Wall
Street refers to the
financial district of
New York City,[1]
named after and centered on the
eight-block-long street running from
Broadway to
South Street on the
East River in
Lower Manhattan. Over time, the
term has become a
metonym for the financial
markets of the
United States as a whole, or
signifying New York-based financial
interests.[2]
It is the home of the
New York Stock Exchange, the
world's largest stock exchange by
market capitalization of its listed
companies.[3]
Several other major exchanges have
or had headquarters in the Wall
Street area, including
NASDAQ, the
New York Mercantile Exchange,
the
New York Board of Trade, and the
former
American Stock Exchange.
Anchored by Wall Street, New York
City is one of the world's principal
financial centers.[4][5][6][7][8][9][10][11]
There are
varying accounts about how the
Dutch-named "de Waal Straat"[12]
got its name. A generally accepted
version is that the name of the
street name was derived from an
earthen wall on the northern
boundary of the
New Amsterdam settlement,
perhaps to protect against English
colonial encroachment or incursions
by native Americans. A conflicting
explanation is that Wall Street was
named after
Walloons -- possibly a Dutch
abbreviation for Walloon
being Waal.[13]
Among the first settlers that
embarked on the ship "Nieu
Nederlandt" in 1624 were 30 Walloon
families.
In the 1640s,
basic picket and plank fences
denoted plots and residences in the
colony.[14]
Later, on behalf of the
Dutch West India Company,
Peter Stuyvesant, using both
African slaves[15]
and
white colonists, collaborated
with the city government in the
construction of a more substantial
fortification, a strengthened
12-foot (4 m) wall.[16]
In 1685 surveyors laid out Wall
Street along the lines of the
original stockade.[16]
The wall started at Pearl Street,
which was the shoreline at that
time, crossing the Indian path
Broadway and ending at the other
shoreline (today's Trinity Place),
where it took a turn south and ran
along the shore until it ended at
the old fort. In these early days,
local merchants and traders would
gather at disparate spots to buy and
sell shares and bonds, and over time
divided themselves into two
classes—auctioneers and dealers.[17]
The
rampart was removed in 1699.[13]
In the late
18th century, there was a
buttonwood tree at the foot of
Wall Street under which
traders and speculators would
gather to trade securities.[18]
The benefit was being in close
proximity to each other.[18]
In 1792, traders formalized their
association with the
Buttonwood Agreement which was
the origin of the
New York Stock Exchange.[19]
The idea of the agreement was to
make the market more "structured"
and "without the manipulative
auctions", with a commission
structure.[17]
Persons signing the agreement agreed
to charge each other a standard
commission rate; persons not signing
could still participate but would be
charged a higher commission for
dealing.[17]
In 1789,
Wall Street was the scene of the
United States' first presidential
inauguration when
George Washington took the oath
of office on the balcony of
Federal Hall on April 30, 1789.
This was also the location of the
passing of the
Bill Of Rights. In the cemetery
of Trinity Church,
Alexander Hamilton, who was the
first Treasury secretary and
"architect of the early United
States financial system," is buried.[20]
Nineteenth
century
In the first
few decades, both residences and
businesses occupied the area, but
increasingly business predominated.
"There are old stories of people's
houses being surrounded by the
clamor of business and trade and the
owners complaining that they can't
get anything done," according to a
historian named Burrows.[21]
The opening of the
Erie Canal in the early 19th
century meant a huge boom in
business for New York City, since it
was the only major eastern seaport
which had direct access by inland
waterways to ports on the
Great Lakes. Wall Street became
the "money capital of America".[18]
Historian
Charles R. Geisst suggested that
there has constantly been a
"tug-of-war" between business
interests on Wall Street and
authorities in
Washington, D.C..[17]
Generally during the 19th century
Wall Street developed its own
"unique personality and
institutions" with little outside
interference.[17]
In the 1840s
and 1850s, most residents moved
north to midtown because of the
increased business use at the lower
tip of the island.[21]
The Civil War had the effect of
causing the northern economy to
boom, bringing greater prosperity to
cities like New York which "came
into its own as the nation's banking
center" connecting "Old World
capital and New World ambition",
according to one account.[20]
J. P. Morgan created giant
trusts;
John D. Rockefeller’s
Standard Oil moved to New York.[20]
Between 1860 and 1920, the economy
changed from "agricultural to
industrial to financial" and New
York maintained its leadership
position despite these changes,
according to historian Thomas
Kessner.[20]
New York was second only to London
as the world's financial capital.[20]
In 1884,
Charles H. Dow began tracking
stocks, initially beginning with 11
stocks, mostly railroads, and looked
at average prices for these eleven.[22]
When the average "peaks and troughs"
went up consistently, he deemed it a
bull market condition; if averages
dropped, it was a bear market.[22]
He added up prices, and divided by
the number of stocks to get his Dow
Jones average. Dow's numbers were a
"convenient benchmark" for analyzing
the market and became an accepted
way to look at the entire stock
market.[22]
In 1889, the
original stock report, Customers'
Afternoon Letter, became
The Wall Street Journal.
Named in reference to the actual
street, it became an influential
international daily business
newspaper published in
New York City.[23]
After October 7, 1896, it began
publishing Dow's expanded list of
stocks.[22]
A century later, there were 30
stocks in the average.
Twentieth
century
Historian
John Brooks in his book Once
in Golconda considered the turn
of the 20th century period to have
been Wall Street's heyday.[20]
The address of 23 Wall Street where
the headquarters of
J. P. Morgan & Company, known as
The Corner, was "the precise
center, geographical as well as
metaphorical, of financial America
and even of the financial world."[20]
Wall Street
has had changing relationships with
government authorities. In 1913, for
example, when authorities proposed a
$4 tax on stock transfers, stock
clerks protested.[24]
At other times, city and state
officials have taken steps through
tax incentives to encourage
financial firms to continue to do
business in the city.
