Monday, October 24, 2011

What Really Has Wall Street Worried Now

No, it isn't Occupy Wall Street. It's the prospect of a shifting market and pay cuts and layoffs, according to BusinessWeek.

Charles Stevenson, president of hedge fund Navigator Group, heads the co-op board at 740 Park Ave., home to Blackstone (BX) Chairman Stephen Schwarzman and oilman David Koch. While the Upper East Side building was picketed by Occupy Wall Street in early October, Stevenson, 64, is less disturbed by the protesters than by the problems plaguing his industry. “I don’t think it’s a time to make money—this is a time to rig for survival,” he says. “The future is not going to be like a past we knew. There’s no exit from this morass.”

Euphoria swept Wall Street in 2009 as it rebounded to record profits after the credit crisis. Now the benefits of a $700 billion taxpayer bailout and $1.2 trillion in emergency funding from the Federal Reserve have faded. An anemic global economy, the European sovereign debt crisis, U.S. unemployment stuck above 9 percent, and swooning stock markets have darkened the mood on Wall Street, where bankers worry the troubles may not end for years.

On Oct. 18, Goldman Sachs reported that it lost $393 million in the third quarter, excluding dividends for preferred shareholders, after the value of some investments fell and revenue declined in trading, asset management, and securities underwriting. Michael Karp, CEO of New York recruitment firm Options Group, says Wall Street pay will fall 30 percent this year, and more for executives. It will be flat or down even in businesses doing relatively well, such as emerging markets and commodities, he adds…

http://www.businessweek.com/magazine/what-really-has-wall-street-worried-10202011.html

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