Quit dreaming about the increment - Investment Banking Vice President BNP Paribas Employee Review

1.0
Mar 1, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Views of Marina Bay Sands

Cons

Rotten to the Core There’s a systemic rot that runs deeper than most new joiners realise. The issues aren’t isolated incidents — they’re structural. And if you stay long enough, you’ll see the pattern repeat itself. ⸻ 1. Institutional Bias Let’s start with the uncomfortable topic no one says out loud. Certain nationalities seem to glide through the ranks with suspicious ease — sometimes all the way to MD — regardless of how they’re perceived internally or externally. Meanwhile, others are left wondering what invisible ceiling they’ve hit. APAC often feels like a satellite rather than a priority. Even the email domain reminds you where you stand. Decisions are made elsewhere. Loyalty flows one way. Call it “cultural alignment,” call it “head office preference” — but don’t pretend it’s meritocracy. ⸻ 2. Chronic Pay Stagnation If you’re hoping for meaningful annual increments, prepare for an annual ritual instead. Every March, managers perform the same well-rehearsed script: • Tough macro environment • War • Market volatility • Shareholder expectations • “This year is challenging” Translation: 2–3% for non-promoted staff. Promoted? Congratulations — here’s 5%. Whether you move from Analyst to Associate or VP to Director, the math barely changes. In “Investment Banking,” that’s borderline insulting. This isn’t new. Glassdoor reviews from a decade ago say the same thing. Different year, same story, same microscopic YoY adjustments — wrapped in corporate messaging about how much “we value our people.” Meanwhile, external hires quietly join at materially higher packages than loyal internal staff. Loyalty here has a negative financial return. ⸻ 3. HR That Protects the System, Not the People Employee retention appears to be an afterthought. HR’s visible output? Workshops, development sessions, engagement surveys — surface-level activity that rarely translates into structural change. HR Business Partners aren’t partners. They’re intermediaries whose role seems to be managing optics rather than resolving issues. Concerns are heard, nodded at, documented — and quietly neutralised. Stay long enough and you’ll watch high performers leave. Then you’ll watch new hires come in at 1.3–1.5× your pay. And you’ll understand how the cycle sustains itself.

Explore other reviews about BNP Paribas

5.0
May 28, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

love working here been here 4 years

Cons

return to office policy is tough

1.0
May 8, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

The only good thing about this place were the Nespresso machines.

Cons

I rarely leave reviews, but future job seekers deserve fair warning. From day one, it was clear that micromanagement was a core operating principle here; not a quirk, but a feature. Managers routinely hovered over routine tasks, demanded pointless status updates multiple times a day, constantly changed directives, took credit for my work, and treated experienced professionals like they couldn't be trusted to send an email unsupervised. Any sense of autonomy was purely cosmetic. The culture was equally poisonous. Gossip wasn't background noise; it was practically a department function. Colleagues regularly spoke poorly of one another behind closed doors, cliques formed and hardened fast, and if you weren't part of the right group, you felt it. Unkind doesn't begin to cover it. Basic professionalism and common decency were in short supply. Management set the tone for all of it. Leaders who should have modeled integrity instead participated in the drama, played favorites openly, and addressed conflict with either complete avoidance or outright retaliation. HR was not a resource — it was a shield for bad behavior at the top. I left for my own sanity. The turnover rate here should tell you everything. Life is too short and your career too important to spend either in an environment like this one.

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