In the late
19th and early 20th centuries, the
corporate culture of New York
was a primary center for the
construction of
skyscrapers, and was rivaled
only by
Chicago on the American
continent. There were also
residential sections, such as the
Bowling Green section between
Broadway and the
Hudson river, and between
Vesey Street and the Battery.
The
Bowling Green area was described
as "Wall Street's
back yard" with poor people,
high
infant mortality rates, and the
"worst housing conditions in the
city."[25]
As a result of the construction,
looking at New York City from the
east, one can see two distinct
clumps of tall buildings—the
financial district on the left, and
the taller
midtown district on the right.
The
geology of Manhattan is
well-suited for tall buildings, with
a solid mass of
bedrock underneath Manhattan
providing a firm foundation for tall
buildings. Skyscrapers are expensive
to build, but when there is a "short
supply of land" in a "desirable
location", then building upwards
makes sound financial sense.[26]
A post office was built at
60 Wall Street in 1905.[27]
During the
World War I years, occasionally
there were fund-raising efforts for
projects such as the National Guard.[28]
On September
16, 1920, close to the corner of
Wall and Broad Street, the busiest
corner of the financial district and
across the offices of the
Morgan Bank, a
powerful bomb exploded. It
killed 38 and seriously injured 143
people.[29]
The perpetrators were never
identified or apprehended. The
explosion did, however, help fuel
the
Red Scare that was underway at
the time. A report from the
New York Times:
|
“ |
The
tomb-like silence that
settles over Wall Street and
lower Broadway with the
coming of night and the
suspension of business was
entirely changed last night
as hundreds of men worked
under the glare of
searchlights to repair the
damage to skyscrapers that
were lighted up from top to
bottom. ... The Assay
Office, nearest the point of
explosion, naturally
suffered the most. The front
was pierced in fifty places
where the cast iron slugs,
which were of the material
used for window weights,
were thrown against it. Each
slug penetrated the stone an
inch or two and chipped off
pieces ranging from three
inches to a foot in
diameter. The ornamental
iron grill work protecting
each window was broken or
shattered. ... the Assay
Office was a wreck. ... It
was as though some gigantic
force had overturned the
building and then placed it
upright again, leaving the
framework uninjured but
scrambling everything
inside. -- 1920[30] |
” |
The area was
subjected to numerous threats; one
bomb threat in 1921 led to
detectives sealing off the area to
"prevent a repetition of the Wall
Street bomb explosion."[31]
Regulation
In October 1929, a
celebrated
Yale
economist named
Irving Fisher reassured
worried investors that
their "money was safe"
on Wall Street.[32]
A few days later, stock
values plummeted. The
stock market crash of
1929 ushered in the
Great Depression in
which a quarter of
working people were
unemployed, with soup
kitchens, mass
foreclosures of farms,
and falling prices.[32]
During this era,
development of the
financial district
stagnated, and Wall
Street "paid a heavy
price" and "became
something of a backwater
in American life."[32]
During the
New Deal years as
well as the forties,
there was much less
focus on Wall Street and
finance. The government
clamped down on the
practice of buying
equities based only on
credit, but these
policies began to ease.
From 1946-1947, stocks
could not be purchased "on
margin", meaning
that an investor had to
pay 100% of a stock's
cost without taking on
any loans.[33]
But this margin
requirement was reduced
four times before 1960,
each time stimulating a
mini-rally and boosting
volume, and when the
Federal Reserve reduced
the margin requirements
from 90% to 70%.[33]
These changes made it
somewhat easier for
investors to buy stocks
on credit.[33]
The growing national
economy and prosperity
led to a recovery during
the sixties, with some
down years during the
early seventies in the
aftermath of the
Vietnam War. Trading
volumes climbed; in
1967, according to
Time Magazine,
volume hit 7.5 million
shares a day which
caused a "traffic jam"
of paper with "batteries
of clerks" working
overtime to "clear
transactions and update
customer accounts."[34]
In 1973, the financial
community posted a
collective loss of $245
million and needed help,
and got it with the form
of temporary help from
the goverrnment.[35]
Reforms happened; the
SEC eliminated fixed
commissions which forced
"brokers to compete
freely with one another
for investors'
business."[35]
In 1975, the Securities
& Exchange Commission
threw out the NYSE's
"Rule 394" which had
required that "most
stock transactions take
place on the Big Board's
floor", in effect
freeing up trading for
electronic methods.[36]
In 1976, banks were
allowed to buy and sell
stocks, which provided
more competition for
stockbrokers.[36]
Reforms had the effect
of lowering prices
overall, making it
easier for more people
to participate in the
stock market.[36]
Broker commissions for
each stock sale
lessened, but volume
increased.[35]
The
Reagan years were
marked by a renewed push
for
capitalism,
business, with
national efforts to
de-regulate industries
such as
telecommunications
and
aviation. The
economy resumed upward
growth after a period in
the early eighties of
languishing. A report in
the
New York Times
described that the
flushness of money and
growth during these
years had spawned a drug
culture of sorts, with a
rampant acceptance of
cocaine use although the
overall percent of
actual users was most
likely small. A reporter
wrote:
|
“ |
The Wall Street
drug dealer
looked like many
other successful
young female
executives.
Stylishly
dressed and
wearing designer
sunglasses, she
sat in her 1983
Chevrolet Camaro
in a no-parking
zone across the
street from the
Marine Midland
Bank branch on
lower Broadway.
