Headline: Wall Street Bonuses Drop to Lowest in 30 Years - NYP
Started by farquhar
over 17 years ago
Posts: 124
Member since: Jun 2008
Discussion about
WALL STREET BONUSES DROP TO LOWEST IN 30 YEARS By BRENDAN SCOTT, POST CORRESPONDENT ALBANY - The wheels have officially come off the Wall Street gravy train. Bonuses paid by financial firms to their New York City employees tumbled a record 44 percent in the last year, blowing a combined $1.3 billion hole in city and state budgets, state Comptroller Thomas DiNapoli announced yesterday. The drop... [more]
WALL STREET BONUSES DROP TO LOWEST IN 30 YEARS
By BRENDAN SCOTT, POST CORRESPONDENT
ALBANY - The wheels have officially come off the Wall Street gravy train.
Bonuses paid by financial firms to their New York City employees tumbled a record 44 percent in the last year, blowing a combined $1.3 billion hole in city and state budgets, state Comptroller Thomas DiNapoli announced yesterday.
The drop reflects the largest decline in the local bonus pool in more than 30 years and confirms the worst fears of state and city political leaders, who for years have bet on Wall Street gains to balance budgets.
Overall, financial firms paid out $18.4 billion in bonuses last year, down from $32.9 billion in 2007 and an all-time-high of $34.1 billion in 2006.
The size of bonus checks shrank, too, as financial firms wrote off massive losses and some top executives decided to forgo bonuses altogether.
The average individual bonus fell 37 percent to $112,000, the lowest level since 2004. Last year, bonus checks averaged $177,000.
"The effect of the lower bonus payments will ripple throughout the regional economy and could cost the state and city of New York significant tax revenue," DiNapoli said.
The city collected $275 million less in personal income taxes due to the drop-off in bonuses last year, the comptroller found. The state, meanwhile, took a $1 billion hit.
http://www.nypost.com/seven/01292009/news/regionalnews/wall_street_bonuses_drop_to_lowest_in_30_152516.htm[less]
Response by farquhar
over 17 years ago
Posts: 124
Member since: Jun 2008
While the NYT spins this as not such a big deal, here are a couple of key points:
(1) We know Merrill paid out $4B. That's 22% of the entire Wall Street bonus pool. Take out Merrill, and how much are the other firms' bonus pools down compared to last year?
(2) Average bonus equals 2004 levels. Again, I wonder what that would look like if we adjusted for Merrill. In any event, consider again that that's 2004 levels for many fewer employees than last year.
Hard to find a silver lining for the NYC economy anywhere in this data.
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Response by patient09
over 17 years ago
Posts: 1571
Member since: Nov 2008
As applies to NYC RE values and potential future transactions. The important question is not how much of a drop, but how it was dispersed, what was the median, did the bulk go to already highly compensated people that already own nice pads? Was enough distributed down the hierarchy curve to support mid-tier apts and influence trade-up decisions?
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Response by nyc10022
over 17 years ago
Posts: 9868
Member since: Aug 2008
The AG's office has put Merrill under investigation for the bonuses.... I would noto be surprised with some clawback action.
While the NYT spins this as not such a big deal, here are a couple of key points:
(1) We know Merrill paid out $4B. That's 22% of the entire Wall Street bonus pool. Take out Merrill, and how much are the other firms' bonus pools down compared to last year?
(2) Average bonus equals 2004 levels. Again, I wonder what that would look like if we adjusted for Merrill. In any event, consider again that that's 2004 levels for many fewer employees than last year.
Hard to find a silver lining for the NYC economy anywhere in this data.
As applies to NYC RE values and potential future transactions. The important question is not how much of a drop, but how it was dispersed, what was the median, did the bulk go to already highly compensated people that already own nice pads? Was enough distributed down the hierarchy curve to support mid-tier apts and influence trade-up decisions?
The AG's office has put Merrill under investigation for the bonuses.... I would noto be surprised with some clawback action.