logo
Banker At US Firm Hospitalised With Pancreatic Failure After 110-Hour Workweek

Banker At US Firm Hospitalised With Pancreatic Failure After 110-Hour Workweek

NDTV01-05-2025

The demanding culture on Wall Street often leads to unrealistic working hours and a decline in work-life balance. Long hours, high stress, and intense pressure can take a toll on employees' physical and mental health. Recently, junior employees at Robert W. Baird, a Midwestern investment bank, alleged they were forced to work 110-hour weeks, resulting in extreme burnout and serious health issues, including two hospitalisations. As per The Wall Street Journal, one employee suffered a pancreatic failure, highlighting the severe toll of intense work demands. The bankers claimed that they were assigned 20-hour workdays and faced criticism if they left their desks after working all night.
A former Baird banker anonymously posted on Wall Street Oasis, a popular finance forum, that analysts and associates are treated poorly, likening their experience to being viewed as "scum". Hundreds of anonymous Baird employees shared similar stories of mistreatment, corroborating the original post.
Reports revealed severe health consequences for employees due to the demanding work environment. Two former members of the industrials team were hospitalised after prolonged periods of intense work, while another employee suffered pancreas failure, which doctors attributed to consistently working 20-hour days.
According to the Journal, a banker's health issues led to a second hospital visit, and shortly after, they were terminated, allegedly due to low productivity. In another incident, a former analyst faced reprimand for stepping away from his desk after an all-night work session, with his manager demanding he request permission even for short breaks.
In response to the viral post, the management held a town hall meeting for the industrials team, inviting junior bankers to share their concerns. However, former employees claimed that despite the 80-hour weekly cap, their bosses regularly disregarded this rule, continuing to demand excessive work hours from junior staff.
A turning point came when junior bankers were called to a pizza gathering in Chicago, expecting a reward for their hard work on multiple deals. However, the meeting took an unexpected turn when managers criticised their efficiency, implying they needed to do more despite already working extensive hours.
Some current junior bankers at Baird reportedly view their demanding work conditions as industry standard, accepting them as normal. Meanwhile, some former employees were often hesitant to speak up, fearing they'd be seen as weak or criticised by senior staff who had endured similar or harsher conditions in their careers.
The report comes after recent incidents where junior bankers faced severe consequences due to excessive work hours. Notably, two cases involved the deaths of Carter McIntosh from Jefferies and Leo Lukenas, a 35-year-old former Bank of America analyst, who were reportedly working over 100 hours per week.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Trump's tariff chaos threatens his push for rust belt revival
Trump's tariff chaos threatens his push for rust belt revival

