Full-Time

Investment Banker

Pharma/Biotech, Vice President

Updated on 3/14/2025

JP Morgan Chase

JP Morgan Chase

10,001+ employees

Global financial services and investment banking

No salary listed

Senior, Expert

San Francisco, CA, USA

Category
Investment Banking
Biology & Biotech
Finance & Banking
Required Skills
Investment Banking
Excel/Numbers/Sheets
Requirements
  • 6 years prior work experience in an investment banking front office role
  • Bachelor’s degree in Finance, Accounting, Business Administration, or other related field
  • Exceptional written and verbal communication skills with specific ability to communicate concepts and ideas concisely and defend their validity
  • Very strong quantitative and analytical skills (including Excel modelling and valuation work)
  • Ability to work well under pressure and to tight deadlines, and have the aptitude to synthesize large amounts of information and to develop innovative solutions
  • Adaptability, able to manage projects independently and be ready to assume a high level of responsibility as a member of a team
  • Ability to comfortably interact with clients in a professional and mature manner
  • Excellent understanding of financial, legal and reputational risks facing large integrated investment banks in today's environment
Responsibilities
  • Working with the financial solutions and execution teams to advise clients on integrated financial solutions including mergers & acquisitions, divestitures, restructurings, loans, and equity capital and debt capital raises
  • Following up and coordinating all deals and requests from clients and coordinate with the Financial Solutions, execution and other internal teams, as well as external professional consultants
  • Providing timely market information
  • Participating in business and company events to identify new business opportunities and pitch for new clients
  • Leading and/or participating in execution meetings with support of execution/product partners, as circumstances may require

JPMorgan Chase & Co. provides a wide range of financial services to individuals, small businesses, corporations, governments, and institutions across more than 100 markets worldwide. Its services include investment banking, asset management, financial transaction processing, and consumer banking, which encompasses personal banking, mortgages, credit cards, and auto financing. The company operates by leveraging its extensive expertise and proprietary data to deliver high-quality financial products and services, generating revenue through interest income, service fees, and trading commissions. What sets JPMorgan Chase apart from its competitors is its commitment to integrity, service, and growth, along with its focus on social responsibility, including initiatives to support veterans and community development. The company's goal is to strengthen the workforce and support communities while providing valuable economic insights through the JPMorgan Chase Institute.

Company Size

10,001+

Company Stage

IPO

Headquarters

New York City, New York

Founded

1959

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Simplify's Take

What believers are saying

  • AI-driven chatbots enhance customer support and reduce operational costs for JPMorgan Chase.
  • The rise of DeFi pushes JPMorgan Chase to explore blockchain for secure transactions.
  • Green finance trends open new revenue streams for JPMorgan Chase through sustainable investing.

What critics are saying

  • Wells Fargo's lawsuit could lead to financial and reputational damage for JPMorgan Chase.
  • Papaya Global's partnership with Citibank may increase competition in cross-border payments.
  • The FIRM Act could impact JPMorgan Chase's regulatory compliance strategies.

What makes JP Morgan Chase unique

  • JPMorgan Chase leverages over 200 years of financial expertise and global market presence.
  • The firm offers a comprehensive range of services from investment banking to consumer banking.
  • JPMorgan Chase's proprietary data and market access enhance its financial product offerings.

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Benefits

Health Insurance

Flexible Work Hours

Paid Sick Leave

Paid Holidays

Company News

PYMNTS
Mar 14th, 2025
Financial Leaders: How Ai Transforms Compliance And Risk Management

Financial industry executives believe that companies have little choice but to use artificial intelligence (AI) to navigate today’s increasingly complex regulatory environment and faster product development cycles. “In 2025, there is pretty much no compliance without AI, because compliance became exponentially harder,” said Alexander Statnikov, co-founder and CEO of Crosswise Risk Management. “Think about all the change management that happens with regulations. Now, states will be stepping in. How you stay on top of it?”. It’s a similar story with business product development cycles

PR Newswire
Mar 14th, 2025
J.P. Morgan Asset Management Launches Jpmorgan U.S. Research Enhanced Large Cap Etf On Nyse

Fund aims for consistent returns while providing exposure to U.S. equityNEW YORK, March 14, 2025 /PRNewswire/ -- J.P. Morgan Asset Management (JPMAM) today announced the launch of the JPMorgan U.S. Research Enhanced Large Cap ETF (JUSA) on the New York Stock Exchange. This innovative ETF expands J.P. Morgan's Research Enhanced range, providing investors with a suite of investment strategies for long-term capital appreciation."JUSA exemplifies the core principles of J.P

ETF Daily News
Mar 12th, 2025
Hickory Point Bank & Trust Makes New Investment in JPMorgan Chase & Co. (NYSE:JPM)

Hickory Point Bank & Trust makes new investment in JPMorgan Chase & Co. (NYSE:JPM).

