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        <title><![CDATA[Wall Street bonus forecast not as dire as in May]]></title>
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        <lastBuildDate>Wed, 24 Jun 2020 02:32:00 +0000</lastBuildDate>
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            <media:title type="html">Wall Street bonus forecast not as dire as in May</media:title>
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        <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>With the economy slowly bouncing back from coronavirus quarantines, Wall Street bonus season is shaping up to be less of a nightmare and more of a very bad dream.</p><p>The latest survey by compensation consultant Johnson Associates predicts that financial services pay will be slashed by 15 percent to 20 percent in 2020 — a vast improvement from the 30 percent cuts the <strong>same survey predicted in mid-May</strong>.</p><p>“We’ve dug halfway out of the hole,” the report’s author, Alan Johnson, told The Post. “But that said, after a pandemic and the social unrest, it’s going to be an emotion-filled end of the year.”</p><p>Adding to the year-end drama, Johnson said, will be an uptick in pink slips, as Wall Street looks to cut costs in the aftermath of the pandemic, which is expected to lead to a decline in business for retail and investment bankers thanks to rising loan defaults and a frozen M&amp;A landscape.</p><p>“Retail bankers, in particular, will be way off this year,” mused Johnson, “which tells you how weird this year will be, as that sector is usually very stable.”</p><p>One group that can relax a bit are the traders, who stand to ride a surging stock market to stellar year-end results if prices remain buoyed by Federal Reserve cash and positive sentiment that a COVID-19 vaccine will be discovered in early 2021.</p><p>“Traders will do well,” said Johnson, referring to the dueling realities of the stock market and the economy.</p><p>Johnson’s report also predicts that the Black Lives Matter movement could have real impact on year-end pay considerations, with executive compensation and pay ratios being looked at through a new diversity lens as financial firms reckon with racial inequities within their own walls.</p><p>“This is not a year to be tone deaf,” Johnson said.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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