Economic Times

time7 hours ago

  • Economic Times

Trump's tariff chaos threatens his push for rust belt revival

US President Donald Trump's signature trade policy is threatening to backfire by upending other top priorities: the revival of US manufacturing and the American Rust Belt. In Illinois, Trump's tariffs prompted a compressor maker to delay a key equipment purchase after an ambitious factory revamp. Rockwell Automation Inc., a Wisconsin-based producer of factory tools, says some manufacturers are putting projects on hold because of uncertainty over costs and future demand. Snap-on Inc. is seeing similar hesitancy among car mechanics. The warnings underscore the rising worry that turbulence from Trump's trade wars will smother the progress US manufacturers have already made revving up American factories. Manufacturing payrolls fell by 8,000 last month, the most this year, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics. US and Chinese negotiators will resume trade talks Monday in London, as the world's two largest economies look to resolve disputes over tariffs and the US, perhaps nowhere is the anxiety higher than in the Midwest, which is still home to the nation's highest concentration of manufacturing employment even after bleeding jobs early this century from the rise of offshoring. 'Overall, it is going to be a drag on the US economy,' said Gus Faucher, chief economist for PNC Financial Services Group in Pittsburgh, calling the tariffs a tax that will raise prices. 'In particular, it's going to be a drag on the Midwestern economy.' On-again, off-again levies on imported components and machinery — as well as retaliatory duties imposed by other countries — have injected volatility into supply chains, raised costs, hurt exports and chilled investment. US factory activity contracted for a third straight month in May, and every comment in the Institute for Supply Management's sample of survey responses from manufacturing executives focused on tariffs — including a respondent in the electric equipment, appliance and components business who said the duties have created supply-chain disruptions rivaling those of the pandemic. The Midwestern states of Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Michigan, Minnesota, Missouri, Nebraska, North Dakota, Ohio, South Dakota and Wisconsin lost almost 2 million manufacturing jobs between 1998 and 2010 as trade deals and China's entrance into the World Trade Organization spurred companies to seek lower-cost labor and production outside the recent years, though, a cautious optimism had returned. As supply chain shocks from the pandemic pushed companies to bring operations back home, and as Washington offered sweeping incentives for clean energy, EVs and semiconductor production, the Midwest began to stir. Since the start of 2021, the region has added over 100,000 factory jobs, according to federal data. Rust Belt states had outsized investment in factories in the past decade, according to a report by Citi Institute, even as southern states that offer right-to-work laws, lower labor costs, and aggressive incentive packages to lure global manufacturers have also seen a boom. The White House has pointed to the announcements of big planned investments in the US by companies and foreign governments as proof the president's trade policies are working. Case in point: When Trump traveled to the Pittsburgh area late last month to champion a deal between United States Steel Corp. and Nippon Steel Corp., he touted his plans to increase import duties on steel and aluminum to 50% from 25%. Still, growth in overall US private construction spending on manufacturing has flatlined from the boom seen under the Biden Trump's approach plays out in the long term remains to be seen. For now, however, the constant shifting of his tariff strategy has 'got people spooked,' said Andrew Anagnost, chief executive officer of Autodesk Inc., which sells software used by manufacturers to design factories and improve manufacturing processes.'The current operating mode is just the death to long-term investment,' Anagnost said. Construction work that was already underway or in the backlog is continuing but the uncertainty 'is stalling future projects.'Milwaukee-based Rockwell Automation has already seen some investments get delayed because of uncertainty about how tariffs will affect business. The uneasiness is particularly acute in the automotive industry, which is trying to rewire a global supply chain designed for the old economic order, and in other capital-intensive projects for the long term, CEO Blake Moret said. Snap-on, which provides tools used by automotive mechanics, can manage the impact of tariffs with minimal disruption because it mostly serves US customers with domestically made products, said CEO Nicholas Pinchuk. But while auto shops are still busy and profitable, they're 'confidence poor,' he said, adding that customers of the Kenosha, Wisconsin-based company are wary of economic disruption even if they support Trump politically. 'They're still big Trump fans. This is Trump territory,' he said. 'They believe in where we're going, but they're worried that something's going to happen.'Even manufacturers that are positioned to gain from tariffs are Mill, one of the last vertically integrated US textile mills in an industry devastated by offshoring, has been getting calls from from retailers looking for a domestic producer, said CEO Ross Widmoyer. But despite a projected fifth straight record sales year at the Minnesota-based maker of blankets, throws and apparel, Widmoyer said he's concerned about weakening economic growth. 'If there's a slowdown in consumer spending, it doesn't matter if you're making products domestically or overseas, and that's not good for anybody,' said Widmoyer, who is also chairman of the Minnesota Manufacturers' Decatur, Illinois, TCCI Manufacturing was completing a $45 million factory revamp just as Trump slapped steep new tariffs on countries around the world. With US duties on China zigzagging between 30% and 145% in just weeks, TCCI decided to shelve the purchase of crucial Chinese-made testing equipment it needs by early next year. The factory makes compressors used in company has evaluated alternative sources for the equipment, but 'the problem with that is we don't know what the tariffs are doing,' TCCI President Richard Demirjian said as the company opened the factory earlier this year. TCCI still has high hopes for the plant despite the uncertainty around tariffs and moves by congressional Republicans to roll back federal sweeteners for electric-vehicle purchases. The facility is now called the Clean Energy Innovation Hub, evoking the manufacturer's bet on the future. As a symbol of the region's past, Demirjian drove his father's maroon 1927 Model T to the plant's grand re-opening in April. Illinois Governor JB Pritzker spoke at the ribbon-cutting ceremony and touted the factory as the first to benefit from the state's Reimagining Energy and Vehicles program, which provided part of more than $21 million that TCCI received in state incentives for the project. But Pritzker, a Democrat widely seen as a potential presidential candidate in 2028, warned that erratic policy-making is undercutting efforts to bolster US manufacturing.'Tariffs are on, tariffs are off, tariffs are up, tariffs are down,' Pritzker said. 'Imagine trying to run a business and figure out from day to day how you're going to do pricing, who you're going to do business with, based upon where the tariffs are being imposed.'

Trump's tariff chaos threatens his push for rust belt revival
Trump's tariff chaos threatens his push for rust belt revival