The customer in
the passenger
seat looked like
a successful
young
businessman. But
as the dealer
slipped him a
heat-sealed
plastic envelope
of cocaine and
he passed her
cash, the
transaction was
being watched
through the
sunroof of her
car by Federal
drug agents in a
nearby building.
And the customer
- an undercover
agent himself
-was learning
the ways, the
wiles and the
conventions of
Wall Street's
drug subculture.
-- Peter Kerr in
the
New York Times,
1987.[37] |
” |
In 1987, the stock
market plunged[18]
and, in the relatively
brief recession
following, lower
Manhattan lost 100,000
jobs according to one
estimate.[38]
Since telecommunications
costs were coming down,
banks and brokerage
firms could move away
from Wall Street to more
affordable locations.[38]
The recession of
1990–1991 were marked by
office vacancy rates
downtown which were
"persistently high" and
with some buildings
"standing empty."[21]
The day of the drop,
October 20, was marked
by "stony-faced traders
whose sense of humor had
abandoned them and in
the exhaustion of stock
exchange employees
struggling to maintain
orderly trading."[39]
Ironically, it was the
same year that Oliver
Stone's movie
Wall Street
appeared. In 1995, city
authorities offered the
Lower Manhattan
Revitalization Plan
which offered incentives
to convert commercial
properties to
residential use.[21]
Construction of the
World Trade Center
began in 1966 but had
trouble attracting
tenants when completed.
Nonetheless, some
substantial firms
purchased space there.
It's impressive height
helped make it a visual
landmark for drivers and
pedestrians. In some
respects, the nexus of
the financial district
moved from the street
of Wall Street to Trade
Center complex. Real
estate growth during the
latter part of the 1990s
was significant, with
deals and new projects
happening in the
financial district and
elsewhere in Manhattan;
one firm invested more
than $24 billion in
various projects, many
in the Wall Street area.[40]
In 1998, the NYSE and
the city struck a $900
million deal which kept
the NYSE from moving
across the river to
Jersey City; the
deal was described as
the "largest in city
history to prevent a
corporation from leaving
town".[41]
A competitor to the
NYSE,
NASDAQ, moved its
headquarters from
Washington to New York.[42]
Twenty-first century
In the first year of the
new century, the Big
Board, as some
termed the NYSE, was
described as the world's
"largest and most
prestigious stock
market."[43]
But when the World Trade
Center was destroyed on
September 11th, it
left an architectural
void as new developments
since the 1970s had
played off the complex
aesthetically. The
attacks "crippled" the
communications network.[43]
One estimate was that
45% of Wall Street's
"best office space" had
been lost.[18]
The physical destruction
was immense:
|
“ |
Debris littered
some streets of
the financial
district.
National Guard
members in
camouflage
uniforms manned
checkpoints.
Abandoned coffee
carts, glazed
with dust from
the collapse of
the World Trade
Center, lay on
their sides
across
sidewalks. Most
subway stations
were closed,
most lights were
still off, most
telephones did
not work, and
only a handful
of people walked
in the narrow
canyons of Wall
Street yesterday
morning. --
Leslie Eaton and
Kirk Johnson of
the
New York Times,
September 16,
2001.[44] |
” |
Still, the NYSE was
determined to re-open on
September 17, almost a
week after the attack.[44]
The attack hastened a
trend towards financial
firms moving to midtown
and contributed to the
loss of business on Wall
Street, due to
temporary-to-permanent
relocation to
New Jersey and
further decentralization
with establishments
transferred to cities
like
Chicago,
Denver, and
Boston.
After September 11, the
financial services
industry went through a
downturn with a sizable
drop in year-end bonuses
of $6.5 billion,
according to one
estimate from a state
comptroller's office.[45]
Many brokers are paid
mostly through
commission, and get a
token annual salary
which is dwarfed by the
year-end bonus.
To guard against a
vehicular bombing in the
area, authorities built
concrete barriers, and
found ways over time to
make them more
aesthetically appealing
by spending $5000 to
$8000 apiece on
bollards:
|
“ |
To prevent a
vehicle-delivered
bomb from
entering the
area, Rogers
Marvel designed
a new kind of
bollard, a
faceted piece of
sculpture whose
broad, slanting
surfaces offer
people a place
to sit in
contrast to the
typical bollard,
which is
supremely
unsittable. The
bollard, which
is called the
Nogo, looks a
bit like one of
Frank Gehry's
unorthodox
culture palaces,
but it is hardly
insensitive to
its
surroundings.
Its bronze
surfaces
actually echo
the grand
doorways of Wall
Street's temples
of commerce.
Pedestrians
easily slip
through groups
of them as they
make their way
onto Wall Street
from the area
around historic
Trinity Church.
Cars, however,
cannot pass. --
Blair Kamin in
the
Chicago Tribune,
2006[46] |
” |
Wall Street itself and
the Financial District
as a whole are crowded
with highrises. Further,
the loss of the World
Trade Center has spurred
development on a scale
that hadn't been seen in
decades. In 2006,
Goldman Sachs began
building a tower near
the former Trade Center
site.[26]
Tax incentives provided
by federal, state and
local governments
encouraged development.
A new World Trade Center
complex, centered on
Daniel Liebeskind's
Memory Foundations
plan, is in the early
stages of development
and one building has
already been replaced.
