Posts Tagged ‘banking’

How times have changed?

February 11th, 2010

Can you imagine a firm being in your family’s hands for almost THREE HUNDRED YEARS? Could you imagine that you’re ancestors helped the British government finance its anti-Napoleon campaign, especially the Battle of Waterloo, through the use of different bonds (notably consols, or bonds that provide coupon payments indefinitely)? That’s the story of the Rothschild’s, the worlds most powerful and successful Jewish family. Also, the Rothschild’s are usually considered the most successful banking dynasty in history.

Since the founding of the British arm’s firm (appropriately N M Rothschild & Sons) in 1811, the family’s influence in London and the surrounding European nations has grown considerably. The family firm is about to make a change and it’s related to its historical nepotistic policies, in which only family members hold leadership positions. For the first time ever, to modernize its operations, the firms CEO will not hold the last name of de Rothschild, but Higgins. Nigel Higgins, has been with the firm for 27 years, and yet it should come as a shock, considering the power that this family, with it’s five original branches held over the world of finance. They even financed the Suez Canal . . .

What I’m getting at is that times are changing. People’s careers are being made, while others are falling apart. Pay attention to what is going on around you, because here you have an extraordinarily powerful and intelligent group of individuals admitting that they need leadership to conquer the current financial minefield.

http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/92795dda-15e3-11df-b65b-00144feab49a.html

Banking and its Future

January 28th, 2010

So I work at City Hall for Mayor Bloomberg. One of my coworkers, as it turns out, used to work at Goldman Sachs, the eponymous firm which represents success in the financial industry. I was surprised, and I’m sure many of you are wondering why this individual is not there today. All I can say is that I know he didn’t want to continue a Wall Street career. I’m banking-friendly, and by that, I want to hint at the fact that I don’t mind what banks do (as long as I’m not being screwed over), but at this point, with a hit on compensation packages, people begin to question the career choice. If I get a banking internship this summer (I know, a long-shot, but still a possibility), I’ll accept the offer, since I’m more than eager to learn about the financial services industry and its products. Plus, the people that I’ve networked with are some of my coolest friends.

For the rest of the world though, is banking losing its shining luster? Will NYU Stern’s golden reputation mean nothing as the “dream careers” cycle back to law and medicine? The economic power of the banking industry is nothing but marvelous, but will it shrink? What will happen to these massive “too-big-to-fail” firms? For instance, I recently read that Goldman Sachs should go private again to get out of the spotlight and have control over employee pay again. These questions we all want answers to, the same way we want to know where we’ll all be in ten years, and I want to know one thing: will banking be the right career choice for me?

In other economics news, John Sexton apparently moderated at Davos, Felis Rohatyn, André Meyer’s (as in Meyer Hall) controversial successor at Lazard Frères, and the G-d of M&A has returned as an advisor, and the City budget was presented in the Blue Room today!