Time of India

time8 hours ago

  • Time of India

Trump's tariff chaos threatens his push for rust belt revival

US President Donald Trump 's signature trade policy is threatening to backfire by upending other top priorities: the revival of US manufacturing and the American Rust Belt . In Illinois, Trump 's tariffs prompted a compressor maker to delay a key equipment purchase after an ambitious factory revamp. Rockwell Automation Inc., a Wisconsin-based producer of factory tools, says some manufacturers are putting projects on hold because of uncertainty over costs and future demand. Snap-on Inc. is seeing similar hesitancy among car mechanics. The warnings underscore the rising worry that turbulence from Trump's trade wars will smother the progress US manufacturers have already made revving up American factories. Manufacturing payrolls fell by 8,000 last month, the most this year, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics. US and Chinese negotiators will resume trade talks Monday in London, as the world's two largest economies look to resolve disputes over tariffs and technology. Play Video Pause Skip Backward Skip Forward Unmute Current Time 0:00 / Duration 0:00 Loaded : 0% 0:00 Stream Type LIVE Seek to live, currently behind live LIVE Remaining Time - 0:00 1x Playback Rate Chapters Chapters Descriptions descriptions off , selected Captions captions settings , opens captions settings dialog captions off , selected Audio Track default , selected Picture-in-Picture Fullscreen This is a modal window. Beginning of dialog window. Escape will cancel and close the window. Text Color White Black Red Green Blue Yellow Magenta Cyan Opacity Opaque Semi-Transparent Text Background Color Black White Red Green Blue Yellow Magenta Cyan Opacity Opaque Semi-Transparent Transparent Caption Area Background Color Black White Red Green Blue Yellow Magenta Cyan Opacity Transparent Semi-Transparent Opaque Font Size 50% 75% 100% 125% 150% 175% 200% 300% 400% Text Edge Style None Raised Depressed Uniform Drop shadow Font Family Proportional Sans-Serif Monospace Sans-Serif Proportional Serif Monospace Serif Casual Script Small Caps Reset restore all settings to the default values Done Close Modal Dialog End of dialog window. Sponsored Links Sponsored Links Promoted Links Promoted Links You May Like Ready-to-Move Flats in Chattarpur South Delhi A D Infra Get Info Undo In the US, perhaps nowhere is the anxiety higher than in the Midwest, which is still home to the nation's highest concentration of manufacturing employment even after bleeding jobs early this century from the rise of offshoring. 'Overall, it is going to be a drag on the US economy ,' said Gus Faucher, chief economist for PNC Financial Services Group in Pittsburgh, calling the tariffs a tax that will raise prices. 'In particular, it's going to be a drag on the Midwestern economy.' Live Events Bloomberg On-again, off-again levies on imported components and machinery — as well as retaliatory duties imposed by other countries — have injected volatility into supply chains, raised costs, hurt exports and chilled investment. US factory activity contracted for a third straight month in May, and every comment in the Institute for Supply Management's sample of survey responses from manufacturing executives focused on tariffs — including a respondent in the electric equipment, appliance and components business who said the duties have created supply-chain disruptions rivaling those of the pandemic. The Midwestern states of Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Michigan, Minnesota, Missouri, Nebraska, North Dakota, Ohio, South Dakota and Wisconsin lost almost 2 million manufacturing jobs between 1998 and 2010 as trade deals and China's entrance into the World Trade Organization spurred companies to seek lower-cost labor and production outside the US. In recent years, though, a cautious optimism had returned. As supply chain shocks from the pandemic pushed companies to bring operations back home, and as Washington offered sweeping incentives for clean energy, EVs and semiconductor production, the Midwest began to stir. Since the start of 2021, the region has added over 100,000 factory jobs, according to federal data. Rust Belt states had outsized investment in factories in the past decade, according to a report by Citi Institute, even as southern states that offer right-to-work laws, lower labor costs, and aggressive incentive packages to lure global manufacturers have also seen a boom. The White House has pointed to the announcements of big planned investments in the US by companies and foreign governments as proof the president's trade policies are working. Case in point: When Trump traveled to the Pittsburgh area late last month to champion a deal between United States Steel Corp. and Nippon Steel Corp., he touted his plans to increase import duties on steel and aluminum to 50% from 25%. Still, growth in overall US private construction spending on manufacturing has flatlined from the boom seen under the Biden administration. Bloomberg How Trump's approach plays out in the long term remains to be seen. For now, however, the constant shifting of his tariff strategy has 'got people spooked,' said Andrew Anagnost, chief executive officer of Autodesk Inc., which sells software used by manufacturers to design factories and improve manufacturing processes. 'The current operating mode is just the death to long-term investment,' Anagnost said. Construction work that was already underway or in the backlog is continuing but the uncertainty 'is stalling future projects.' Milwaukee-based Rockwell Automation has already seen some investments get delayed because of uncertainty about how tariffs will affect business. The uneasiness is particularly acute in the automotive industry, which is trying to rewire a global supply chain designed for the old economic order, and in other capital-intensive projects for the long term, CEO Blake Moret said. Snap-on, which provides tools used by automotive mechanics, can manage the impact of tariffs with minimal disruption because it mostly serves US customers with domestically made products, said CEO Nicholas Pinchuk. But while auto shops are still busy and profitable, they're 'confidence poor,' he said, adding that customers of the Kenosha, Wisconsin-based company are wary of economic disruption even if they support Trump politically. 'They're still big Trump fans. This is Trump territory,' he said. 'They believe in where we're going, but they're worried that something's going to happen.' Even manufacturers that are positioned to gain from tariffs are anxious. Faribault Mill, one of the last vertically integrated US textile mills in an industry devastated by offshoring, has been getting calls from from retailers looking for a domestic producer, said CEO Ross Widmoyer. But despite a projected fifth straight record sales year at the Minnesota-based maker of blankets, throws and apparel, Widmoyer said he's concerned about weakening economic growth. 'If there's a slowdown in consumer spending, it doesn't matter if you're making products domestically or overseas, and that's not good for anybody,' said Widmoyer, who is also chairman of the Minnesota Manufacturers' Council. In Decatur, Illinois, TCCI Manufacturing was completing a $45 million factory revamp just as Trump slapped steep new tariffs on countries around the world. With US duties on China zigzagging between 30% and 145% in just weeks, TCCI decided to shelve the purchase of crucial Chinese-made testing equipment it needs by early next year. The factory makes compressors used in EVs. The company has evaluated alternative sources for the equipment, but 'the problem with that is we don't know what the tariffs are doing,' TCCI President Richard Demirjian said as the company opened the factory earlier this year. TCCI still has high hopes for the plant despite the uncertainty around tariffs and moves by congressional Republicans to roll back federal sweeteners for electric-vehicle purchases. The facility is now called the Clean Energy Innovation Hub, evoking the manufacturer's bet on the future. As a symbol of the region's past, Demirjian drove his father's maroon 1927 Model T to the plant's grand re-opening in April. Illinois Governor JB Pritzker spoke at the ribbon-cutting ceremony and touted the factory as the first to benefit from the state's Reimagining Energy and Vehicles program, which provided part of more than $21 million that TCCI received in state incentives for the project. But Pritzker, a Democrat widely seen as a potential presidential candidate in 2028, warned that erratic policy-making is undercutting efforts to bolster US manufacturing. 'Tariffs are on, tariffs are off, tariffs are up, tariffs are down,' Pritzker said. 'Imagine trying to run a business and figure out from day to day how you're going to do pricing, who you're going to do business with, based upon where the tariffs are being imposed.'

