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Why Investment Banking Graduates Are Being Filtered Out Earlier Than Ever

  • 20 March, 2026
  • 3 minute read
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For university students and recent graduates, breaking into investment banking has always been competitive.

In the current hiring cycle, candidates are increasingly being assessed and rejected earlier in the process than in previous years.

Across Australia, application volumes for graduate and internship roles are at an all-time high, while hiring numbers at major banks have stayed relatively consistent. The result is greater pressure on initial screening stages, with firms relying more heavily on structured filters to manage volume.

From our experience working with investment banks, advisory firms and graduate candidates across the market, a large proportion of applications are now screened out before even reaching a hiring manager.

 

What drives early-stage screening?

In practice, early-stage decisions are often driven by a relatively narrow set of signals:

  • Academic performance and degree discipline
  • University background
  • Prior internship experience, particularly within investment banking or M&A
  • CV structure and alignment with expected formats and keywords

These criteria have always been relevant. What has changed is how early and how strictly they are applied.

From an employer perspective, this creates efficiency and consistency across large applicant pools. For candidates, it can mean being excluded before having the opportunity to demonstrate broader capability.

This is particularly relevant for:

    • Students who may be strong academically and highly motivated, but have not yet secured directly relevant experience
    • Candidates coming from universities and pathways outside traditional target profiles

 

A shift in what firms are looking for

At the same time, there is a clear shift across the industry towards hiring candidates who can contribute earlier.

Advisory firms, particularly in the mid-market, are placing greater emphasis on:

  • Practical skills
  • Commercial awareness
  • The ability to operate at an analyst level from day one

The challenge is that these capabilities are difficult to assess at scale through a standardised application process.

 

A growing disconnect in the recruitment process

As a result, a clear dynamic is emerging:

  • Larger institutions prioritise efficiency and consistency in early-stage filtering
  • Smaller advisory firms often take a more flexible, experience-led approach

For university graduates, this creates a disconnect.

Applications are often assessed on experience that is difficult to obtain without first securing an opportunity.

Increasingly, capable candidates are not progressing far enough in the process to demonstrate what they can actually do.

At the same time, rejection itself has become a normal part of the process.

Even strong candidates from top universities with relevant internships often face multiple rejections before progressing. In many cases, this is simply a function of the numbers. Thousands apply, a small percentage progress, and only a handful secure offers.

What tends to separate those who do progress is not just academic background, but preparation.

Candidates who understand how the process works, know how applications are assessed, and can position their experience effectively are more likely to move through each stage.

As recruitment processes continue to evolve, understanding these dynamics is becoming an essential part of navigating entry into investment banking.

For students and graduates taking a more deliberate approach to preparation and positioning is increasingly important. Join the xceeda graduate portal to better understand how you’re being assessed – and how to position yourself to progress.