{"text":[[{"start":3.94,"text":"The 22-year-old Wall Street graduate trainee: hot commodity, or tragic victim of artificial intelligence? At the moment, the answer is both."}],[{"start":14.68,"text":"Earlier this week, Navid Mahmoodzadegan — incoming CEO of the boutique investment bank Moelis & Co. — intimated that AI tools could take on much of the grunt work currently done by human number crunchers and PowerPoint makers. Adopted smartly, he said, AI could rationalise “the size of our pyramid”."}],[{"start":35.16,"text":"That sounds at odds with private equity’s frenzied recruitment of junior bankers. The peculiar custom of offering jobs that start two years hence to new employees of sell-side firms led to complaints from JPMorgan boss Jamie Dimon. Apollo Global Management and General Atlantic have, in response, paused this practice of time-delayed poaching."}],[{"start":60.449999999999996,"text":"Knowledge industries such as investment and dealmaking are inherently about human judgment. But the lower-level training that cultivates those skills can increasingly be outsourced to algorithms. As Mahmoodzadegan notes, investors and boards want to see technology used to bring down expenses."}],[{"start":80.33,"text":"Banker pay is, naturally, one of the biggest outlays. Moelis and its closest rivals consistently hand employees 70 per cent or more of total revenue. The historical norm of 55 per cent is almost impossible to achieve today as investment banks expand into novel areas such as advising on private credit financings, or selling stakes in earlier private equity deals."}],[{"start":107.52,"text":"Junior talent, though, happens to be relatively cheap — perhaps $200,000 a year for an analyst. It is hard to see how taking on fewer trainees could offset multimillion dollar guarantees given to managing directors. "}],[{"start":124.66,"text":"Private equity’s pitch to early-career financiers is fairly compelling, and consists of more money and potentially more interesting work. Private equity firms are also more thinly staffed and less focused on churning out PowerPoints. For them, day-to-day operating costs such as junior salaries are less consequential."}],[{"start":null,"text":"
