Wall Street bonus average falls to $101K
Major banks are seeing lower returns and economic instability in the US and Europe. And employee rewards are taking the hit.
Bring out the violins. The average Wall Street bonus will come in at just $101,000 this year.That's the estimate of State Comptroller Thomas DiNapoli, according to the New York Post. And while it seems like an incredible amount to most of us, it's actually a 16.5% drop from last year and nearly a 50% drop from the high-rolling days of 2006.
Some traders are waiting out these lean years in hopes of a return to the golden days. After all, Wall Street is more adept at making bundles of cash than just about anyone. It's well-positioned to capitalize on an economic recovery.
But others think Wall Street will never get back to those days of huge bonuses and thousand-dollar meals billed to the company expense account. "I don't believe the typical bonuses, as we used to know them, exist anymore," the CEO of one investment group, Shaffer Asset Management, told the Post.
Why the big banks being so tight-fisted? Four reasons:
1. The fiscal cliff. Although it appears that lawmakers are heading to some kind of solution, there is still too much up in the air. Wall Street has no clue what will happen after Jan. 1, and bankers are worried about what impact the fiscal cliff, with its significant tax increases and spending cuts, will have on the economy's growth.
2. The Federal Reserve. As Operation Twist expires, will the Fed move to another round of quantitative easing?
3. Europe. The neverending drama has impacted Wall Street all year as traders wait nervously for developments in the European debt crisis. This weekend, Italian prime minister Mario Monti said he would resign after the 2013 budget is approved.
4. Lower returns. A market downturn has made it much harder for banks to make money. The banking industry's return on equity slid to 7.6% in 2011 from 8.4% in 2010, Bloomberg reports. The average cost of that equity is around 10% to 12%.
All of those issues are creating uncertainty, which is Public Enemy No. 1 for Wall Street. And until banks feel a little more sure about what's going on, the spigot of bonus cash will be turned down.
The workforce is getting trimmed as well. Citigroup (C) is cutting 11,000 positions across the board, while UBS is getting out of fixed-income trading altogether. The Wall Street Journal reports that investment-banking and trading revenue at the 10 largest banks may only rise by 2.8% this year to $148 billion. That's a 32% drop from 2009 and a 13% drop from 2010.
More from Money Now
- A $1.5 billion ticket to the moon
- FedEx's busiest day ever: 200 packages a second
- Google's $2 billion tax dodge
| Tags: | Economy |
HEY JIM...68...We all paid those taxes, that worked...Not 36% Federal,unless you make BIG BUCKS, but then you pointed out MINUS DEDUCTS of course...YES plus those...AND if you invested in certain things like a Farm/Ranch/home office&space or other items, YOU COULD write off more...
Yeah I know the game, Jim....I know the game.
This is a crap story. First, they are generating a story off of estimates from earning analysts. Second, they are telling you the estimated average. You don't know if this is an estimate that'll happen - or not happen; you don't know if this average is for 10 bonuses or 1,000... this is a crap load of crap designed to inflame public sentiment again.
Well guess what - if you really want change on Wall Street and feel there are transgressions - do what I do - buy shares in each company you have an issue with and make your voice be heard... don't just vote for the proxy - make a statement! Wall Street listens to its investors more than bloggers that are simply getting worked up by a liberal media that wants divisivenss.
DATA PROVIDERS
Copyright © 2013 Microsoft. All rights reserved.
Quotes are real-time for NASDAQ, NYSE and AMEX. See delay times for other exchanges.
Fundamental company data and historical chart data provided by Thomson Reuters (click for restrictions). Real-time quotes provided by BATS Exchange. Real-time index quotes and delayed quotes supplied by Interactive Data Real-Time Services. Fund summary, fund performance and dividend data provided by Morningstar Inc. Analyst recommendations provided by Zacks Investment Research. StockScouter data provided by Verus Analytics. IPO data provided by Hoover's Inc. Index membership data provided by SIX Financial Information.
Japanese stock price data provided by Nomura Research Institute Ltd.; quotes delayed 20 minutes. Canadian fund data provided by CANNEX Financial Exchanges Ltd.
Trending NOW
- 1.amex
- 2.fb
- 3.abx
- 4.carmike cinemas
- 5.slw
- 6.fnma
- 7.universa investments
- 8.vrx
- 9.uvxy
- 10.amzn
About moneyNOW
MoneyNOW brings users smart, original and entertaining takes on the latest business and investing topics that are buzzing on the Web.
RECENT POSTS
Tired of constantly dying batteries, she came up with a device that could revolutionize energy storage -- and won $50,000 from Intel.
- Detroit in hot water over proposal to sell art
- Sears spirals toward oblivion
- Why aren't heads rolling at the IRS?
- Do we pay attention to roads and bridges now?
- Yahoo may be going after Hulu
- Apple's first computer could fetch $450,000
- AT&T adds sneaky fee onto its wireless bills
- Soaring ER use adds more pain to health costs
- Netflix gets 'Arrested Development' stars cheap
MARKET UPDATE
[BRIEFING.COM] Stocks entered the weekend on a mixed note as the S&P 500 shed 0.1% while the Dow ended with a gain of 0.1%.
The major averages began the day on a lower note as nine of ten sectors saw losses of more than 0.5%.
The consumer staples sector was the lone exception as the group spent the entire day in positive territory thanks to the relative strength of Dow component Procter & Gamble (PG 81.89, +3.19). The second-largest staple stock advanced ... More
More Market News
TOP STOCKS
S&P's top-ranked analysts share their latest stock recommendations.
MSN MONEY'S
- Shared
- Commented
- Viewed



