
(CBS / iStock Photo)
Happy days are here again for Wall St. workers.
Twenty-three major U.S. banks and investment firms are on a pace to dole out $140 billion in compensation this year, exceeding the pre-crisis levels of 2007, according to a
Wall Street Journal report ($).
Many banks have quickly returned to strong revenue levels a year after the entire financial system was threatened – a crisis that sparked public outrage over the banks' risky practices and exorbitant compensation levels and prompted a multi-billion-dollar government rescue.
But now, with the stock market recovering and the credit crunch easing, banks and investment houses are pumping money back into human capital.
The $140 billion estimate, which amounts to a $143,400 average worker salary, is 20 percent higher than last year's $117 billion. It also beats out 2007's record level of $130 billion.
Among the companies included in the Journal's survey are banks JPMorgan Chase, Bank of America and Citigroup and investment firms Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley.
The Journal analyzed the firms' quarterly compensation disclosures and calculated them as a percentage of quarterly earnings. They then extrapolated compensation estimates based on annual revenue projections – which are expected to reach $437 billion this year.
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