The centerpiece to this
plan is the 1,776-foot
(541 m) tall
1 World Trade Center
(formerly known as the
Freedom Tower). New
residential buildings
are sprouting up, and
buildings that were
previously office space
are being converted to
residential units, also
benefiting from tax
incentives. A new
Fulton Street Transit
Center is planned to
improve access. In 2007,
the
Maharishi Global
Financial Capital of New
York opened
headquarters at 70 Broad
Street near the NYSE, in
an effort to seek
investors.[47]
The Guardian
reporter Andrew Clark
described the years of
2006 to 2010 as "tumultous"
in which the heartland
of America is "mired in
gloom" with high
unemployment around
9.6%, with average house
prices falling from
$230,000 in 2006 to
$183,000, and foreboding
increases in the
national debt to $13.4
trillion, but that
despite the setbacks,
the American economy was
once more "bouncing
back."[48]
What had happened during
these heady years? Clark
wrote:
|
“ |
But the picture
is too nuanced
simply to dump
all the
responsibility
on financiers.
Most Wall Street
banks didn't
actually go
around the US
hawking dodgy
mortgages; they
bought and
packaged loans
from
on-the-ground
firms such as
Countrywide
Financial and
New Century
Financial, both
of which hit a
financial wall
in the crisis.
Foolishly and
recklessly, the
banks didn't
look at these
loans
adequately,
relying on
flawed
credit-rating
agencies such as
Standard &
Poor's and
Moody's, which
blithely
certified toxic
mortgage-backed
securities as
solid... A few
of those on Wall
Street,
including
maverick hedge
fund manager
John Paulson and
the top brass at
Goldman Sachs,
spotted what was
going on and
ruthlessly
gambled on a
crash. They made
a fortune but
turned into the
crisis's
pantomime
villains. Most,
though, got
burned – the
banks are still
gradually
running down
portfolios of
non-core loans
worth $800bn. --
The Guardian
reporter Andrew
Clark, 2010.[48] |
” |
The first months of 2008
was a particularly
troublesome period which
caused
Federal Reserve
chairman
Benjamin Bernanke to
"work holidays and
weekends" and which did
an "extraordinary series
of moves."[49]
It bolstered U.S. banks
and allowed Wall Street
firms to borrow
"directly from the Fed."[49]
These efforts were
highly controversial at
the time, but from the
perspective of 2010, it
appeared the Federal
exertions had been the
right decisions. By
2010, Wall Street firms,
in Clark's view, were
"getting back to their
old selves as engine
rooms of wealth,
prosperity and excess."[48]
A report by Michael
Stoler in
The New York Sun
described a
"phoenix-like
resurrection" of the
area, with residential,
commercial, retail and
hotels booming in the
"third largest business
district in the
country."[50]
At the same time, the
investment community was
worried about proposed
legal reforms, including
the Wall Street
Reform and Consumer
Protection Act which
dealt with matters such
as credit card rates and
lending requirements.[51]
The NYSE closed two of
its trading floors in a
move towards
transforming itself into
an electronic exchange.[20]
Beginning in September
2011,
demonstrators
disenchanted with the
financial system
protested in parks and
plazas around Wall
Street.[52]
Buildings: Physical
layout
Wall
Street's
architecture
is generally
rooted in
the
Gilded Age,
though there
are also
some
art deco
influences
in the
neighborhood.
The layout
of streets
doesn't have
the
rectangular
grid pattern
typical of
midtown
Manhattan,
but small
streets
"barely wide
enough for a
single lane
of traffic
are bordered
on both
sides by
some of the
tallest
buildings in
the city",
according to
one
description,
which
creates
"breathtaking
artificial
canyons"
offering
spectacular
views in
some
instances.[21]
Construction
in such
narrow steep
areas has
resulted in
occasional
accidents
such as a
crane
collapse.[53]
One report
divided
lower
Manhattan
into three
basic
districts:[21]
-
The
financial
district
proper—particularly
along
John
Street
-
South of
the
World
Trade
Center
area—the
handful
of
blocks
south of
the
World
Trade
Center
along
Greenwich,
Washington
and West
Streets
-
Seaport
district—characterized
by
century-old
low-rise
buildings
and
South
Street
Seaport;
the
seaport
is
"quiet,
residential,
and has
an old
world
charm"
according
to one
description.[21]
Landmark
buildings on
Wall Street
include
Federal Hall,
14 Wall
Street (Bankers
Trust
Company
Building),
40 Wall
Street
(The Trump
Building)
the
New York
Stock
Exchange
at the
corner of
Broad Street
and the US
headquarters
of Deutsche
Bank at
60 Wall
Street.
The Deutsche
Bank
building
(formerly
the J.P
Morgan
headquarters)
is the last
remaining
major
investment
bank to
still have
its
headquarters
on Wall
Street.
The older
skyscrapers
often were
built with
elaborate
facades;
such
elaborate
aesthetics
haven't been
common in
corporate
architecture
for decades.
The
World Trade
Center,
built in the
1970s, was
very plain
and
utilitarian
in
comparison
(the
Twin Towers
were often
criticized
as looking
like two big
boxes,
despite
their
impressive
height).
Excavation
from the
World Trade
Center was
later used
by
Battery Park
City
residential
development
as landfill.[18]
23 Wall
Street
was built in
1914 and was
known as the
"House
of Morgan"
and served
for decades
as the
bank's
headquarters
and, by some
accounts,
was viewed
as an
important
address in
American
finance.
A key anchor
for the area
is, of
course, the
New York
Stock
Exchange.
City
authorities
realize its
importance,
and believed
that it has
"outgrown
its
neoclassical
temple at
the corner
of Wall and
Broad
streets",
and in 1998
offered
substantial
tax
incentives
to try to
keep it in
the
financial
district.[18]
Plans to
rebuild it
were delayed
by the
events of
2001.[18]
In 2011, the
exchange
still
occupies the
same site.
The exchange
is the locus
for an
impressive
amount of
technology
and data.
For example,
to
accommodate
the three
thousand
persons who
work
directly on
the Exchange
floor
requires
3,500
kilowatts of
electricity,
along with
8,000 phone
circuits on
the trading
floor alone,
and 200
miles of
fiber-optic
cable below
ground.[44]
Personalities:
players and
deal-makers
Persons
associated
with Wall
Street have
become
famous.
Although
their
reputations
are usually
limited to
members of
the
stock
brokerage
and banking
communities,
several have
gained
national and
international
fame. Some
earned their
fame for
their
investment
strategies,
financing,
reporting,
legal or
regulatory
skills,
while others
are
remembered
for their
greed.[54]
One of the
most iconic
representations
of the
market
prosperity
is the
Charging
Bull
sculpture,
by
Arturo Di
Modica.
Representing
the
bull market
economy, the
sculpture
was
originally
placed in
front of the
New York
Stock
Exchange,
and
subsequently
moved to its
current
location in
Bowling
Green.
Wall
Street's
culture is
often
criticized
as being
rigid. This
is a
decades-old
stereotype
stemming
from the
Wall Street
establishment's
protection
of its
interests,
and the link
to the
WASP
establishment.
More recent
criticism
has centered
on
structural
problems and
lack of a
desire to
change
well-established
habits. Wall
Street's
establishment
resists
government
oversight
and
regulation.
At the same
time, New
York City
has a
reputation
as a very
bureaucratic
city, which
makes entry
into the
neighborhood
difficult or
even
impossible
for middle
class
entrepreneurs.
Several well
known Wall
Street
individuals
include
John
Meriwether,
John Briggs,
Michael
Bloomberg,
and
Warren
Buffett
(All
affiliated
at one time
or another
with the
firm
Salomon
Brothers),
as well as
Bernie
Madoff,
and numerous
others.
Many
talented
financiers
and bankers
worked for
Wasserstein
Perella &
Co.
during the
1980s.
The now
defunct
investment
bank of
Donaldson,
Lufkin &
Jenrette
had numerous
talented
people
working
there
including
people such
as
William
Donaldson
who served
in the
Nixon
administration,
as well as
Ken Moelis,
Bennett
Goodman,
Herald "Hal"
Ritch, Joel
Cohen,
Safra A.
Catz who
became
president of
Oracle
Corporation,
Tom Dean,
Larry
Schloss,
Michael
Connelly,
and others.[55]
Wall
Street as a
financial
center
Wall
Street in
the New York
economy
Finance
professor
Charles R.
Geisst wrote
that the
exchange has
become
"inextricably
intertwined
into New
York's
economy".[43]
Wall Street
pay, in
terms of
salaries and
bonuses and
taxes, is an
important
part of the
economy of
New York
City,
the
tri-state
metropolitan
area,
and the
United
States.
In 2008,
after a
downturn in
the stock
market, the
decline
meant $18
billion less
in taxable
income, with
less money
available
for
"apartments,
furniture,
cars,
clothing and
services".[45]
A falloff in
Wall
Street's
economy
could have
"wrenching
effects on
the local
and regional
economies".[45]
Estimates
vary about
the number
and quality
of financial
jobs in the
city. One
estimate was
that Wall
Street firms
employed
close to
200,000
persons in
2008.[45]
Another
estimate was
that in
2007, the
financial
services
industry
which had a
$70 billion
profit
became 22
percent of
the city's
revenue.[56]
Another
estimate (in
2006) was
that the
financial
services
industry
makes up 9%
of the
city's work
force and
31% of the
tax base.[57]
An
additional
estimate
(2007) from
Steve
Malanga of
the
Manhattan
Institute
was that the
securities
industry
accounts for
4.7 percent
of the jobs
in New York
City but
20.7 percent
of its
wages, and
he estimated
there were
175,000
securities-industries
jobs in New
York (both
Wall Street
area and
midtown)
paying an
average of
$350,000
annually.[20]
Between 1995
and 2005,
the sector
grew at an
annual rate
of about
6.6%
annually, a
respectable
rate, but
that other
financial
centers were
growing
faster.[20]
Another
estimate
(2008) was
that Wall
Street
provided a
fourth of
all personal
income
earned in
the city,
and 10% of
New York
City's tax
revenue.[58]
The seven
largest Wall
Street firms
in the first
decade of
the 21st
century were
Bear Stearns,
JPMorgan
Chase,
Citigroup
Incorporated,
Goldman
Sachs,
Morgan
Stanley,
Merrill
Lynch
and
Lehman
Brothers.[45]
During the
recession of
2008–2010,
many of
these firms
went out of
business or
were bought
up at
firesale
prices by
other
financial
firms. In
2008, Lehman
filed for
bankruptcy,[48]
Bear Stearns
was bought
up by
JP Morgan
Chase[48]
with
blessing by
the U.S.
government,[49]
and
Merrill
Lynch
was bought
up by
Bank of
America.
These
failures
marked a
catastrophic
downsizing
of Wall
Street as
the
financial
industry
goes through
restructuring
and change.
Since New
York's
financial
industry
provides
almost
one-fourth
of all
income
produced in
the city,
and accounts
for 10% of
the city's
tax revenues
and 20% of
the state's,
the downturn
has had huge
repercussions
for
government
treasuries.[45]
New York's
mayor
Michael
Bloomberg
reportedly
over a four
year period
dangled over
$100 million
in tax
incentives
to persuade
Goldman
Sachs to
build a
43-story
headquarters
in the
financial
district
near the
destroyed
World Trade
Center site.[56]
In 2009,
things
looked
somewhat
gloomy, with
one analysis
by the
Boston
Consulting
Group
suggesting
that 65,000
jobs had
been
permanently
lost because
of the
downturn.[59]
But there
were signs
that
Manhattan
property
prices were
rebounding
with price
rises of 9%
annually in
2010, and
bonuses were
being paid
once more,
with average
bonuses over
$124,000 in
2010.[48]
The U.S.
