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UBS Lifts Junior Bankers’ Pay, Following Rivals on Wall Street

UBS Lifts Junior Bankers’ Pay, Following Rivals on Wall Street

UBS Group AG is lifting salaries for junior bankers, associates and directors in the U.S., making it the latest financial firm to boost pay in an effort to retain younger employees amid increased competition from buy-side and tech firms and crushing workloads from a surge in deals.

First-year analysts will now earn at least $100,000, matching pay at Deutsche Bank AG, Citigroup Inc., Barclays Plc and JPMorgan Chase & Co., while their second-year counterparts will make $105,000 and third-year analysts will bring in $110,000, according to a person with knowledge of the increase. The raises for U.S. employees at the Zurich-based bank will take effect Aug. 1, the person said, asking not to be identified because the information isn’t public. Associates will earn $175,000 to $225,000 and directors at least $275,000 after the raises, the person said.

UBS joins the slew of financial firms, which includes PJ Solomon and Guggenheim Partners, that have lifted base salaries for first-year bankers to $100,000 in a bid to stem defections of younger staff inundated by work. Mary Erdoes, chief executive officer of JPMorgan’s asset and wealth management business, defended such intense workloads, saying they were necessary to adequately train analysts starting out on Wall Street.

“If you think 10,000 hours is about what you need to master any subject, if someone comes in and has a regular, eight-hour-a-day job, five days a week, it’s gonna take about five years to have a base-level mastery,” she said in a Bloomberg Television interview. “On Wall Street, it’s more like 12 hours a day, six days a week. That cuts you down to about two and a half years before you become mastered in something.”

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