Houston Chronicle

Average annual Wall Street bonus rises to $138,210

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NEW YORK — The average Wall Street banker bonus came to slightly more than $138,000 in 2016, according to data released this week from the New York State Comptrolle­r’s Office.

The major banks set aside $23.9 billion for bonuses in 2016, or $138,210 per worker, up 2 percent from a year earlier.

Bonuses remain well below than the levels they were in their heydays before the financial crisis, when the average bonus reached as high as $191,360 in 2006.

While most Wall Street bankers make a salary, the vast majority of their compensati­on comes in the form of annual bonuses which reflect how the firm did that year, plus the worker’s contributi­on.

Some bonuses can be as small as a few thousand dollars for low-level support staff, while highprofil­e traders and investment bankers can bring in bonuses in the tens of millions of dollars.

Roughly 177,000 people were employed by Wall Street securities and brokerage firms in 2016, according to the comptrolle­r’s office, the highest level of employment since 2008.

Industrywi­de profits in New York state were $17.3 billion, the highest annual profit for the industry in New York state since 2012.

Bigger profits for the industry are typically good for New York, since the state is heavily reliant on Wall Street profits for tax revenue.

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