banking
industry
employes
1.86 million
people and
earned
profits of
$22 billion
in the
second
quarter of
2010, up
substantially
from
previous
quarters.[48]
Wall
Street
versus
Midtown
Manhattan
A
requirement
of the New
York Stock
Exchange was
that
brokerage
firms had to
have offices
"clustered
around Wall
Street" so
clerks could
deliver
physical
paper copies
of stock
certificates
each week.[18]
There were
some
indications
that midtown
had been
becoming the
locus of
financial
services
dealings
even by
1911.[60]
But as
technology
progressed,
in the
middle and
later
decades of
the 20th
century,
computers
and
telecommunications
replaced
paper
notifications,
meaning that
the close
proximity
requirement
could be
bypassed in
more
situations.[18]
Many
financial
firms found
that they
could move
to midtown
Manhattan
four miles
away[21]
or elsewhere
and still
operate
effectively.
For example,
the former
investment
firm of
Donaldson,
Lufkin &
Jenrette
was
described as
a Wall
Street firm
but had its
headquarters
on Park
Avenue in
midtown.[55]
A report
described
the
migration
from Wall
Street:
|
“ |
The
financial
industry
has
been
slowly
migrating
from
its
historic
home
in
the
warren
of
streets
around
Wall
Street
to
the
more
spacious
and
glamorous
office
towers
of
Midtown
Manhattan.
Morgan
Stanley,
J.P.
Morgan
Chase,
Citigroup,
and
Bear
Stearns
have
all
moved
north.
--
USA
Today,
October
2001.[18] |
” |
Nevertheless,
a key magnet
for the Wall
Street
remains the
New York
Stock
Exchange.
Some "old
guard" firms
such as
Goldman
Sachs
and
Merrill
Lynch
(bought by
Bank of
America
in 2009),
have
remained
"fiercely
loyal to the
financial
district"
location,
and new ones
such as
Deutsche
Bank
have chosen
office space
in the
district.[18]
So-called
"face–to–face"
trading
between
buyers and
sellers
remains a
"cornerstone"
of the NYSE,
with a
benefit of
having all
of a deal's
players
close at
hand,
including
investment
bankers,
lawyers,
and
accountants.[18]
In 2011, the
Manhattan
Financial
District
is one of
the largest
business
districts in
the United
States, and
second in
New York
City only to
Midtown
in terms of
dollar
volume of
business
transacted.
Wall Street
as a
neighborhood
During most
of the 20th
century,
Wall Street
was a
business
community
with
practically
only offices
which
emptied out
at night. A
report in
the
New York
Times
in 1961
described a
"deathlike
stillness
that settles
on the
district
after 5:30
and all day
Saturday and
Sunday."[21]
But there
has been a
change
towards
greater
residential
use of the
area, pushed
forwards by
technological
changes and
shifting
market
conditions.
The general
pattern is
for several
hundred
thousand
workers to
commute into
the area
during the
day,
sometimes by
sharing a
taxicab[61]
from other
parts of the
city as well
as from
New Jersey
and
Long Island,
and then
leave at
night. In
1970, only
833 people
lived "south
of Chambers
Street"; by
1990; 13,782
people were
residents
with the
addition of
areas such
as
Battery Park
City[18]
and
Southbridge
Towers.[38]
Battery Park
City was
built on 92
acres of
landfill,
and 3,000
people moved
there
beginning
about 1982,
but by 1986
there was
evidence of
more shops
and stores
and a park,
along with
plans for
more
residential
development.[62]
According to
one
description
in 1996,
"The area
dies at
night ... It
needs a
neighborhood,
a
community."[38]
During the
past two
decades
there has
been a shift
towards
greater
residential
living areas
in the Wall
Street area,
with
incentives
from city
authorities
in some
instances.[18]
Many empty
office
buildings
have been
converted to
lofts and
apartments;
for example,
the office
building of
Harry
Sinclair,
the oil
magnate
involved
with the
Teapot Dome
scandal,
was
converted to
a co-op in
1979.[38]
In 1996, a
fifth of
buildings
and
warehouses
were empty,
and many
were
converted to
living
areas.[38]
Some
conversions
met with
problems,
such as
aging
gargoyles on
building
exteriors
having to be
expensively
restored to
meet with
current
building
codes.[38]
Residents in
the area
have sought
to have a
supermarket,
a movie
theater, a
pharmacy,
more
schools, and
a "good
diner".[38]
The discount
retailer
named Job
Lot used
to be
located at
the World
Trade Center
but moved to
Church
Street;
merchants
bought extra
unsold items
at steep
prices and
sold them as
a discount
to consumers
and shoppers
included
"thrifty
homemakers
and browsing
retirees"
who "rubbed
elbows with
City Hall
workers and
Wall Street
executives";
but the firm
went bust in
1993.[45]
There were
reports that
the number
of residents
increased by
60% during
the 1990s to
about 25,000[18]
although a
second
estimate
(based on
the 2000
census based
on a
different
map) places
the
residential
(nighttime
and weekend)
population
in 2000 at
12,042.[21]
By 2001,
there were
several
grocery
stores, dry
cleaners,
and two
grade
schools and
a top high
school.[18]
There is a
barber shop
across from
the New York
Stock
Exchange
which has
been there a
long time.[63]
By 2001,
there were
more signs
of
dogwalkers
at night and
a 24-hour
neighborhood,
although the
general
pattern of
crowds
during the
working
hours and
emptiness at
night was
still
apparent.[21]
There were
ten hotels
and thirteen
museums by
2001.[21]
Stuyvesant
High School
moved to its
present
location
near Battery
Park City in
1992 and has
been
described as
one of the
nation's
premier high
schools with
emphasis on
science
and
mathematics.[21]
In 2007, the
French
fashion
retailer
Hermès
opened a
store in the
financial
district to
sell items
such as a
"$4,700
custom-made
leather
dressage
saddle or a
$47,000
limited
edition
alligator
briefcase."[64]
Some streets
have been
designated
as
pedestrian–only
with
vehicular
traffic
prohibited
at some
times.[64]
There are
reports of
panhandlers
like
elsewhere in
the city.[65]
By 2010, the
residential
population
had
increased to
24,400
residents[66]
with crime
statistics
showing no
murders in
2010.[66]
The area is
growing with
luxury
high-end
apartments
and upscale
retailers.[50]
Wall
Street as a
tourist
destination
Wall Street
is a major
location of
tourism in
New York
City.
One report
described
lower
Manhattan as
"swarming
with
camera-carrying
tourists".[67]
Tour guides
highlight
places such
as Trinity
Church, the
Federal
Reserve gold
vaults 80
feet below
street level
(worth $100
billion),
and the
NYSE.[68]
A
Scoundrels
of Wall
Street Tour
is a walking
historical
tour which
includes a
museum visit
and
discussion
of various
financiers
"who were
adept at
finding ways
around
finance laws
or loopholes
through
them".[69]
Occasionally
artists make
impromptu
performances;
for example,
in 2010, a
troupe of 22
dancers
"contort
their bodies
and cram
themselves
into the
nooks and
crannies of
the
Financial
District in
Bodies in
Urban Spaces"
choreographed
by Willi
Donner.[70]
One chief
attraction,
the
Federal
Reserve
Building
in lower
Manhattan,
paid
$750,000 to
open a
visitors'
gallery in
1997.[71]
The New York
Stock
Exchange and
the American
Stock
Exchange
also spent
money in the
late 1990s
to upgrade
facilities
for
visitors.[71]
Attractions
include the
gold
vault
beneath the
Federal
Reserve and
that
"staring
down at the
trading
floor was as
exciting as
going to the
Statue of
Liberty."[71]
Wall
Steet versus
Main Street
As a figure of speech contrasted to "Main Street", the term "Wall Street" can refer to big business interests against those of small business and the working of middle class. It is sometimes used more specifically to refer to research analysts, shareholders, and financial institutions such as investment banks. Whereas "Main Street" conjures up images of locally owned businesses and banks, the phrase "Wall Street" is commonly used interchangeably with the phrase "Corporate America". It is also sometimes used in contrast to distinguish between the interests, culture, and lifestyles of investment banks and those of Fortune 500 industrial or service corporations. Wall Street in the public imagination
Wall Street in a conceptual sense represents financial and economic power. To Americans, it can sometimes represent elitism and power politics, and its role has been a source of controversy throughout the nation's history, particularly beginning around the Gilded Age period in the late 19th century. Wall Street became the symbol of a country and economic system that many Americans see as having developed through trade, capitalism, and innovation.[72]Wall Street has become synonymous with financial interests, often used negatively.[73] During the mortgage mess from 2007–2010, Wall Street financing was blamed as one of the causes, although most commentators blame an interplay of factors. The U.S. government with the Troubled Asset Relief Program bailed out the banks and financial backers with billions of taxpayer dollars, but the bailout was often criticized as politically motivated,[73] and was criticized by journalists as well as the public. Analyst Robert Kuttner in the Huffington Post criticized the bailout as helping large Wall Street firms such as Citigroup while neglecting to help smaller community development banks such as Chicago's ShoreBank.[73] One writer in the Huffington Post looked at FBI statistics on robbery, fraud, and crime and concluded that Wall Street was the "most dangerous neighborhood in the United States" if one factored in the $50 billion fraud perpetrated by Bernie Madoff.[24] When large firms such as Enron, WorldCom and Global Crossing were found guilty of fraud, Wall Street was often blamed,[32] even though these firms had headquarters around the nation and not in Wall Street. Many complained that the resulting Sarbanes-Oxley legislation dampened the business climate with regulations that were "overly burdensome."[74] Interest groups seeking favor with Washington lawmakers, such as car dealers, have often sought to portray their interests as allied with Main Street rather than Wall Street, although analyst Peter Overby on National Public Radio suggested that car dealers have written over $250 billion in consumer loans and have real ties with Wall Street.[75] When the United States Treasury bailed out large financial firms, to ostensibly halt a downward spiral in the nation's economy, there was tremendous negative political fallout, particularly when reports came out that monies supposed to be used to ease credit restrictions were being used to pay bonuses to highly-paid employees.[62] Analyst William D. Cohan argued that it was "obscene" how Wall Street reaped "massive profits and bonuses in 2009" after being saved by "trillions of dollars of American taxpayers' treasure" despite Wall Street's "greed and irresponsible risk-taking."[76] Washington Post reporter Suzanne McGee called for Wall Street to make a sort of public apology to the nation, and expressed dismay that people such as Goldman Sachs chief executive Lloyd Blankfein hadn't expressed contrition despite being sued by the SEC in 2009.[77] McGee wrote that "Bankers aren't the sole culprits, but their too-glib denials of responsibility and the occasional vague and waffling expression of regret don't go far enough to deflect anger."[77]
But chief banking analyst at Goldman Sachs, Richard Ramsden, is "unapologetic" and sees "banks as the dynamos that power the rest of the economy."[48] Ramsden believes "risk-taking is vital" and said in 2010:
| “ |
You can construct a banking system in which no bank will ever fail, in which there's no leverage. But there would be a cost. There would be virtually no economic growth because there would be no credit creation. -- Richard Ramsden of Goldman Sachs, 2010.[48] |
” |
Others in the financial industry believe they've been unfairly castigated by the public and by politicians. For example, Anthony Scaramucci reportedly told President Barack Obama in 2010 that he felt like a piñata, "whacked with a stick" by "hostile politicians".[48]
