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Wall Street Bonuses Up 17%, Profits Could Hit 'Unprecedented' Level, Says NY State Comptroller Thomas DiNapoli

Wall Street Bonuses

First Posted: 04/25/10 06:12 AM ET Updated: 05/25/11 04:35 PM ET

ALBANY, N.Y. (By Michael Gormley, Associated Press) - Wall Street bonuses were up 17 percent to over $20 billion in 2009, the year taxpayers bailed out the financial sector after its meltdown, New York state Comptroller Thomas DiNapoli said Tuesday.

Total compensation at the largest securities firms grew beyond that figure and profits could surpass what he calls an unprecedented $55 billion last year, DiNapoli said. That's nearly three times Wall Street's record increase, a rate of growth that is boosted in part by the record losses in 2008 of nearly $43 billion, the Democrat said.

"Wall Street is vital to New York's economy, and the dollars generated by the industry help the state's bottom line," said DiNapoli. "But for most Americans, these huge bonuses are a bitter pill and hard to comprehend. ... Taxpayers bailed them out, and now they're back making money while many New York families are still struggling to make ends meet."

DiNapoli supports reforms that require Wall Street bonuses to be tied to long-term profitability, to force more stability in the volatile markets and "make sure the securities industry thrives without driving the rest of us out on a fragile economic limb."

DiNapoli reviews tax collections each year and bases his annual projection of Wall Street bonuses on income and other taxes paid in New York City.

DiNapoli notes the bonuses help state revenues tremendously as it faces an $8.2 billion deficit, but they are a "bitter pill" to most taxpayers nationwide.

The bonus estimate doesn't include compensation that Wall Streeters chose to take in stock options and other kinds of deferred payment.

He said the bonus pool is a third less than the amount paid out two years ago when Wall Street had its previously most profitable year.

The estimate does not include stock options that have not yet been realized or other forms of deferred compensation. This year's estimated bonus pool is third less than the amount paid two years ago, the previous most profitable year.

For example, Morgan Stanley CEO James Gorman could receive a stock bonus currently valued at $8.1 million for 2009 if he meets certain performance targets, the bank said in January. Gorman is getting deferred stock worth $5.4 million but no cash bonus for 2009, Morgan Stanley said in a filing. Gorman can't cash in the stock for three years.

Banks had been expected to hand out near-record compensation for last year's performance. Several banks earned huge profits in 2009, aided by billions in government bailout funds and a rebounding stock market.

State Attorney General Andrew Cuomo has pressed the nation's eight biggest banks to reveal how much they plan to pay out in employee bonuses for 2009. The Democrat also sought the size of the banks' bonus pool would have been affected if the banks hadn't received a taxpayer rescue at the height of the financial crisis in late 2008.

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ALBANY, N.Y. (By Michael Gormley, Associated Press) - Wall Street bonuses were up 17 percent to over $20 billion in 2009, the year taxpayers bailed out the financial sector after its meltdown, New Yo...
ALBANY, N.Y. (By Michael Gormley, Associated Press) - Wall Street bonuses were up 17 percent to over $20 billion in 2009, the year taxpayers bailed out the financial sector after its meltdown, New Yo...
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11:05 AM on 02/24/2010
My daughter a nontenured special education teacher in Wildwood NJ was just told all nontenured teaches will be laid off and these bastards continue on their merry way with their big bonuses.
08:53 PM on 02/23/2010
How many here have 401K plans? How many here secretly own and support these sob's without even knowing it? My guess? Many.

Sell your stocks, save your cash, pay your debts and take on no new loans.

Bankers can't securitize loans that never happen in the first place!!!
shylove2
warfare state is pathological
06:21 PM on 02/23/2010
They are probably out to drain off as much as they can before we collapse completely. The money does not come from nowhere, it comes out of the rest of the country's pocket.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
spinns17
TEAMSTER
05:53 PM on 02/23/2010
come on 2012 .lol
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
spinns17
TEAMSTER
05:51 PM on 02/23/2010
welcome to mexico.good thing they put that fence up .we wouldnt know which side is which.
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reasonshouldrule
04:36 PM on 02/23/2010
There are a lot of smart people on this site. Would somebody explain to me why we (1) can't charge some of these Wall streeters with fraud and (2) can't just get rid of these large Wall st. concerns?
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spinns17
TEAMSTER
05:49 PM on 02/23/2010
we dont have a congress .only a wall street board .
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chelliza
06:01 PM on 02/23/2010
This is exactly what Reagan put in motion and exactly what he had in mind. He wanted the wealthy few to have all the wealth and then they would let it trickle down as they saw fit. He then wanted a small, weak government so it could not stop them. Both have happened as planned. It will not trickle down and I'm not sure it was ever really supposed to. But as poverty trickles up, and more from the upper middle class gets hit by it, they will soon realize that the plan did not include them. If you can't get in your private jet and fly off to your home in another country, you will go down too eventually.
03:16 PM on 02/23/2010
I found the following details from an article on the demise of Bear Stearns back in 2008 quite amusing. It's about the panicking of the bankers and their cancellations of interior decorating projects.

