The Lure of Finance
Committing to an occupation that will consume 40 or more hours each week for decades is a fairly big decision.
LinkedIn research shows that millennials will change jobs four times on average before they reach age 32, job-hopping twice as often as Gen Xers and much more than earlier generations. Each job decision has an influence on the next — opening up new opportunities and closing off other career options.
Recently, I worked with Renée Adams, Brad Barber, and Terrence Odean on a CFA Institute Research Foundation paper to analyze how investment professionals (using CFA Institute members as proxies) consider work culture and values. Who enters the field, for what reasons, and what is important to them?
Among the questions we asked: At what age did members decide to pursue careers in finance? Four out of five respondents made the decision by 26, and one third by 22. We also examined the results by gender and found relatively few differences between men and women. Overall, the university years were critical.
The reasons to go into finance vary, of course. Aspiring finance professionals could be motivated as much by money and status as by more altruistic goals like helping clients achieve their financial objectives or fulfilling promises to pension fund participants.
But what is the catalyst that prompts the decision? We asked CFA Institute Financial NewsBrief readers what convinced them to work in the field.
Who or what most influenced you to enter finance?*
* Results do not add up to 100% due to rounding.
Coursework or an interest in finance was the most popular answer, garnering 51% of the 718 votes. When combined with the 4% of respondents who credited a professor, clearly this demonstrates the the post-secondary years are when people are ready to focus.
This intellectual curiosity drives many of the CFA charterholders I have met, and forthcoming CFA Institute Future of Finance research will look at the motivations of investment professionals and whether they consider their work a job, a career, or a calling.
There are worrying trends about the industry’s appeal, however. For example, there are signs of a brain drain from Wall Street to Silicon Valley, with more recently minted MBA graduates from top US schools going into technology careers rather than finance. In addition, wealth managers are currently finding it difficult to recruit, with one report indicating that the average financial adviser is now about 60 years old, while only 11% are younger than 35. That just 18% of CFA Institute members overall are women also highlights an industry-wide image problem.
Additional challenges include the popular perception of finance, which is increasingly negative, as everyone piles on. For example:
- The media and politicians are eager to cast the industry in a negative light. This is particularly ironic since both government and the media are trusted less than the financial sector, with only 43% and 49% of the general population, respectively, indicating they have faith in these fields. In comparison, after five years without a financial crisis, the finance industry has rebounded to a still-disappointing 51% trust rating.
- Regulators are turning their focus to the industry’s culture. See Andrew Lo’s paper “The Gordon Gekko Effect: The Role of Culture in the Financial Industry,” prepared for the New York Federal Reserve.
- Speaking of Gordon Gekko, movies like Wall Street continue to showcase financial villains. Though only 8% of poll respondents cited cultural references as their reason for entering the field, even those in finance are drawn to these dark stories. One of the most popular Enterprising Investor posts is “Top 20 Films about Finance: From Crisis to Con Men,” and the reactions it prompted are enlightening. Michael Douglas, who played Gordon Gekko, later became a spokesperson for the FBI, and author Michael Lewis has lamented the fact that his investigations into the negative aspects of finance have actually encouraged many to join the industry.
The real story, it seems, matters more, with 21% of poll respondents saying that friends and family in the industry convinced them to give finance a try. Facebook scientists have recently used their data to map the frequency of children following in their parents’ footsteps when it comes to careers, proving early influences make a difference.
Cultural expectations play a large role too, and with significant growth in the number of CFA candidates in China (about 50,000 during the last year) and India (about 20,000), this is worth consideration. My colleague Shreenivas Kunte, CFA, in Mumbai, notes that intense competition for the limited seats at top educational institutions is forcing aspirants in India to make career decisions at an increasingly younger age — typically at 14 or 15, and even earlier in some cases.
Furthermore, unlike the United States, where millennials are the first generation expected to do worse financially than their parents, the reverse is true in these markets. Finance is a field of great opportunity and is well represented among the world’s billionaires.
The least popular (2%) answer was guidance from a career adviser or a recruiter. These results aside, such resources can be valuable in any stage of professional life, and the CFA Institute Career Resources are worth a look when considering next steps or even new careers.
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All posts are the opinion of the author. As such, they should not be construed as investment advice, nor do the opinions expressed necessarily reflect the views of CFA Institute or the author’s employer.
The most important thing in a financial career is how you are able to bring liquidity ability, under any circumstances, without compromising the company’s resources.
If you can do that, then you really CFA true.