Wall Street is looking at lot more diverse -- at least for the summer.

This year’s crop of interns is Bank of America Corp.’s “most diverse group ever,” the lender told investors on its second-quarter earnings call. Women comprise 45 percent of the current class -- up from 42 percent in 2017 -- while non-white interns make up 55 percent. Goldman Sachs Group Inc. and Wells Fargo & Co. report similar numbers.

“What we’ve seen is a lot of our efforts kind of come into fruition,” Elizabeth Schoentube, Bank of America’s head of campus recruiting and program management, said in an interview. “We’re really focused on not just the internship, not just getting them to be analysts, but what’s the career path and how do we get this pipeline to be our future leadership bench?”

Women are already the majority of the Charlotte, North Carolina-based lender’s U.S. employees, making up 54 percent of its workforce in 2017. Employees of color comprised 45 percent, according to company filings. As with other big banks, gender and racial diversity decreases at the highest levels, with women in less than a third of executive and senior-level roles last year and non-whites in less than a fifth.

Friends, Family

The same trend plays out across Wall Street. Between 2012 and 2016, the percentage of black senior executives and managers declined at JPMorgan Chase & Co., Citigroup Inc. and Goldman Sachs Group Inc.

Big banks are relying less on the “friends and family and VIP network" to find interns, and have also moved to the model where most full-time hires come from the summer programs, said Andrea O’Neal of Management Leadership for Tomorrow, an organization that works with companies to increase diversity. Bank of America, for example, hired more than 70 percent of its 2017 intern class as full-time employees.

“Students that are being locked out of the internship experience are effectively locked out of the industry," O’Neal said. “That pipeline and how it’s constricted, or not, is setting the longer-term diversity and inclusion strategy for the firm. You have to get people in the door first.”

At Goldman Sachs, nearly half of its summer class were women and a majority were ethnically diverse. “The firm’s intern program serves as our primary source of talent for entry-level hiring, and we are focused on building a class that is as diverse as and represents the communities in which we live and work," spokeswoman Leslie Shribman said in a statement.

Gender Split

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