Steve Jobs told Apple CEO Tim Cook: Never to stay ‘married' to ..., a skill he says he learnt late, but is very thankful for
Steve Jobs told Apple CEO Tim Cook: Never to stay ‘married' to ..., a skill he says he learnt late, but is very thankful for

Time of India

timea day ago

  • Time of India

Steve Jobs told Apple CEO Tim Cook: Never to stay ‘married' to ..., a skill he says he learnt late, but is very thankful for

Apple CEO Tim Cook said that Steve Jobs gave him a crucial skill that only 'few people have' and he learnt late – the ability to change one's mind instantly when new facts emerge. In a 2024 interview with The Wall Street Journal, Cook revealed that Job – co-founder of Apple taught him never to stay 'married to my past views' and to let go of pride when better evidence appears. Jobs, Cook recalled, could shift direction in a snap—something that surprised him at first but later became a trait he admired and adopted. '[I learned] not to be so proud you can't change your mind when you're presented with new evidence,' Cook said in the interview. This flexible mindset, according to those close to Jobs, was powered by strong emotional intelligence. In Steve Jobs's biography, author Walter Isaacson wrote that Jobs had the ability to "size people up, understand their inner thoughts, and hurt them at will," highlighting how his emotional intelligence could be both inspiring and cutting. Steve Jobs' leadership mindset inspired Jeff Bezos, John Ive, Marc Benioff Many former Apple colleagues say this mix of intensity and intuition helped revive the company from near collapse and shaped its culture of bold innovation. The practice also echoes Amazon founder Jeff Bezos's belief that 'people who are right a lot change their mind a lot'—a mindset linked to strong decision-making. Jobs's influence extended well beyond Tim Cook. Former Apple designer Jony Ive once called Jobs 'the most remarkably focused person' he'd ever met, describing his focus as an 'every-minute' discipline. Salesforce CEO Marc Benioff also credited a pivotal 2010 conversation with Jobs for inspiring the product focus that helped build Salesforce into a $250 billion company. In an 2019 interview, Benioff reflected how a single meeting in 2003 left a lasting impression on the Salesforce CEO, who credits Jobs for planting the seed of what would become the company's app marketplace. Jobs urged the Salesforce founders to build a cloud software ecosystem—an idea that eventually led to the creation of AppExchange. Years later, when Jobs launched the iPhone App Store in 2008, Benioff was so moved by his words, 'I give you App Store,' that he handed over the domain to Apple as a tribute. What to Expect at WWDC 2025: iOS 19, AI, M4 Macs & More AI Masterclass for Students. Upskill Young Ones Today!– Join Now

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store