Slavery in the City: Death of
21-year-old intern Moritz Erhardt at Merrill Lynch sparks furore over long
hours and macho culture at banks
Young German worked until 6am for three consecutive days before collapse at
home in east London
Serious concerns have been raised tonight about
the punishing hours endured by interns at City investment banks following the
death of a young Bank of America Merrill Lynch employee.
Moritz Erhardt, 21, was nearing the end of a seven-week internship in
London when he collapsed at home after working until 6am for three days in a
row.
His body was discovered by his flatmates. The circumstances of his death
are unknown, but police are not treating them as suspicious. Some reports suggested
that Mr Moritz, from Freiburg, south-west Germany, was epileptic.
Around 300 interns working at various banks stay at the Claredale House
student accommodation complex in Bethnal Green in east London for between seven
and 10 weeks over the summer. One intern, who did not want to be named, told The Independent those in Mr Erhardt’s
investing banking division group faced the longest hours.
He said: “We all work long hours, but the guys working regularly until 3am
or 4am are those in investment banking. People working in markets will have to
be in at 6am but not stay as late, so what time you can leave the office
depends on your division.
“You’re only doing it for up to 10 weeks so there’s a general acceptance of
it. I see many people wandering around, blurry-eyed and drinking caffeine to
get through but people don’t complain because the potential rewards are so
great. We’re competing for some very well-paid jobs.”
Another intern living at Claredale claimed that Mr Erhardt, who had been
earning £2,700 a month or £45,000 pro rata, collapsed from exhaustion. “He
apparently pulled eight all-nighters in two weeks. They get you working crazy
hours and maybe it was just too much for him in the end,” they said.
Users of the popular finance blog wallstreetoasis.com insisted Mr Erhardt
regularly worked long hours, with his final three days consisting of 21-hour
stints in the office. One said: “He was found dead in the shower by his
flatmate. Intern at BAML who went home at 6am three days in a row.”
Mr Erhardt was found last Thursday around 8.30pm and was pronounced dead at
the scene. His parents are believed to be in the UK where a post-mortem and
inquest will now take place.
The London-based cardiologist Dr Aseem Malhotra spoke of the health risks
to which young banking interns are exposed. He said: “Although we don’t know
for sure what caused such a tragic death, we know that working excessive hours,
especially night shifts, is an extra risk to health.
“Last year the BMJ [medical journal] published the largest and most
comprehensive review of over two million people concluding that those working
shifts and especially night shifts were at significantly increased risk of
heart attack and stroke. It’s probably related to a combination of sleep
deprivation and added stress.”
Bank of America Merrill Lynch said it could not comment on the claims about
the hours that Mr Erhardt had been working. John McIvor, head of international
communications at Merrill Lynch, said: “All the rumours and comments are just
that. We will have to wait and see what the post-mortem examination says.” He
added: “Our first thoughts are with his family and we send our condolences to
them.”
Mr McIvor refused to say whether or not it was common for staff to work
through the night. He said: “I have not got any comment to make on our work
patterns.” But he added: “Do people in investment banking sometimes work long
hours? Yes they do.”
Mr Erhardt appears to have been one of many interns caught on the so-called
“magic roundabout” – a process whereby a taxi takes interns home, waits outside
while they shower and change, then drives them back to the office to begin
another long day.
FinanceInterns, a careers advice group, condemned the City’s long-hours
culture. A spokesperson said: “Young people who jubilantly accept a summer
internship thinking they’ve landed a chance at their dream job, find themselves
declaring that, what should have been a summer full of hope, is in fact the
‘worst three months’ of their lives due to the exhausting combination of
all-nighters, weekend work and the magic roundabout.
“In the toughest job-market experienced in recent times, competition is
even higher. Consequently these talented, diligent, young people are ever more
willing to work hours which more senior staff would not.”