Discover your dream Career
For Recruiters
Are you spending your salary and your bonus just to sustain your lifestyle?

Why it's hard to be a banker on a salary alone

People who don't work in finance think bankers are all inordinately rich. This isn't necessarily the case - especially at the start.

When I started out in banking in 1999 I was on a $40k salary. I’m not quite sure how I survived on that in NY City, but I did. I certainly wasn't living the "banking life." I was subsisting: staying late and having dinner at work on weekdays to save money. Sometimes I'd have dinner at work on weekends too - for the same reason.

I know people live on less, but it's not easy. After tax, $40k doesn't go far in NYC. My entire paycheck was spent almost before it hit my bank account.

Fortunately, though, there was also a bonus. Back then, I used my bonuses to pay down my college loans. My salary was for living (frugally); my bonuses were for reducing my debts. Within a few years, those bonuses meant I paid my college debts off in full.

As time went on, my salary rose. From $40k, it went to $100k and then to $150k. Given my past frugal habits, you might've thought I'd be able to save money from this higher salary, but I didn't. I started spending more. In fact, I started spending my whole salary and even using a proportion of my bonus to cover my monthly expenses.

Sadly, this is a pretty common theme in finance. When you work in banking, your salary and your bonus often go up linearly, but your expenses and your cost of living go up exponentially (especially when you have children).

It's called the burn rate - the rate at which you burn through your money. When I was in banking, my burn rate was $175k+. That's low: even when I was spending "big" I was still pretty frugal. I have friends whose burn rates are $350k+: they need to earn $650k just to stay flat. Very few banks will pay you a $650k salary, so once you hit that level you're almost certainly using your bonus too.

How does this happen? Tom Wolfe gives a steer in Bonfire of the Vanities. His banker protagonist, Sherman McCoy recalls where he spent last year’s paycheck, and it goes like this:

I’m already going broke on a million dollars a year! The appalling figures came popping up into his brain. Last year his income had been $980,000. But he had to pay out $21,000 a month for the $1.8 million loan he had taken out to buy the apartment. What was $21,000 a month to someone making a million a year? That was the way he had thought of it at the time-and in fact, it was merely a crushing, grinding burden-that was all! It came to $252,000 a year, none of it deductible, because it was a personal loan, not a mortgage. (The cooperative boards in Good Park Avenue Buildings like his didn’t allow you to take out a mortgage on your apartment.) So, considering the taxes, it required $420,000 in income to pay the $252,000. Of the $560,000 remaining of his income last year, $44,400 was required for the apartment’s monthly maintenance fees; $116,000 for the house on Old Drover’s Mooring Lane in Southampton ($84,000 for mortgage payment and interest, $18,000 for heat, utilities, insurance and repairs, $6,000 for lawn and hedge cutting, $8,000 for taxes.[…more expenses I don’t feel like typing out…] The tab for furniture and clothes had come to about $65,000; and there was little hope of reducing that, since Judy was, after all, a decorator and had to keep things up to par. The servants…came to $62,000 a year…the abysmal truth was that he had spent more than $980,000 last year. Well, obviously he could cut down here and there-but not nearly enough-if the worst happened!  

Sherman was on the hedonic treadmill. I've written about it here before: it's very easy to get on and very difficult to get off.  When you're on it, you find yourself not just wanting but needing certain things. Things you think you can’t do without. A better house, a better car, summer in the Hamptons or the south of France, nights out, new clothes, a second home.

I see it all the time. It's not your fault: it's the human condition. Humans quickly adapt to circumstances and then want more. We look around and see our friends doing something and it becomes normal.

What you need to remember though, is that just because you can afford to buy something this doesn't mean you should. Banking is not a stable career choice: people often get downsized and you could easily find yourself with expenses you can't sustain and debts you can't pay off.

For some, the awakening happens too late. When they are in their forties, with little saved up.

I spoke to a friend who’s 58 recently, he had lost a lot when Lehman went down, and then had to pay for his kids' weddings. There he was, theoretically just a few years from retirement but needing a job that pays $500k because he had no savings.

Stop spending your bonus. Start saving your salary. Get off the treadmill, before you get thrown off.

The author is a former managing director at a top US bank and blogger at the site What I Learned on Wall Street (WilowWallStreet.com). 

Photo by Sharon McCutcheon on Unsplash

Have a confidential story, tip, or comment you’d like to share? Contact: sbutcher@efinancialcareers.com in the first instance. Whatsapp/Signal/Telegram also available.

Bear with us if you leave a comment at the bottom of this article: all our comments are moderated by human beings. Sometimes these humans might be asleep, or away from their desks, so it may take a while for your comment to appear. Eventually it will – unless it’s offensive or libelous (in which case it won’t.)

author-card-avatar
AUTHORWiLow Wall Street Insider Comment
  • Ma
    Marcelo
    2 March 2021

    There are less glamorous example of bankers struggling to get by on their salary. Not everybody in banking earn millions, not even half millions. Plenty of people are on 100-150K a year and feel miles away from being satisfied with their financial wellbeing. Many get token bonus if no bonus at all. Experience months, sometime years of redundancy that eat into their savings pot. Have to pay higher and higher mortgages because of rising cost of housing. Pay more and more for goods of decent quality (dont trust official inflation nbers, they re rubbish!). Think of people on 100K of with kids or a spouse on a lower income if no income at all. Think of people who don't get their wedding paid off by their family and those who don't inherit a penny or worst inherit debts. Think about the cost of education, cost of transport not just to work but to see family who for many live accross the world. Yes you can always "get by" as they say but you won't live a happy life if you aspire to a good standard of living. If you work in banking and put so much effort to break in, you most likely don't do it to eat in tupperware and drive a utility vehicle. Certainly all the more if you re from a developed country and you feel like your standard of living has gone down from that of your parents. Talk about growth when all you feel around you is regression.

  • th
    theprofitdare
    9 January 2018

    No, it is YOUR fault. Don't blame it on the "human condition". That's simply a cop-out for an undisciplined life. Grow up, stop whining and for God's sake do something to make banker look better than a group of spoiled rotten babies. No wonder the parasites in DC are gunning for banks.

Apply for jobs

Find thousands of jobs in financial services and technology by signing up to eFinancialCareers today.

Boost your career

Find thousands of job opportunities by signing up to eFinancialCareers today.
Latest Jobs
Selby Jennings
China Quant Researcher
Selby Jennings
Dingxi, China
Unicorn Advisor (HK) Limited
私募股权基金投资助理 - 北京
Unicorn Advisor (HK) Limited
Beijing, China
Unicorn Advisor (HK) Limited
fixed income investment manager, Guangzhou based
Unicorn Advisor (HK) Limited
Guangzhou, China
Susquehanna Pacific Pty Ltd
Commodities Analyst
Susquehanna Pacific Pty Ltd
Shanghai, China