Investment Banking Major: How to Pick the Best One (2024)

Many high-school and university students with an interest in finance naturally ask, “What’s the best college major for investment banking?”

The answer to this question has changed over the years, and these changes have made your university major less important and more important at the same time.

In theory, you can get into investment banking with “any” major.

In practice, however, you maximize your chances of winning internships and eventual investment banking roles by picking from a small set of highly relevant majors:

Investment Banking Major: Assumptions and Constraints

In this article, I am making a few important assumptions:

  1. You have to pay for your degree, either upfront or by borrowing money.
  2. You are attending a relatively expensive school that will cost tens of thousands of dollars or $100K+.
  3. University degrees will continue to be required for jobs in finance, especially in the most competitive fields, such as investment banking and private equity.
  4. You are interested in a finance career, but you also want a good “Plan B” in case you graduate during a market crash or recession, or you decide against finance.
  5. You are a practical, logical person who wants to achieve a decent ROI on the time and money you spend on the degree.

Some of these assumptions may not be true for you.

For example, maybe you have wealthy parents who are paying for your degree, or you’re in a country where higher education is free or very cheap.

Or maybe you have a philosophical objection to this concept because you believe that a university education should offer “learning for the sake of learning.”

Or maybe you believe that the entire university system will collapse, so official degrees will no longer be required, and trade schools will take over, similar to what happened for electricians and plumbers.

If that’s you, please stop reading right here. You might be right about your views or predictions, but this article is not for you.

Instead, we’re going to focus on the average person’s reality:

Investment Banking Major: Why Does It Matter At All?

A long time ago, your university major mattered because:

  1. Undergraduate-level recruiting took place later, so more of your grades came from your major, and
  2. There were fewer ways to learn accounting and financial modeling independently.

But both of these have changed over time.

The IB recruiting timeline is now hyper-accelerated, there are far more self-study options, and careers in “high finance” have become less appealing vs. ones in technology, sales, or even real estate.

And even if you start early and do everything right, the randomness and timing of the recruiting process mean that you might end up without an IB offer.

So, your major matters for three main reasons:

  1. You need to earn a good GPA – You need at least a 3.5, and ideally over 3.7 if you’re at a lesser-known school, to have the best shot at winning interviews. A low GPA is the most difficult weakness to overcome in interviews, so you don’t want to pick something that makes your grades plummet.
  2. You want to signal that you’re competent and intelligent, and a major that’s at least moderately difficult will give this impression.
  3. Your major is now more important for “Plan B” options in case you graduate into a market crash or recession or you decide against finance.

A few other important points include:

  • If you’re an international student studying in the U.S., you want a degree that qualifies as STEM so you can stay in the country and work for 36 months after graduation. Many degrees count as STEM, including some that are a bit of a stretch.
  • Regardless of your official major, you should take classes where you learn practical skills that you can apply directly to high-paying jobs.
  • Finally, you don’t want a major that crowds out time for other activities, such as networking, internships, and student groups.

Based on all of that, I recommend the following as the “best investment banking major” (or “study plan”):

  • Major: Accounting/finance (or, if your university doesn’t have these specific majors, something that has coursework in these areas).
  • Minor: Computer science, math, or statistics.
  • You should also consider taking at least 1-2 writing or communication-intensive classes because plenty of students are good with numbers, but many of them cannot communicate with other humans.
  • If you’re an international student, you may have to flip the order so your major qualifies as “STEM.”

Why This Major/Minor Combination?

This combination is best because it:

  • Gives you the skills required for finance careers.
  • Makes you seem competent/intelligent.
  • And gives you good “Plan B” options in case you decide against finance.

It should not be overly difficult to earn a decent GPA, and if you run low on free time, you can drop the official minor and make it a few extra classes instead.

Also, you can front-load the easier classes in your first 1-2 years to boost your GPA by the time you apply for internships.

If you want to be a quant, you can flip the order and pick math or CS for your major and accounting/finance for your minor.

Here’s why each specific component in this plan matters:

  • Significant Accounting Coursework: Accounting is, by far, the most important “technical skill” for investment banking, private equity, and many hedge funds. And a lot of mid-level and senior bankers don’t understand it that well!
  • One or Two Corporate Finance Classes: Most universities do not offer courses that delve into the real “corporate finance” work done in IB/PE roles (i.e., valuation and modeling transactions), so you should stop with the basics of corporate finance before getting into the weeds.
  • Math/Statistics/Computer Science Background: You don’t need to be an expert, but these skills will be applicable in almost any field. You should understand basic programming concepts (control structures, data structures, recursion, memory, etc.) and math through calculus and linear algebra.
  • One or Two Writing/Communication-Intensive Classes: You spend a lot of time reading and writing documents, calling people, and conducting meetings in finance and also in sales, product management, and real estate.

Finally, if you decide against finance after completing a sequence of internships or an official IB internship, this plan will give you other options:

  • Tech Companies: Product management, sales, data science, or potentially even programming (but you may need a deeper background for the latter two).
  • Finance-Related Areas: Fintech and real estate are always solid options. Maybe even consulting, if you feel like earning less and living in hotels. Then there are Big 4 firms and others in “professional services” that look for similar skills.
  • Non-Finance, Non-Tech Companies: You could also join a normal company in a corporate finance, corporate strategy, or project management role.

You won’t be the ideal candidate to win the most technical jobs with this combination, and you also won’t be in the best position to win the most sales-y jobs.

But you will have a lot of flexibility for roles in between those two extremes.

“But Wait! I Want to Study Literature! Or History! Or Gender Studies!”

I hear you.

Even though I was a Computer Science major, I almost picked History or Literature, and I’ve been rereading all of Shakespeare’s plays this year (for fun).

But I don’t think it’s a great idea to pick something in the liberal arts or social sciences if your goal is a high-paying job immediately after graduation.

If you’re at an elite university (the Ivy League and similar schools in the U.S.; Oxbridge in the U.K., etc.), you might be able to pull this off because your university’s reputation is far more important than your major.

But if you’re at even a moderately-lesser-known school, whether a “semi-target” or a complete non-target for banks, it’s a bad idea.

Bankers might be able to vouch for an English Literature major from Harvard, but they’d be a lot more skeptical about a similar candidate from Podunk U.

Other Investment Banking Major Mistakes to Avoid

Double and triple majors are bad ideas because they will drag down your GPA and reduce your free time.

Bankers will not be impressed if you earned a 3.1 cumulative GPA and had lower grades because of a triple major – they’d rather hire someone who earned a 3.7 with one major and who also had good internships.

Finally, Economics is not a good choice unless your school offers absolutely nothing else related to Accounting or Finance.

Not only is it questionable to call macroeconomics a “science,” but it has very little to do with the daily work in IB, PE, or tech careers.

Maybe if you are interested in asset management or portfolio management or something broader, Economics could be more applicable…

…but it’s still more useful to know accounting and the financial statements like the back of your hand.

How To Combine Your Major With Activities And Internships

We have a few examples of how to combine your major with activities and internships in the article on how to get an investment banking internship.

In short, you need to win finance-related internships early (Year 1 and the summer after) so you can set yourself up for IB and related roles – or rule them out quickly.

You don’t need to commit to a specific major in the beginning; you just need something by the time recruiting for Year 3 internships begins.

Your Investment Banking Major: What Next?

Questions about the “best” major never go away, but most advice about this topic is somewhat off.

Banks do hire from all majors, and some majors are more relevant to finance than others.

But these points ignore the true importance of your major: allowing you to earn good grades while appearing competent and intelligent and gaining a useful skill set that gives you “Plan B” options.

But as I said in the beginning, if someone else is paying for your degree, your education is “free,” or you don’t care about practicality, feel free to do what you want.

I hear the Gender Studies department is recruiting.

Read More

If you liked this article, you might be interested in:

  • How To Get Into Investment Banking
  • Investment Banking Target Schools: Lists by Region and What to Do If You’re Not at One
  • The Investment Banking Certification: The Most Useless Idea in the World?
  • Master’s in Finance Programs: The Best Last-Minute Path into Investment Banking?
Investment Banking Major: How to Pick the Best One (2024)
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