My experience as an investment banking analyst intern at G2 Capital Advisors

My experience as an investment banking analyst intern at G2 Capital Advisors

Aastha DAS

In this article, Aastha DAS (ESSEC Business School, Bachelor’s in Business Administration, Exchange Student from Northeastern University) shares her experience during a summer internship as an investment banking analyst at G2 Capital Advisors.

About the company

G2 Capital Advisors is a boutique, low-middle market investment bank which is sector-focused with an integrated and multi-product approach, creating an uncommon full-service product line. G2 provides unique solutions in the investment banking realm including specializing in buy-side and sell-side advisory, capital markets, and restructuring, with different teams allocated to each part of those practices. Most analysts specialize in one of the products while associates and vice presidents tend to cover more product lines while specializing a certain industry in the business practice, further supporting the C-Level executive heading their respective industry specialty group.

G2 Capital Advisors logo
Women in Finance
Source: G2 Capital Advisors.

G2 follows a unique business model in which their managing directors and leads of industry practices are from a background of sector success, and not necessarily banking careers, like Industrials & Manufacturing, Technology & Business Services, Consumer & Retail, and Transportation & Logistics. The culture and core values at G2 Capital Advisors revolve around dedication to their clients, to be able to provide the best possible, creative yet lucrative solutions for their issues. Their main business practice remains Restructuring and Investment Banking.

Through remaining tenacious in all their business processes, they are able to create a full-servicing bank which can provide accountability in an honest and respectful manner, further differentiating themselves.

My Internship

My Missions

I worked as an intern in the summer of 2022 for the Investment Banking practice at G2 Capital Advisors. I was mainly responsible for supporting the analysts and sometimes supported the associates in the buy-side and sell-side business practices. As the size of this boutique lower-middle market investment bank is a lot smaller than a lot of other banks, my experience was more unique than most investment banking summer analyst positions.

I got holistic views on the whole firm as I got experience in intensive levels in three of four of their business practices: Technology & Business Services, Consumer & Retail, and Transportation & Logistics, on both the buy-side and sell-side investment banking advisory. On the buy-side, I created extensive market maps for clients to source their clients and potential new acquisitions for them. Here I was also able to perform also as a research analyst for M&A and equity research on active advisory and restructuring deals throughout the summer by using Excel to curate and develop market maps, historical financial analysis, and prepare for engagement with clients. I was the forefront of the intern class through ensuring that all the submissions from the group were of top quality for all curated presentation materials including tailored pitch books, Confidential Information Memorandums, deal sheets, and teasers. This helped prepare me, the other interns, as well as the analysts and associates for client presentations, oftentimes doing more research than necessary, to stay ahead of competitors. I also aided in the company’s outreach initiatives through drafting many press releases and research presentations for transaction announcements and quarterly industry reports specifically for the Consumer & Retail and Transportation & Logistics business practices.

In my final weeks as an intern, I was able to generate my own comparables and financial models to aid associates for many ongoing deals. All the interns were also responsible for a research presentation of any of the business practices and I delivered a presentation on Consumer & Retail. In this presentation, I sourced new portfolio companies, hedge funds, and private equity firms for G2 to create connections with and evaluated the intrinsic value of creating relations with each of these different sub-sectors and companies and how it better aligns with G2’s goals to provide industry specialized support for clients. I have since gotten feedback from several of the managing directors and leads in the Consumer & Retail team that many of the suggested partnerships have rendered successful and are in process of deal-making with due diligence underway.

Required Skills and Knowledge

The Investment Banking sector at G2 Capital Advisors is arguably the most profitable business practice and there was a high learning curve to going into this internship. I had to quickly learn the sell-side and buy-side business practices to best support the analysts and associates so that we were able to deliver the best market maps and materials to the clients and our managing directors/deal managers. Along with the steep learning curve of investment banking concepts, I also had to adapt to the G2 form of financial modeling as I had learned it already from a club at my university called Bull & Bear Equity Research club. It is also necessary to develop and come prepared with many soft skills like humility, generosity to always give a helping hand, self-discipline, time management, conflict resolution, and high analytical/critical thinking. As an aspiring intern in the investment banking and advisory space, it is wise to stay up to date with financial news, so it is recommended to read/listen to news through podcasts like the NYTimes Daily, New York Times, Wall Street Journal, The Economist. Most higher-level executives are well versed with financial news and do not need to think twice about it and this is a good tactic to incorporate in beginner’s careers to ensure the interns are knowledgeable on all that is going on in the market, in light of any swift changes.

