Investment Banking Managing Director: Careers, Salaries, Hours & Exits (2024)

Investment Banking Managing Director: Careers, Salaries, Hours & Exits (1)

“Then happy low, lie down! / Uneasy lies the head that wears a crown.”

(Henry IV, Part 2, Act III, Sc. 1)

When you think about the investment banking Managing Director, your first thought may be a gorilla swinging through the jungle, devouring food and crushing the Analyst monkeys.

But if you want a more accurate view of the role, you should think about Henry IV’s state of mind from the soliloquy above.

Having deposed the former king, Richard II, he now faces betrayal from the same noble families that initially supported his claim to the throne.

Confronted with rebelling Welsh, Scots, and Englishmen, plus the French to the south, Henry is so stressed that he can no longer sleep at night.

He then realizes the great irony: thousands of his poorest subjects can fall asleep, while “nature’s soft nurse” continues to elude him.

And that’s an apt summary of the Managing Director job in investment banking: yes, you’re “the King,” but you may not get much sleep at night.

The Investment Banking Managing Director: Job Description

Managing Directors have one goal: to make it rain. They spend their time winning deals and clients, meeting companies, and developing relationships, and they’re frequently on the road doing that.

They are responsible for winning most of the , capital markets, and restructuring deals a bank executes – so, they are also responsible for most of its investment banking revenue.

Sometimes MDs get involved in deal marketing and negotiations, especially for high-profile clients that require special finesse, but they spend far less time on project management than VPs.

An MD’s average day is filled with tasks such as:

  • Meeting with new companies that might become clients in the future, listening to their concerns, and answering their questions.
  • Meeting with existing clients and subtly convincing them to do deals or updating them on overall market activity.
  • Pitching companies and competing against other banks to win deals in “bake-offs” or “beauty pageants.”
  • Meeting with private equity and venture capital firms to discuss their portfolio companies and which ones might need to sell, go public, or raise capital.
  • Meeting with VPs and SVPs to discuss deals, potential deals, and internal matters such as recruiting.

Notice how 4 out of 5 of these bullets start with the word “meeting.”

That’s intentional because an MD’s life is a series of meetings. It would be exceptionally rare for an MD to jump into Excel, Word, or PowerPoint to create documents, but they may make minor edits occasionally.

MDs still check and review deliverables, but only after the Associates and VPs have already done the initial checks.

As described in the article on the Vice President role, MDs have more autonomy than VPs and spend less time on execution, such as revisions of pitch books and CIMs.

At smaller banks, such as regional boutiques, MDs spend more time on traditional “sourcing” activities (conferences, cold emails, networking via referrals, etc.) because smaller banks always need new clients.

At larger banks, MDs spend more time servicing the bank’s existing clients, maintaining relationships, and casually pitching ideas to clients.

It’s hard to say whether the job is more or less difficult than a VP’s job, but it is a narrower one.

If you’re not great at multitasking, but you’re very good at doing one thing over and over again, you might do well as an MD – even if your VP job was a struggle.

On the other hand, if you think being a full-time networker and relationship manager is boring, then you should stay far away from this role.

Investment Banking MD Hours

On paper, Managing Directors have the best hours of any banker, with a likely range of 50-60 hours per week.

Just one small problem: those hours also include travel, and there’s a lot of it at this level.

The percentage depends on the bank size, the group (industry vs. product), and the office location, but it’s not unusual for bankers at this level to be on the road 50% of the time.

On the lower end, a product group MD that manages existing relationships and who is also in a big financial center might travel only 20-30% of the time.

But just like consultants, MDs also return home on weekends, so it’s plausible to have a family/social life at this level.

Why Would You Want to Become an MD?

Nearly all MDs are promoted internally, from the ranks of Senior Vice Presidents (SVPs) or Executive Directors (EDs) at the bank.

So, if you’re in a position to become an MD, you should already know that there is only one good reason to go for it: because you want to make a long-term career out of investment banking and stay in the role for at least 10 years.

In reality, most MDs do not even make it to the 2-year mark because of the enormous pressure to generate revenue, and only a small percentage of those who start as Analysts make it to the MD level (5-10%?).

So, you have to ask yourself if the potential payout – earning millions of dollars per year – is worth the pressure and the high chance of failure.

If you’re the rare person who gets hired as an MD as an outsider, then you need to figure out the nature of the role because these jobs may have somewhat different responsibilities (e.g., Rahm Emanuel’s stints in investment banking).

Investment Banking MD Salary (and Bonus)

Base salaries are in the mid-six-figure range, with total compensation in the high six figures to low seven figures.

An MD doing decently should earn at least $1 million per year, and sometimes a low multiple of that; the average range is probably $1 – $3 million.

A normal MD is unlikely to earn $10 or $20 million in a normal year; they would need to be even more senior (e.g., Group Head) for that to be plausible.

At the bulge-bracket banks, a significant percentage of an MD’s compensation is deferred or paid in stock.

