On a recent Saturday
afternoon, two college juniors were slumped down in their chairs at a local
lunch spot, nibbling at sandwiches and looking exhausted. Both of them went to
the same elite school, and both were enmeshed in one of the most exhausting and
time-consuming quests a student can subject himself to: the search for a Wall
Street summer internship.
“I went to two or three of my ten meetings for class this week,"
one of the juniors said. "One day, I had a first-round, a Superday, then
came back to campus for another first-round. But that's banking. If you can
handle the interviews, you can probably handle the job."
The students had both spent the past two-plus years checking
all the right boxes to become Wall Street interns. They had gotten themselves
admitted to so-called “target schools” (colleges at which big banks focus their
recruiting efforts) and once there, they’d racked up advanced finance and economics
classes, student leadership positions, and stellar grades. And now they were
mounting their attacks on the biggest banks on Wall Street — Goldman Sachs,
J.P. Morgan, Morgan Stanley, and a dozen more.
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