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Wall Street’s bonus pool hit a record high last year — with bankers on average raking in an eye-popping windfall of $244,700 on top of their salaries — as stock trading roared back to life.

Data released by New York state Comptroller Thomas P. DiNapoli found that financiers saw the annual number swell to a whopping $47.5 billion in its first major surge since the coronavirus pandemic. 

The survey said payouts have soared as New York’s banks finally bounce back from a lull that had followed a COVID-era boom in public offerings made through shell companies known as SPACs, or special-purpose acquisition companies.

Ana Gioia/NY POST DESIGNAna Gioia/NY POST DESIGN

The survey pointed out that profits for the city’s finance industry “rose by 90% in 2024” driven by stronger trading and underwriting revenues, although some dealmaking — particularly IPOs, continued to sag.

“The record-high bonus pool reflects Wall Street’s very strong performance in 2024,” DiNapoli said. “This financial market strength is good news for New York’s economy.”

But in a thinly veiled dig at President Trump’s tariff trade war, DiNapoli warned that the trend could be quickly reversed this year.

“Increasing uncertainty in the economy amid significant federal policy changes may dampen the outlook for parts of the securities industry in 2025,” the Democrat added.


  State Comptroller Thomas DiNapoli warned that uncertainty over the economic outlooks could reverse the trend later in 2025. Pacific Press/LightRocket via Getty Images State Comptroller Thomas DiNapoli warned that uncertainty over the economic outlooks could reverse the trend later in 2025. Pacific Press/LightRocket via Getty Images

DiNapoli’s estimates focus exclusively on cash bonuses rather than deferred compensation such as stock options.

The boost in profits also saw Wall Street job numbers reach their “highest annual level in nearly three decades.”

The comptroller said there were 201,500 working in the New York finance industry, up from 198,400 the year prior and exceeding the previous peak seen in 2000. 

DiNapoli added that Wall Street accounted for 19% of the entire state of New York’s tax collection, and a total of 7% of the city’s revenue year, underlining the industry’s importance to the Big Apple.

Financial services firms are also responsible for a greater share of new leasing activity in the city since the pandemic and have helped drive the development of new property, the survey added.

It cited JPMorgan Chase’s move to bring staffers back to the office at a new 60-story headquarters building in Midtown as further boosting economic growth in New York City.

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