"We only had about $50,000 worth of final touches (to go), and the wife called me last week and said stop," said interior designer Darren Henault, whose work has been featured in such magazines as Vanity Fair and Elle Decor.

http://www.reuters.com/article/idUSN2631380520080326

I like that: $50,000 for "final touches." Heck, that could buy a small house in some areas of the nation.
03:12 PM on 02/23/2010
I think it is time for a sit in at the mansions of these criminals. If they can just take our money by blackmailing our elected officials, we can also take their assets by simply moving a mob into them and taking them by force.
03:13 PM on 02/23/2010
March on Versailles, baby!
04:13 PM on 02/23/2010
Bring your torches and pitchforks.
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spinns17
TEAMSTER
05:50 PM on 02/23/2010
im there
03:01 PM on 02/23/2010
Wall St. is running the same scam that caused its near collapse in 2007. Wall St. is creating another gigantic financial bubble, stealing all the money in the form of bonuses, salaries and stock options, and when the bubble collapses, the criminals get to keep their money while the taxpayer gets to bail out the institutions that they bankrupted. The government and both political parties are accomplices to this scam, so nobody should expect any justice to be served. Anybody who wants justice should be prepared to take justice into their own hands.
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02:31 PM on 02/23/2010
I love it when this article says that the '[bail outs] and bonuses will help the state of New York's bottom line'.

It just goes to show you that Wall Street Democrats like Tim Geithner believe more in 'trickle-down voodoo' economics then Republicans.

It's the mother of all justifications.

You justify a bank robber because eventually the money he stole will 'trickle-down' to the serfs at the bottom of the economy.

That's what the bail outs say folks.
02:08 PM on 02/23/2010
Actually, they want to reduce us to ancien-regime France when the top 1-2% controlled everyone else. They want to reduce as many Americans to the level of peasants and staff. After all, what could be better, according to our elites, than to have a Ph.D. tutor their spawn for FREE at their palatial residences, ranging from 5500 sq. ft to 50,000 sq. ft.? Or having 10 personal chefs whip up a 10-course meal when they invite their fellow elites? 5 personal librarians to catalogue their personal libraries? Etc. And of course since they're employing YOU, they have the right to be as rude, condescending, or brutal as they wish.

Welcome to the new America--the new version of the Old World that American colonists were trying to escape.
01:56 PM on 02/23/2010
This bonus issue also related to recent health insurance rate hikes. For example a couple of years ago the CEO of Anthem Blue Cross ( same company now raising rates by 39% in California ) received a 43 million dollar bonus. For further discussion see : http://www.huffingtonpost.com/michael-blumenfield-md/huge-compensation-package_b_464678.html
02:16 PM on 02/23/2010
And we expect the federal gov't to manage our healthcare system? Get real.
03:03 PM on 02/23/2010
You prefer to have your health managed by criminals who pay themselves giant bonuses with your money? That's totally insane.
01:56 PM on 02/23/2010
It's all part of the master plan to lower the standard of living in America,since America has to compete with the rest of the world now,they have to bring America down towards third world status,the America we all knew is no longer and is not coming back,this is the 21st century America.
01:16 PM on 02/23/2010
This is scandalous!
Why haven't the 'quants'
who started this mess
been arrested instead
of continuing to make billions??
03:04 PM on 02/23/2010
The government and both political parties are accomplices to this scam. If you want justice, be prepared to take justice into your own hands.
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spinns17
TEAMSTER
05:55 PM on 02/23/2010
and how do we do that ?.
01:07 PM on 02/23/2010
I have a terrible feeling about this. I have never felt so enraged - I am not in a terrible situation luckily but I can only imagine the outrage of people who are.

Someone better find a decent outlet for it quick ... we haven't seen the last home set on fire, bulldozed, abandoned or blown up, that's for sure. I just hope the violence doesn't escalate. These jobs bills and tiny regulations on credit cards are not going to cut it.
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chelliza
06:07 PM on 02/23/2010
You are not in a terrible situation yet, but it trickles up not down. If we do't find a way to stop it, it will hit us eventually too.