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R.I.P. June Lockhart: ‘Lassie’ and ‘Lost in Space’ Star Dead at 100

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Shelter Dog ‘So Grateful’ To Be Let Out of Kennel—Even if Just for a Walk

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Voters in Dutch general election have 27 parties and 1,166 candidates to choose from

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El Clásico: Real Madrid vs Barcelona Lineups, Odds, Start Time, TV Channel, How to Watch, Mbappé, Yamal

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‘Think big’: A 35-year finance veteran urges Gen Z to start their own businesses as entry-level jobs dry up

Tourists view Canary Wharf's financial district across the River Thames at Greenwich in London on May 10, 2025.
A City veteran warns Gen Z to stop chasing shrinking graduate jobs and start building their own businesses as AI reshapes work.

  • Quentin Nason says AI and shrinking grad schemes leave Gen Z with “a broken social contract.”
  • The City executive urges young people to embrace entrepreneurship and “chase tomorrow’s jobs.”
  • Nason says starting a business early builds vital skills and may be Gen Z’s best hedge on work.

As AI reshapes white-collar work and graduate schemes shrink, one City veteran says the safest hedge may be to stop waiting for callbacks — and start building something.

Quentin Nason, a 35-year finance veteran who spent two decades in investment banking and 15 years in asset management, has watched both his children and countless students hit a wall trying to break into finance.

Through City Pay It Forward, his independent, self-funded charity that teaches financial literacy in UK and US schools, the former Deutsche Bank managing director and now vice chair of the London Foundation for Banking and Finance, said he sees daily evidence of how hard it’s become for graduates to get a foot in the door.

“We have a generation, the generation coming through now, where we say, ‘Go to the best schools, study hard, get the grades, you know, take the student loans,’ right?” he told Business Insider.

“They’re now coming out, and they said I did what you wanted, I studied hard, and I did everything you told me to, and where is my job?” he said.

“That social contract feels broken.”

AI squeezes the first rung

Nason said entry-level roles in the City of London and on Wall Street are disappearing, with competition so fierce that “there’s less than a 1% probability you’ll get a job.”

He blames a perfect storm of AI-driven mass applications and shrinking graduate intakes.

“Recruiters are overwhelmed, candidates get no feedback — it’s crickets. The process is dehumanized.”

That pressure is showing up in hard data.

A Stanford University study from August found a 13% decline in employment for early-career workers between 22 and 25 years old in the most AI-exposed jobs, including software engineering and customer service.

The researchers found that by mid-2025, employment for young developers was down nearly 20% from its 2022 peak — even as older cohorts’ employment rose.

In August, PwC confirmed it will cut graduate hiring by about a third in the US over the next three years and by 200 roles in the UK, saying “the rapid pace of technological change is reshaping how we work.”

A generation on edge

For Nason, the result is a brewing crisis of expectation.

“They did what society told them to do, worked hard, went to university, took on £50,000 ($67,000) of debt, and now find themselves locked out,” he said.

He fears that frustration may soon erupt. He pointed to protests in Nepal and Peru as early signs of a youth-driven backlash.

“They mobilize fast,” he said. “The anger is bubbling up.”

Entrepreneurship as the escape hatch

Yet amid the bleak outlook, Nason sees a clear opportunity in entrepreneurship.

He said his charity now emphasizes startup thinking and financial literacy for students, shifting from traditional career coaching to what he called the “language of entrepreneurship.”

He cited Warren Buffett, who told Vanity Fair in 2011 he’d read a study finding that the age at which people started their first businesses is one of the biggest predictors of future success, though Buffett didn’t identify the study.

“To start a business and not only be good at math, reading, speaking, confidence, drive, it’s an amalgam of so many skills, and if you’re able to harness that at a young age, then you’re able to do like the 10,000-hour rule, right?” he said, referencing Malcolm Gladwell’s theory that mastery takes 10,000 hours of practice.

“In a world where everything is changing,” he said, “that’s a very powerful combination.”

He also said he wants Gen Z to look beyond traditional finance hubs to the next wave of automation, robotics, blockchain, and drones.

“Rather than chasing yesterday’s jobs, chase tomorrow’s,” he said.

Even as AI erodes entry roles, Nason remains hopeful.

“Half the industries that will exist in the future don’t exist today, and we’ll find out in the next five years,” he said.

“The challenge is to try to find where the tide is going.”

Read the original article on Business Insider
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Rising Stars of Wall Street: See Business Insider’s lists highlighting the future leaders of finance

Photo collage featuring Wall Street's rising stars of 2024

They’re closing deals, raising funds, and shaking up the old guard.

For eight years, Business Insider’s Rising Stars of Wall Street list has highlighted the young professionals redefining the finance industry. We’ve featured traders rewriting the playbook, investors shaping private markets, and influential dealmakers across firms such as Goldman Sachs, Blackstone, BlackRock, and Citadel, who quickly left their mark.

Many of these honorees have since risen to lead businesses and shape the industry’s direction. Take a look at our latest class and meet those who we’ve highlighted in the past.


2025’s Rising Stars of Wall Street

The up-and-coming finance leaders you need to know in 2025 — and what you need to know about them.


Advice and hacks from the top

We asked the 2025 Rising Star honorees for their top tips for college grads, how they spent their first big paychecks, and about their routines.


A look at past Rising Stars of Wall Street lists

Meet the classes of the past, made up of individuals who continue to succeed in one of the most competitive industries in the world.

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High court halts eviction of refugee under Home Office 28-day policy

Judge intervenes in case, disapplying government rule that charities say drives refugees into homelessness

A high court judge has overruled the government by halting the eviction of a refugee from his asylum accommodation in an emergency case in the early hours of the morning.

Mr Justice Johnson made an order in the out-of-hours case just before 2am on Wednesday, disapplying a Home Office policy that requires new refugees to move on from their asylum accommodation within 28 days.

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Gun violence prevention groups disqualified from grants built around their work

Trump administration altering program that was a lifeline for pioneering non-profits helping reduce gun violence

The Trump administration has released solicitations for a grant program meant to stop gun violence in underserved communities. But this year, the non-profits the grant was built around are disqualified from applying, according to an application notice released by the Department of Justice (DoJ) in September.

The Community Based Violence Intervention and Prevention Initiative (CVIPI), was created in 2022, to support groups working in rural and urban communities struggling to address violence and fund research studying the programs’ efficacy.

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