders in
options and futures. Investment banks and commercial banks may even be owned by the same company; for example, Salomon
Smith Barney (an investment bank) and Citibank (a commercial bank) are both
owned by Citigroup.
Category: Corporate finance
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