- TPG is the latest private equity firm to bow out of early recruiting for junior talent.
- The firm sent a letter to potential candidates on Monday saying it won't hire until 2026.
- It joins Apollo and General Atlantic in toppling an annual recruiting tradition amid criticisms.
Another private equity firm pulled the plug on recruiting for 2027 associates this year, Business Insider has learned.
TPG, a buyout firm with $251 billion in assets, emailed recent graduates — many of whom are about to begin their first year as investment bankers — after 4:20 p.m. on Monday to say that they will not hire for 2027 until "sometime in 2026."
This is the third firm to withdraw from "on-cycle recruiting," a frenetic recruiting process focused on getting incoming junior investment bankers to agree to jobs that won't start for two years, usually after their investment banking analyst training has ended.
The domino effect began when Apollo announced a similar decision on June 11, as BI reported. It was followed by General Atlantic, which also canceled plans for early recruiting on June 12. Those announcements came days after JPMorgan told its incoming first-year bankers that they'd fire anyone who accepted one of these pre-dated jobs.
The industry has been criticized for starting on-cycle recruiting earlier and earlier each year. Last year, the process kicked off at the end of June, before many incoming junior bankers had even started Day 1 of their new Wall Street jobs. This year, there were signs it might start even earlier, with some firms reaching out for informal "coffee chats" during college graduation ceremonies.
TPG's memo, a copy of which was obtained by Business Insider, was sent by Anna Edwin, an HR executive at TPG. Here's the email: