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Corporate financier: Job description and activities

Job description

Corporate financiers provide a range of financial services to companies, institutions and governments. They manage corporate, strategic and financial opportunities, including mergers, acquisitions, issuing bonds and shares, lending, privatisations, and overseeing initial public offerings (IPOs). Corporate financiers advise and lead management buyouts, provide strategic advice to clients, and identify and secure new deals.

Investment banking is frequently used as a catch-all term. In reality, banks are made up of many divisions and investment bankers perform a range of different functions. Traditionally, investment banking incorporates corporate finance and mergers and acquisitions (M&A). The definition has blurred in recent years and may also include trading bonds and shares.

Typical work activities

The main role of corporate financiers is to advise companies, institutions and governments on how to achieve their financial goals and implement their plans. Corporate financiers work in dedicated teams, focusing on specific transactions or market sectors. A typical corporate finance deal involves two stages:

  • Origination: assessing a deal's desirability, which is sometimes an innovative idea from the bank rather than the client. Financial models are used to simulate possible outcomes (this requires a deep understanding of a sector).
  • Execution: structuring and negotiating the detailed terms of a deal, often in liaison with other professionals.

Many investment banks deal in three main areas:

  • Mergers and acquisitions (M&A): assisting clients with expansion to increase profitability, safeguard market position, diversify, etc. Investment bankers manage the transaction process, assessing the target organisation and the impact of the deal. This involves knowledge of legal and regulatory issues.
  • Debt capital markets: working with lenders such as financial institutions, agencies and public and private companies to support client debt. This includes restructuring debt, refinancing debt and raising new debt.
  • Equity capital markets: advising clients on how much capital to raise, from whom and when.

Although dealing with different, specific business areas, project teams liaise with one another during the two phases of a deal in order to obtain relevant specialist information and market intelligence.

Typical activities on a day-to-day basis include:

  • thoroughly researching market conditions and developments;
  • identifying new business opportunities;
  • carrying out financial modelling, then developing and presenting appropriate financial solutions to clients;
  • liaising with the chief executive and chief finance officer of large organisations;
  • structuring marketing campaigns for transactions;
  • co-ordinating teams of professionals, including accountants, lawyers and PR consultants.
 
AGCAS
Written by Laura Rose, London School of Economics and Political Science
Last updated:
April 2008

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