Untroubled by modesty or lack of ambition, 29-year old Sam Bankman-Fried sets out his ambitions for FTX, as the cryptocurrency exchange goes into another fundraising round. “If we are the biggest exchange, buying Goldman Sachs and CME is not out of the question at all”. However, Fink said too, that the salary rise - which will take effect from September - wasn't a reaction to inflationary pressures but reflected a desire to spread the love after a period of strong performance.īond King Bill Gross is being sued (again) by his neighbours over allegations of loud music and offensively tall umbrellas ( Twitter) The move feels inflationary, and indeed BlackRock chief executive Larry Fink has been warning about inflation. Announced yesterday and pitched as a reward for 'initiative, commitment and teamwork,' it applies to everyone irrespective of their role and doesn't appear to be the sort of thing that can be taken back in 2024 if BlackRock isn't doing quite so well by then. While double-digit pay inflation is the new norm for juniors on the sell-side, it is at least restricted to a few people ( analysts, associates, sometimes VPs) in a single division (investment banking) and - in the case of Apollo - it's just a retention bonus and can easily be removed as necessary.īlackRock's off-cycle salary 8% salary rise for all its employees up to director level "after a period like no other in the firm’s history," feels a little different. Apollo increased associate compensation by 22%. ![]() Banks like Barclays and Citi have increased analyst salaries by 17% this year. Separately, if you're concerned that inflation is becoming an issue, then a brief browse of recent salary increases in financial services firms is likely to set your teeth on edge. For all that the role is often poorly defined, when the chips are down, the market’s in crisis and the bank desperately in need of capital and funding, it’s the CFO the board looks to, not the COO, CRO, CIO or CTO, to ask “any ideas”? But it makes sense to have someone in that role who made a choice to “understand tactical skills associated with a sales and trading environment” at an early career stage. ![]() ![]() I did not expect that to be the conversation that we were having”. The conversation about being promoted to CFO six years later was apparently less nerve-wracking – “He was jovial and he was nice and he was very complimentary. It was quite dark and I remember it was a 5 o’clock interview” Yeshaya appears to have had a close call. She recalls to Bloomberg that “I was relatively young, your hands are shaking, you’ve never been upstairs to the 40th floor. And her division at the time was one of the lower-ranked desks at Morgan Stanley, a prime candidate to be considered “non core”. She was first invited to join Gorman’s staff in 2014, just as the rumors were circulating about what turned out to be a brutal restructuring affecting 25% of the MS workforce. But Ms Yeshaya had a fairly easy choice to make. It’s quite unusual for people who have been such stars in risk-taking roles to “go into management” there’s often a perception that it’s a career risk as well as likely to result in a lower bonus, and it’s not really possible to keep your name personally attached to revenue generation as a forex trader in the way that an advisory banker can. In fact, she was one of comparatively few women to have made Managing Director, at the age of 34 as a trader in the FICC division, after having turned down an opportunity to do an economics PhD and make a career on the Research team. Interestingly, though, she hasn’t spent her career on the management track. He holds a Bachelor's degree from Yale University a Master's degree from Harvard's Kennedy School of Government a law degree from Columbia University and an MBA from the University of Virginia's Darden School of Business.On that basis, Sharon Yeshaya has a pretty good set of experiences for her new job as CFO at Morgan Stanley as well as having been James Gorman’s chief of staff, she was previously the head of Investor Relations. Fink writes the Stocks to Watch daily column that provides readers with timely insight into current events and their potential impact on publicly listed companies. ![]() He has traded options for more than 20 years and generated personal profits of more than $5 million. Fink switched gears to the investment realm full-time, working for a university endowment, a private wealth management firm, an insurance and financial planning company, and as a senior analyst for an online investment newsletter service. Prior to joining Investing Daily, he practiced telecommunications regulatory law for nine years. James Fink is the senior online editor for Investing Daily and is also chief investment strategist for Jim Fink's Options for Income.
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