What I Learned

My internship at G2 Capital Advisors gave me a good understanding of the composition of the entire financial institution and the operation of the financial market as well as investment banking through allowing me to master my Excel capabilities, relationship building skills with clients and other employees, while learning technical skills as well like financial terms and everything that is necessary in the different advisory processes. The knowledge I had previously from taking microeconomics, macroeconomics, macroeconomic theory, financial management, Wall Street Prep, and financial accounting aided me in the internship to create a solidified foundation to grow in the industry. I also learned how lucrative a career in investment banking is because of how heavily technical it can get with developing models, but also how personable it can make you through creating special relationships with many different market leaders, clients, and investors, creating a well-rounded employee in the financial services space.

Key Financial Concepts

Here are three useful financial concepts I learned in the Investment Banking department at G2 Capital Advisors.

Buy-side vs sell-side

Buy-Side – is the side of the financial market that buys and invests large portions of securities for the purpose of money or fund management.

Buy-Side – is the other side of the financial market, which deals with the creation, promotion, and selling of traded securities to the public.

M&A Sell-Side Advisory Process Explained

One of the most in-depth processes I learned was the Sell-side process for investment banking: Detailing my insight below

Process and Timeline

   1. Winning the Mandate
      a. Pitch
      b. Engagement Review Memo
      c. Engagement Letter Signing
   2. Preparing for sale
      a. Definite strategy (who, how much, what process)
      b. Draft Teaser, Executive Summary, CIM
      c. Kick-off Meeting
      d. Organize Financials
      e. Create Projections
      f. Prepare non-disclosure agreement (NDA)
   3. Marketing
      a. Launch process
         i. Contact Buyers
         ii. Receive preliminary bids
         iii. Manage deal processes
         iv. Send teaser and NDA
         v. Investor meetings/emails
         vi. Draft Letter of Interest bid
         vii. Draft Management Presentation
         viii. Set up data room and due diligence
      b. Letter of Interest Bid Deadline
         i. Receive final LOIs
         ii. Board meetings
         iii. Management presentation
         iv. Negotiate with lead bidders
         v. Execute LOI
   4. Confirmatory Due Diligence
      a. Enter into exclusivity agreement with one bidder post negotiation
      b. Kick-off diligence meeting
      c. Facilitate due diligence
   5. Closing
      a. Proceeds waterfall deliverables
      b. Present finalized deal terms and fairness opinion
      c. Get board approval
      d. Signing and closing
      e. Invoice deliverable sent
      f. Transaction review memo

What is Restructuring?

Restructuring is a unique concept in investment banking which entails growth and special situations in and out of the court with both a debtor and creditor side, based on what is best fit for the firm. It helps provide clients with clear solutions to ensure sustainable long-term stability. This is usually a practice which is enacted, and advisors are called in when a company wants to change its structure completely or significantly in both financial and operational aspects, during times of financial pressures where clear restructuring of the business is necessary. It often involves revising debt options, operations, and forms of limiting financial detriment while still improving the firm.

A company will often use restructuring advisory when there is debt difficulty, especially regarding consolidating to pay their bondholders. It is also possible to incorporate operation restructure to help cut costs in payroll and/or in the size of assets through significant sales.

Internal restructuring often entails operations, processes, departments, supply chains, executive board, and even ownership change, further enabling the firm to grow profitable while growing. This is when investment banks come in to help with the negotiation of restructuring plans to input financial and legal advisors and potentially even gain aid from investors and appointing new CEOs to implement the new changes and propel the firm forward.

Merger & Acquisition Activism

Activism a particularly new space in the investment banking world but one worth keeping tabs on because of how much it changes and how volatile it can make certain deals. In activist investing, there is usually a sign of change occurring through a catalyst which prompts activist investors to reveal themselves. This is an investment strategy where an investor comes into and/or attempts to pursue poorly-run companies with share prices that have gone down recently, usually an investor which much potential. The activist investor usually takes in a large stake in the company which reveals their interest and pushes for changes because of their vast equity, in efforts to turnaround the company for the better. This hopefully results in price increases for the security.

It is necessary to stay weary of activist investors because they may not always have the company’s best interests at hand. For this reason, shareholder trust is a large factor for activist investors. Most of the most successful activist investors are public figures and not necessarily hedge funds. They often use aggressive and confrontational tactics to pressure the management teams of public companies. It is necessary to grow public and shareholder trust along with public attention to grow their platform to endorse the suggested recommendations.

Why should I be interested in this article?

It is worth reading this article because of the topic it discusses in the popular investment banking space. It is necessary to note how well-rounded investment banking can make an individual but also the uniqueness of this post entails how the experience was at a boutique low-middle market investment bank with full servicing to reveal how one smaller firm can do so much in efforts to create the most impactful and creative solutions to business issues and M&A deals.

Useful resources

G2 Capital Advisors

Financier Worldwide Magazine (June 2019) The rising influence of shareholder activism in M&A transactions: recent trends in the UK

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About the author

The article was written in December 2022 by Aastha DAS (ESSEC Business School, Exchange Student from Northeastern University – Bachelor’s in Business Administration).

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