That’s why it doesn’t make sense to stay in the role for only 1-2 years – you might lose out on the majority of your bonus(es). And I’m guessing it’s also why Rahm Emanuel joined Centerview rather than Goldman Sachs…

A Day in the Life: What Does a Managing Director Do?

To illustrate this one, we’ll use the same day as in the Analyst, Associate, and VP articles, but change the perspective to the Managing Director instead:

8:00 AM – 9:00 AM: Do an internal conference call with MDs in other offices to review the group’s overall pipeline and some potential new deals.

In theory, everyone is supposed to weigh in and informally “approve” deals; in practice, fees trump everything. You’re skeptical of one of the newer MDs who’s presenting high-fee-potential-but-also-highly-unlikely deals.

9:00 AM – 10:30 AM: You read a few emails from contacts at venture capital firms, and they’re suggesting that you meet with a few of their newer portfolio companies.

You read up on a recent industry conference, cross-reference it with their suggestions, and then have your assistant request meetings, following this soft introduction.

10:30 AM – 11:30 AM: You invite a promising VP to join you for a pitch about a bolt-on acquisition for a private equity firm’s portfolio company.

The PE firm is skeptical of this company’s merits, but you know they desperately need to turn this portfolio company’s fortunes around, so you persist.

11:30 AM – 2:00 PM: You head to lunch with the CEO of a client company that previously hired your bank to run acquisitions for it.

It’s supposed to be a short, 1-hour meeting with 30 minutes of transportation time, but this CEO keeps going on tangents and talking about his personal life, and you have to indulge him – at least if you want the potential for $20 million in fees in a few years.

2:00 PM – 3:30 PM: Back at the office, you conduct a series of calls with clients that are considering convertible bond issuances this year.

Low prevailing interest rates mean that investment-grade companies can issue zero-coupon bonds in many cases, which is quite appealing, so you make brief pitches and leave a few voicemails.

3:30 PM – 4:30 PM: The negotiations to finalize the Definitive Agreement in a fairly important M&A deal are about to fall through.

You have a relationship with the CEO of the buyer, so you call him and the CEO of the seller and try to get everyone on the same page. The buyer wants a 3% termination fee, while the seller is willing to accept only a 2% fee, so this shouldn’t be that difficult… but you make little progress this time around.

4:30 PM – 5:30 PM: You conduct a job interview with an MD from another bank that your office is trying to poach.

He could boost the office’s fee revenue by at least 10%, but he’s also demanding significantly higher compensation than any of the current MDs, so it’s “wait and see” for now.

5:30 PM – 7:00 PM: You meet up with the staffer, a VP, and an Associate to discuss the office’s new hires this year.

Some have performed well in their first few months, but 1-2 of the Analysts and Associates seem unengaged and error-prone so far.

7:00 PM – 7:30 PM: The VP stays behind, and you vent to him over the CEO with all the personal issues from earlier in the day. He’s clearly bored by these complaints, but you’re the senior banker who determines his bonus, so he has to stay and listen.

Then you strategize with him about a few other deals and head home.

This day may not seem “difficult,” and in some sense, it’s not: you didn’t have to perform open-heart surgery or rescue children from a burning building.

But the payoff from most of these tasks is unknown, and it often happens far into the future.

That said, you can’t just wait around for 5-10 years to get results with everything; you need evidence of potential fee revenue in the next 1-2 years if you want to stay employed.

How to Get Promoted to Managing Director at a Bank

As with VP-level promotions, technical skills do not matter at all.

What matters is your ability to get companies to sign on the line that is dotted.

If you’re bringing in deals and generating the required fee income as an ED or SVP, then you should have a good idea of whether or not you’ll be promoted.

The tricky part, though, is that the promotion process is not 100% based on your performance.

At most banks, existing MDs survey other senior bankers at the firm and ask everyone for their opinions of you.

Therefore, you need to make yourself “known” to people in positions of power elsewhere, and you need to avoid negative stories and hearsay at all costs.

Even if you perform well, you won’t get promoted if the most senior executives dislike your style, or if you caused some controversy (real or imagined) in previous years.

The Investment Banking Managing Director Job: Right for You?

As usual, this is the wrong question to ask because no one “chooses” to become an MD.

You start in IB, work your way up, and then stay in the field, switch firms, or switch industries.

It is impossible to know in advance how good you’ll be because the MD job does not use a common, everyday skill set.

So, my answer goes back to the point above: only take the job if you’re in it for the long-haul, ideally 10+ years.

It takes a long time to see a payoff from all the relationship building, office politicking, and deals that go nowhere – plus, you’ll give up significant deferred compensation if you leave early.

The biggest mistake I see is that students and career changers tend to think about the Managing Director job, and the investment banking career path in general, in terms of “hours and lifestyle.”

The thought process often goes like this: “Well, I’ll have crazy hours in my 20’s, but if I can become an MD by my mid-30’s, it will be worth it since I’ll make over $1 million per year and will work only 50-60 hours per week. And then I can do it for a few years and retire when I’m 40.”

The problem here is that hours and lifestyle are useful metrics only for similar, entry-level jobs.

