Bonuses return with a vengeance on Wall Street

24 Feb 2010

1

With Wall Street employees genetically programmed with STM (short term memory), the pain of the global financial crisis of 2008 have long been forgotten as Wall Street bonuses jumped 17 per cent last year, to an estimated $20.3 billion, according to a report released yesterday by the New York State comptroller.

In a scathing report released yesterday, Thomas DiNapoli, the New York State Comptroller, said that Wall Street bonuses paid to New York City securities industry employees rose by 17 per cent to $20.3 billion in 2009.

Total compensation at the largest securities firms grew even faster and industry profits could exceed an unprecedented $55 billion in 2009, nearly three times greater than the previous all-time record. In 2008, the industry lost a record $42.6 billion with the collapse of the financial markets.

New York's crusading Attorney-General Andrew Cuomo, after conducting a nine-month investigation into compensation practices in the American banking system mismanagement, released a report last July titled, No Rhyme Or Reason: The Heads I Win, Tails You Lose, in wich he alleged that nearly a dozen banks paid out more than $32.6 billion in bonuses in 2008 even as they received $175 billion in taxpayer's money. (See: US banks paid $ 32.6 billion in bonuses: Andrew Cuomo

In his analysis of the 2008 bonuses and earnings paid at the nine TARP recipients, two firms, Citigroup and Merrill Lynch suffered massive losses of more than $27 billion at each firm. Nevertheless, Citigroup paid out $5.33 billion in bonuses and Merrill paid $3.6 billion in bonuses.

Despite their combined loss of $54 billion, the two banks collectively paid out nearly $9 billion in bonuses and then received government bailouts totaling $55 billion.

Latest articles

ByteDance’s Seedance 2.0 video AI draws attention as China eyes next breakout AI success

ByteDance’s Seedance 2.0 video AI draws attention as China eyes next breakout AI success

Trump-linked World Liberty Financial plans low-fee forex and remittance platform

Trump-linked World Liberty Financial plans low-fee forex and remittance platform

Adyen shares slide 15% as softer payment volumes temper revenue growth

Adyen shares slide 15% as softer payment volumes temper revenue growth

China eases stance as EV makers begin direct tariff talks with EU

China eases stance as EV makers begin direct tariff talks with EU

UK selects HSBC’s blockchain platform for digital gilt pilot

UK selects HSBC’s blockchain platform for digital gilt pilot

The silicon-rich AI race: how Cisco’s G300 puts networking at the center of compute

The silicon-rich AI race: how Cisco’s G300 puts networking at the center of compute

Silver jumps nearly Rs 7,000/kg; gold rises Rs 1,600 as weak US retail data boosts rate-cut bets

Silver jumps nearly Rs 7,000/kg; gold rises Rs 1,600 as weak US retail data boosts rate-cut bets

Goldman Sachs doubles down on India, climbs Wall Street rankings in crowded deal market

Goldman Sachs doubles down on India, climbs Wall Street rankings in crowded deal market

Rahul Gandhi criticises India–US trade deal as tariffs on Indian goods rise to 18%

Rahul Gandhi criticises India–US trade deal as tariffs on Indian goods rise to 18%