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Author Topic: The financial industry is struggling too even when they offer more money  (Read 440 times)

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Offline theking

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...to keep their talent... ???:

Some companies can’t get employees to stay even when they throw millions at them. Here’s why


Wall Street is hemorrhaging money, and it has nothing to do with the markets.

America’s heralded financial institutions are feeling the effects of The Great Resignation, and they’re padding year-end bonuses and salaries like never before in an attempt to get their workers to stay. The five biggest investment banks paid out $142 billion in compensation for 2021, that’s $18 billion more than in 2020. Pay rose twice as fast as revenue last year.

At JPMorgan Chase, compensation for investment bankers and traders rose 13% last year, about three times as much as the extra revenue they produced. Citigroup paid out $3 billion more to its employees than it did in 2020, and Goldman Sachs parceled out nearly half a billion dollars in special stock bonuses to its partners.

But as staffing shortages in finance persist and recruiters are getting nervous, they’re learning that money is no longer the be-all-end-all when it comes to retaining and hiring employees.

If there was a chart that mapped out when an employee’s quality of life became more important to them than pay, Alan Johnson, a consultant who helps financial firms design their pay programs, told Fortune, “we’re stretching the ends of it.” Mental health problems and fatigue are catching up to finance workers who have now worked grueling days from their couches for more than two pandemic-laced years.

“This is a unique situation,” said Johnson. “We’ve always had compensation go up and down based on the labor market, but now there’s this cumulative fatigue of COVID remote work. It’s all new.” Money is not enough, he said, employees are looking for a change of scenery as a way to cure this growing sense of fatigue.

About 65% of employees say the pandemic has made them rethink the place that work should have in their lives, research firm Gartner found in a recent survey. Compensation isn’t the main motive.

Johnson said that his 800-plus clients, which have included financial institutions like Credit Suisse, are unclear on how to handle the situation because there is no historical precedent. “They're all very nervous about what the turnovers are going to look like,” he said.




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Offline Cali Guy

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Re: The financial industry is struggling too even when they offer more money
« Reply #1 on: February 14, 2022, 09:03:35 AM »
Maybe they’ll hire rocky.  ;D ;D



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Offline theking

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Re: The financial industry is struggling too even when they offer more money
« Reply #2 on: February 15, 2022, 04:25:52 PM »
Maybe they’ll hire rocky.  ;D ;D

 ;D ;D ;D

That poor girl, Renaissance never had a chance after listening to THAT GUY's "advice".. :idiot2::

GE stock as of today is $11.69 per share.  Someone is giving bad investment advice 




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Offline walley

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Re: The financial industry is struggling too even when they offer more money
« Reply #3 on: February 15, 2022, 05:30:00 PM »
 ;D ;D ;D ;D ;D



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hmgPebble dumb as a rock

 

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