Rooms at the Fairmont Royal Pavilion, perched on the platinum beaches of Barbados, can run north of $1,000 a night. Catch the catamaran snorkel cruise in the morning; be back ashore in time for the royal afternoon tea.

For some employees of Houlihan Lokey Inc., an offer is now on the table: A five-night stay at this Caribbean retreat, on the investment bank’s dime—a reward after a year of record profits. It also represents a silent plea to the company’s junior employees: Please don’t quit.

That same prayer is echoing all around Wall Street, where rates of turnover and burnout among young workers are accelerating. Banks have tried to turn the tide with raises, bonuses, vacations and even free Pelotons. All that means it’s never been more lucrative to be a young banker in the U.S.

The problem though is that it’s also never been more lucrative for aspirants to work outside the gilded world of finance. And the gap between banks and other employers like technology firms has narrowed.

“Is it the best time to be a banker in terms of making money? Sure,” says executive recruiter Dan Miller of True Search. “Is it a horrible time in terms of lifestyle? Absolutely.”

A presentation prepared by 13 first-year analysts at Goldman Sachs Group Inc. earlier this year drove a reckoning across Wall Street after it shone a spotlight on the working conditions for junior bankers—some of them were toiling hundred hours a week while their physical and mental health suffered. Goldman responded by easing up on weekend hours and pledging to increase staff in its most-active businesses.

Yet some industry veterans have harsh words for those complaining about the workload. Cantor Fitzgerald’s Howard Lutnick has suggested some of the young workers who consider leaving finance might simply not be cut out for it. “Young bankers who decide they’re working too hard—choose another living,” he told Bloomberg TV earlier this month.

And bank analysts’ grueling workloads have remained, and in some cases gotten worse. As Covid-19 took hold of the nation last year, the mantra of “work hard, play hard” turned into “work hard, sit on your couch,” all while the economy ran hot and deals proliferated.

Frustrated and overworked, many of them turned to the anonymous ex-banker behind the popular finance-meme account “Litquidity” for support. In an interview, he said he was flooded with messages on Twitter and Instagram from young industry colleagues who were fed up and weighing whether the job was worth it.

Lit, as he calls himself, was at the time a senior associate in investment banking and knew all too well what they were going through. He, too, felt exhausted and stressed, and at one point went to see a doctor to check up concerning heart palpitations.

“You know the feeling when your stomach just sinks? I felt that in my heart,” he said by phone from New York’s Central Park. It’s probably stress-related, his doctor concluded. This past winter, Lit quit his job to focus on growing on the Litquidity brand and penning a daily newsletter. He says he's also working to launch a venture capital fund.

First « 1 2 » Next