Bonus Time on Wall Street is Bonus Time For NYC Realtors

Oct 25, 2007 12:49 PM, By Christina Mucciolo


         Subscribe in NewsGator Online   Subscribe in Bloglines  

Wall Street bonuses and their effects on the sale of luxury apartments in Manhattan? Said to be like the moon and the tide. The Wall Street bonus season reached record heights in 2006 ($23.9 billion), while luxury apartment sales in Manhattan peaked in the first half of 2007 (at over 740), according to the liberal New York-centric weekly newspaper The New York Observer (a paper that loves to dish—in a decidedly gossipy way—about who bought what for how much). Former CEO and chairman of Citigroup, Sandy Weill partook in this year’s feeding frenzy and snatched up a $42.4 million penthouse at the luxury neo-classical Fifteen Central Park West. (Click here to see The Observer’s story).

The last time the NYC luxury real estate market saw this kind of sales boom was in the first half of 2002, when 483 apartments were sold following a $13 billion bonus season in 2001. But the connection between a robust bonus season and the health of elite real estate sales in Manhattan is not axiomatic, says The Observer. In fact, NYC luxury sales slipped lower after 2002, even as Wall Street bonuses continued to climb.

Bonuses this year are expected to be hefty, though perhaps not record breaking, says The Observer. The average year-end Wall Street bonus totaled $137,500 in 2006. The average price for a luxury apartment in Manhattan? $5.1 million.


Commenting terms of use blog comments powered by Disqus

Current Issue

Registered Rep Cover

Humbled But (Somehow) Triumphant

By Kristen French With reporting from John Churchill and Halah Touryalai
October 1, 2008

Rescued by Bank of America from its near-death experience, Merrill Lynch is still managing to set the industry standard.



browse back issues


Featured Book

Cannon’s Concepts For Professionals: A Complete Library of Essential Financial Concepts 

This reference book was updated for 2008 and now contains over 900 pages of information on essential financial concepts and wealth management strategies for your work with wealthy clients. The book not only contains brief summaries of each topic, but it also contains many useful diagrams and charts that can be used with clients when explaining difficult financial concepts. The information in this book meets current FINRA/NASD guidelines....

Bookstore

Rainmaker
Mastering High Net Worth Mastering High Net Worth
Back to Top