By and large, any student who has their sights on working at a major bank must complete a summer internship first. They are an opportunity for students to test out the profession, and for the firm to scout for its future employees.
In 2015, Business Insider had the opportunity to follow Sophie, a University of Cambridge economics student, as she went through a day of her 10-week summer analyst internship.
She was one of hundreds of interns who work at the investment bank every summer, and who follow essentially the same programme, whether they're in London, Hong Kong or New York.
If previous years are anything to go by, a majority of the summer intake will be offered positions at JP Morgan for when they finish studying — becoming high-flying and highly-paid investment bankers in the process.
This is how Sophie's day went.
This post is based on a previous article by Mike Bird.
It was an early start. Sophie had to be at her desk for 6:30 a.m, in London's Canary Wharf.
JP Morgan's London headquarters is this 31-storey tower on Bank Street. The bank bought the tower in 2010 — it had previously belonged to Lehman Brothers.
Sophie worked in global equity sales. She was there for 10 weeks in the summer of 2015, having completed other internship periods at the bank already. The desk essentially sells shares from around the world to largely UK-based clients.
See the rest of the story at Business Insider