PYMNTS
Mar 10th, 2025
Report: Papaya Global Adds Citi As Sponsor Bank

Payroll payments provider Papaya Global reportedly added Citibank as a sponsor bank, joining the company’s other sponsor, JPMorgan Chase.The relationship with Citi will enable Papaya Global to expand to new geographic regions, Payments Dive reported Monday (March 10), citing its interview with Papaya Global CEO Eynat Guez.With the addition of Citi as a sponsor, Papaya Global will keep enhancing its cross-border payments capabilities that currently encompasses 160 countries and 130 currencies, and serves clients in the U.S., Europe, Latin America and Asia, according to the report.“Multinational organizations simply cannot rely on error-prone manual inputs, capricious data security, changing FX rates, and erratic land dates when paying employees and contractors,” the company said in the report.Papaya Global did not immediately reply to PYMNTS’ request for comment.The company said Wednesday (March 5) that it formed a partnership with verification and compliance solutions provider Sumsub, in which Sumsub will offer Papaya artificial intelligence (AI)-powered fraud prevention and verification solutions.“When you enable global workforce payments, as we do at Papaya, thorough compliance and security is a top priority,” Amit Levi, senior vice president of product at Papaya Global, said at the time in a press release. “Anything less than that simply isn’t acceptable when serving enterprise clients. With Sumsub, we can take our compliance engine to the next level and deliver at scale, supporting our clients and their employees.”Papaya Global teamed up with cross-border payment platform dLocal in April to enable global firms to pay employees worldwide in local currencies in a timely fashion.The partnership launched in Latin America, including Chile, Colombia and Mexico; in Asia, including Indonesia and Vietnam; and in Africa, with plans to expand to additional territories.“The partnership with dLocal is exciting, because it speaks to the core of our mission at Papaya,” Ori Shilo, vice president of business development and partnerships at Papaya Global, said at the time in a press release. “Together, we are reshaping the global payments landscape, ensuring a premium payment experience without borders or compromises, and providing our customers with a strong base for scale and growth.”

PYMNTS
Mar 10th, 2025
Report: Wells Fargo Sues Jpmorgan Chase Over Commercial Real Estate Loan

Wells Fargo reportedly sued JPMorgan Chase on Monday (March 10), alleging that the bank knowingly made a loan based on faulty numbers, knowing that the loan would later be sold off in pieces to investors.In its lawsuit, Wells Fargo seeks to recover losses for investors, Reuters reported Monday.Reached by PYMNTS, JPMorgan Chase declined to comment on the report.The case involves a $481 million commercial real estate loan made in 2019, according to the report.Wells Fargo alleges that JPMorgan Chase learned before the purchase closed that the seller had overstated the property’s historical net operating income by 25% but went ahead with the loan because parts of it would be sold to investors, the report said.When the borrower defaulted in 2022, investors lost tens of millions of dollars, per the report.With its lawsuit, Wells Fargo aims to force JPMorgan Chase to repurchase the loan or pay damages for breach of contract, according to the report.It was reported in November that double commercial property loan defaults were at their highest point in 10 years.This situation raised worries that a lending practice known as “extend and pretending” was masking an increasing system risk and that the increase in loan modification was distorting loan markets.In October, the New York Federal Reserve warned that lenders seemed in many cases to be offering breaks to property borrowers for the sole purpose of delaying a write-off.“Banks’ ‘extended-and-pretended’ their impaired commercial real estate mortgages in the post-pandemic period,” the central bank’s researchers wrote, cautioning that generous modifications could lead “to credit misallocation and a build-up of financial fragility.”In April, it was reported that banks were facing a $2 trillion “wall” of property debt and must reduce their exposure to commercial real estate as that debt comes due.“Banks will be under pressure,” Newmark CEO Barry Gosin told the Financial Times (FT) in an interview posted April 1.Newmark, a real estate advisory and brokerage company, said at the time that the estimated $2 trillion of U.S. commercial real estate debt maturing between then and 2026 would have to be refinanced at much higher interest rates