The nature of the investment banking Managing Director job and the sources of stress are so completely different that it’s ridiculous to view it through a $ per hour lens.

So, yes, you may be King, and you won’t be pulling all-nighters at this level – but that doesn’t mean you’ll be able to sleep easily, either.

Uneasy lies the head that wears a crown.

For Further Reading

You might be interested in The Investment Banking Vice President: The Toughest Job at a Bank?

Investment Banking Managing Director: Careers, Salaries, Hours & Exits (2024)

FAQs

How many hours do managing directors work? ›

On paper, Managing Directors have the best hours of any banker, with a likely range of 50-60 hours per week.

How much does a managing director at an investment bank make? ›

What Is Investment Banking?
RoleBase Salary ($)Average Year-End Bonus (% of base)
Associate$150,000 - $200,00050% - 100%
Vice President (VP)$200,000 - $225,00050% - 150%
Senior Vice President (SVP)$250,000 - $500,000> 100%
Managing Director (MD)$400,000 - $600,000> 100%
2 more rows

How long does it take to become a managing director at an investment bank? ›

To many who love their jobs, the path is worth it, particularly given the wealth and prestige that comes with the title. Emolument. "It Takes Over 12 Years to Become an Investment Bank Managing Director."

How long does it take to become a managing director? ›

Another critical step to becoming a managing director is to gain extensive professional experience in your field. Often, managing director positions require at least 10 years of management experience along with additional industry experience. Therefore, it's important to start building your work history.

How much do MDs at Goldman Sachs make? ›

What are Top 10 Highest Paying Cities for Goldman Sachs Managing Director Jobs
CityAnnual SalaryMonthly Pay
San Francisco, CA$133,437$11,119
Beverly Hills, CA$131,710$10,975
San Jose, CA$128,398$10,699
Benicia, CA$126,830$10,569
6 more rows

How many MDs are at Goldman Sachs? ›

The MD layoffs come ahead of a new round of managing director promotions at Goldman in November 2023. Given that each Goldman MD earns a salary alone of $400k, 125 cuts represents fixed cost savings of circa $50m. Goldman is thought to have 2,000 MDs in total; the cull represents just 6% of the MD class.

How much do MDS at JP Morgan make? ›

Total Salary Range for J.P. Morgan Managing Director

The estimated total pay range for a Managing Director at J.P. Morgan is $374K–$691K per year, which includes base salary and additional pay. The average Managing Director base salary at J.P. Morgan is $298K per year.

How much do MDS at Jefferies make? ›

The average Managing Director base salary at Jefferies is $325K per year. The average additional pay is $199K per year, which could include cash bonus, stock, commission, profit sharing or tips. The “Most Likely Range” reflects values within the 25th and 75th percentile of all pay data available for this role.

How many managing directors are at JP Morgan? ›

JPMorgan has about 1,600 managing directors, according to 2019 CNBC report.

How old are managing directors at investment banks? ›

The Investment Banking Career Path
Position TitleTypical Age RangeTimeframe for Promotion
Associate25-353-4 years
Vice President (VP)28-403-4 years
Director / Senior Vice President (SVP)32-452-3 years
Managing Director (MD)35-50N/A
1 more row

How long does it take to become managing director at J.P. Morgan? ›

They must also spend long years on conspicuous extracurricular activities like charity and diversity work. None of this is easy. In the past, FN says it was common to spend five years as an executive director before being promoted to MD at JPMorgan, now it's more like seven to eight.

At what age do investment bankers retire? ›

When do investment bankers retire? This varies widely. But on average, the oldest full-time execs I saw were in their early to mid-50s. A banker's retirement age (much like that of any profession) really depends on what his motivations are.

How much do ib MDs make? ›

The “all-in” comp for investment banking managing directors (MDs) ranges from just under $1 million to several million dollars. The compensation is comprised of both a base and bonus component: Base Salary: $350,000 to $600,000 at most bulge bracket and boutique investment banks.

What is the average age of a managing director? ›

Zippia's data science team found the following key facts about managing directors after extensive research and analysis: There are over 86,175 managing directors currently employed in the United States. 26.5% of all managing directors are women, while 73.5% are men. The average managing director age is 44 years old.

Which is higher, GM or MD? ›

A managing director is a senior-level partner that works directly with the CEO. A general manager works closely with their team/department. A managing director is tasked with meeting company goals and creating new programs or ventures. A general manager is tasked with meeting project goals.

What is the average hours worked for a director? ›

On average, Operations Directors often work between 45 to 60 hours per week.

What does a managing director do day to day? ›

The MD oversees the whole organisation and drives it forward: from the company vision, business growth and finances, to client relationships, production and the wellbeing of the team.

What is the duration of managing director? ›

Conditions for Appointment of a Managing Director

In such a case, the explanatory statement annexed to the notice for passing such a resolution should state the justification for appointing such a person. The maximum tenure for the appointment of a managing director is five years at a time.

Do Managing Directors make a lot of money? ›

According to Glassdoor, a managing director's base pay averages $170,622 annually, with an additional payment (bonus and profit sharing) of $193,638.

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