Wall Street Revives Senior Banker Hiring as Confidence in M&A and IPOs Rises

Aug 27, 2025

Wall Street Sees Uptick in Senior Banker Hiring Amid Rebound in Dealmaking

NEW YORK, Aug 25 — A renewed wave of confidence in the U.S. economy is driving a resurgence in dealmaking activity—and Wall Street banks are staffing up to meet demand. After a sluggish start to 2025, triggered by uncertainty around new U.S. tariffs, investment banks are now aggressively recruiting senior talent.

JPMorgan Chase recently named Jerry Lee, a veteran from Goldman Sachs, as global chair of investment banking. Between January and April, JPMorgan hired over 300 professionals across its global banking business, including senior figures in tech, energy, and activism defense.

“It’s been an active summer in investment banking,” said Troy Rohrbaugh, co-CEO of JPMorgan’s commercial and investment bank. “We’re hiring strategically in sectors and geographies where we expect to grow our market share.”

Hiring traditionally spikes between January and April, after annual bonuses are distributed. However, the 2025 recruitment season was delayed by President Trump’s surprise tariff announcement, dubbed “Liberation Day,” which rattled markets and forced banks to hit pause on hiring.

“As markets calmed in July, banks resumed recruiting,” said Meridith Dennes of Prospect Rock Partners. “Many job openings that were on hold earlier this year quickly came back to life.”

Citigroup also made notable moves, hiring Guillermo Baygual and Drago Rajkovic as new co-heads of M&A, and Pankaj Goel as co-head of tech investment banking—all of whom previously worked at JPMorgan.

UBS added Taylor Henricks as its Americas M&A lead, joining a slew of other senior-level additions.

“There’s been no slowdown,” said Julian Bell of Sheffield Haworth. “We’ve been actively hiring all year.”

According to Johnson Associates founder Alan Johnson, senior-level hiring remains below the peaks of the last decade, but is steadily improving. Meanwhile, junior hiring surged in August, according to Tom Ragland of Harrison-Rush Group, who reported a 200% spike in inbound interest for associate and VP-level roles by mid-August, marking a sharp recovery from earlier in the year.

Subscribe
Notify of
guest
0 Comments
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments

You may also interested in