Business Standard

Wall Street holiday parties are back... but don’t tell anyone

- LAWRENCE DELEVINGNE & OLIVIA ORAN New York, 22 December REUTERS

Wall Street holiday parties this year took place in luxury venues like the Waldorf Astoria, featured women dressed as glowing angels, and had fine wine, scotch and bourbon on hand. But organisers of the soirées, conscious of tighter budgets and public scrutiny, are not eager to discuss the merriment. Big financial firms started curtailing year-end bashes in 2008 as taxpayer bailouts, populist outrage and weak profits created an environmen­t where lavish celebratio­ns were frowned upon. Some investment banks stopped sponsoring corporate holiday parties altogether, advising individual teams to use their own budgets for more intimate gatherings. Catering managers and event planners said that while holiday party spending is still down relative to its pre-financial crisis peak, Wall Street is starting to come back on the scene.

“It’s a more optimistic climate,” said Bill Spinner, director of catering at The Pierre, a Taj Hotel in New York.

The number of Wall Street firms with holiday events at The Pierre was steady this year, he said, but more people attended.

Other planners said the atmosphere was lighter in 2016, with winter wonderland and carnival themes featuring such flourishes as giant snow globe photo booths and game stations.

A Reuters review of the financial industry holiday scene found parties sponsored by Credit Suisse Group AG, Bank of New York Mellon Corp, Moelis & Co, BlackRock Inc, Blackstone Group LP, KKR & Co LP, Apollo Global Management, PIMCO, AQR Capital Management LP, Bain Capital, York Capital Management LLC and Chilton Investment Management, among others.

Employees enjoyed themselves at swanky venues in New York, London, Boston, Chicago, Southern California, Sydney and Wroclaw, Poland, according to attendees and Instagram photos. Representa­tives of some firms said they were reticent to discuss the parties because they have tried to keep such events out of the news since the financial crisis.

One argued his firm’s party was more austere than in prior years, and that festive Instagram photos with ostentatio­us hashtags misreprese­nted it. Others declined to comment at all.

B Allan Kurtz, managing director at New York events venue Gotham Hall, which hosts about half a dozen Wall Street holiday gatherings each year, said the standard budget is $100,000 to $200,000.

Spending is similar to what it was in the years leading up to the crisis but then the money went further, Kurtz said. It works out to about 20 per cent more than today’s dollars adjusted for inflation. One expensive feature that has been absent since 2008 is a hired celebrity entertaine­r or singer. Private-equity firm KKR used Gotham Hall for its party, which Kurtz declined to comment on. Whatever they spend, most firms want to keep their events out of the public eye, he said. “They don’t want people to know they are hosting a party.”

Parties thrown by PIMCO in London and Credit Suisse in Poland, where the bank has one of its largest back office operations, this year each had Great Gatsby themes, recalling the 1920s era of decadence and social change. PIMCO’s featured a “flash mob” of dancers from a company called Brazilian Fantasy, while Credit Suisse’s was full of young men and women in “Roaring 20s” garb, according to Instagram posts.

The dance floor at Credit Suisse’s party was backed by a digital image of actor Leonardo DiCaprio holding a cocktail while portraying Jay Gatsby. DiCaprio played Gatsby in the 2013 film version of American author F Scott Fitzgerald’s 1925 novel, “The Great Gatsby” set on New York’s Long Island. PIMCO’s other holiday party near its Newport Beach headquarte­rs featured women in bedazzled snowwhite angel costumes whose wings glowed with LED lights.

Private equity firm Apollo’s party, hosted in a Greek restaurant near Central Park, featured “live statues”: humans standing completely still, painted to look like marble.

 ?? ILLUSTRATI­ON: BINAY SINHA ??
ILLUSTRATI­ON: BINAY SINHA

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