Global Stock Markets
Wall Street bonuses may climb as much as 10 percent this year, in the
first meaningful jump for the industry since 2013.
Bankers who advise companies on issuing stock or
bonds could see an even bigger pay jump, as much as 20 percent,
compensation firm Johnson Associates Inc said on Sunday.
A
reduced emphasis on financial regulation under U.S. President Donald
Trump has boosted shares of banks to peak levels on hopes higher
interest rates, lower taxes and faster economic growth under the Trump
administration would lift profits.
The KBW
Nasdaq Bank Index, which measures the largest U.S. banks, has risen 34
percent since the election, compared with the benchmark S&P 500
index’s 24 percent gain over the same period.
But
looser banking regulations haven’t translated yet into better trading
results amid low market volatility and tepid client activity. Wall
Street firms’ bond trading revenue has fallen for about seven years amid
new rules on trading and capital.
Banks,
including Goldman Sachs Group Inc and Morgan Stanley, that once relied
heavily on trading, are now leaning more heavily on businesses like
private equity and wealth management.
As a result, fixed income traders are likely to see their bonuses fall as much as 10 percent, the report said.

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