The financial misdeeds of various figures throughout American history sometimes casts a dark shadow on financial investing as a whole, and include names such as William Duer, Jim Fisk and Jay Gould (the latter two believed to have been involved with an effort to collapse the U.S. gold market in 1869) as well as modern figures such as Bernard Madoff who "bilked billions from investors".[69]
In addition, images of Wall Street and its figures have loomed large. The 1987 Oliver Stone film Wall Street created the iconic figure of Gordon Gekko who used the phrase "greed is good", which caught on in the cultural parlance.[78] According to one account, the Gekko character was a "straight lift" from the real world junk-bond dealer Michael Milkin,[32] who later pled guilty to felony charges for violating securities laws. Stone commented in 2009 how the movie had had an unexpected cultural influence, not causing them to turn away from corporate greed, but causing many young people to choose Wall Street careers because of that movie.[78] A reporter repeated other lines from the film:
| “ |
I’m talking about liquid. Rich enough to have your own jet. Rich enough not to waste time. Fifty, a hundred million dollars, Buddy. A player. -- lines from the script of Wall Street[78] |
” |
Wall Street firms have however also contributed to projects such as Habitat for Humanity as well as done food programs in Haiti and trauma centers in Sudan and rescue boats during floods in Bangladesh.[79]
Wall Street in popular culture
- Herman Melville's classic short story Bartleby, the Scrivener is subtitled A Story of Wall Street and provides an excellent portrayal of a kind and wealthy lawyer's struggle to reason with that which is unreasonable as he is pushed beyond his comfort zone to "feel" something real for humanity.
- In William Faulkner's novel The Sound and the Fury, Jason Compson hits on other perceptions of Wall Street: after finding some of his stocks are doing poorly, he blames "the Jews."
- The film Die Hard with a Vengeance has a plot involving thieves breaking into the Federal Reserve Bank of New York and stealing most of the gold bullion stored underground by driving dump trucks through a nearby Wall Street subway station.
- Many events of Tom Wolfe's Bonfire of the Vanities center on Wall Street and its culture.
- On January 26, 2000, the band Rage Against The Machine filmed the music video for "Sleep Now in the Fire" on Wall Street, which was directed by Michael Moore. The band at one point stormed the Stock Exchange, causing the doors of the Exchange to be closed early (2:52 P.M.). Trading on the Exchange floor, however, continued uninterrupted.[80][81]
- The 1987 film Wall Street and its 2010 sequel exemplify many popular conceptions of Wall Street, being a tale of shady corporate dealings and insider trading.[82]
- "Wallstreet Kingdom" is a controversial fashion brand promoting capitalism and bonuses on Wall Street.
- In the film National Treasure a clue to finding the Templar Treasure leads the main characters to Wall Street's Trinity Church.
- TNA Wrestler Robert Roode is billed from "Wall Street in Manhattan, New York."
- Bret Easton Ellis's novel American Psycho follows the day-to-day life of Wall Street investment banker and serial killer Patrick Bateman.
- In the video game Grand Theft Auto IV in the fictional Liberty City Wall Street is a district dubbed The Exchange.
- Battles 2011 album Gloss Drop contains a song titled "Wall Street."
- In the video game Call of Duty: Modern Warfare 3, in 2016, Manhattan is under attack by Ultranationlist Russia. Delta Force soldiers are sent to destroy a radar jamming installation on top of the New York Stock Exchange.
See
Also
References
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- ^ "UBS may move US investment bank to NYC". e-Eighteen.com Ltd. http://www.moneycontrol.com/news/world-news/ubs-may-move-us-investment-bank-to-nyc_556257.html. Retrieved 2011-10-16.
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- ^ The Best 301 Business Schools 2010 by Princeton Review, Nedda Gilbert. http://books.google.com/books?id=dWA7aEbsy8QC&pg=PA154&dq=new+york+financial+capital+of+the+world+2010#v=onepage&q=new%20york%20financial%20capital%20of%20the%20world%202010&f=false. Retrieved May 31, 2010.
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- ^ "London may have the IPOs...". Marketwatch. http://www.marketwatch.com/story/credit-crunch-shows-new-york-is-still-worlds-financial-capital/. Retrieved May 31, 2010.
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- ^ White New Yorkers in Slave Times New-York Historical Society. Retrieved August 20, 2006. (PDF)
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Further reading
- Atwood, Albert W. and Erickson, Erling A. "Morgan, John Pierpont, (Apr. 17, 1837 – March 31, 1913)," in Dictionary of American Biography, Volume 7 (1934)
- Carosso, Vincent P. The Morgans: Private International Bankers, 1854–1913. Harvard U. Press, 1987. 888 pp. ISBN 978-0-674-58729-8
- Carosso, Vincent P. Investment Banking in America: A History Harvard University Press (1970)
- Chernow, Ron. The House of Morgan: An American Banking Dynasty and the Rise of Modern Finance, (2001) ISBN 0-8021-3829-2
- Fraser, Steve. Every Man a Speculator: A History of Wall Street in American Life HarperCollins (2005)
- Geisst, Charles R. Wall Street: A History from Its Beginnings to the Fall of Enron. Oxford University Press. 2004. online edition
- Moody, John. The Masters of Capital: A Chronicle of Wall Street Yale University Press, (1921) online edition
- Morris, Charles R. The Tycoons: How Andrew Carnegie, John D. Rockefeller, Jay Gould, and J. P. Morgan Invented the American Supereconomy (2005) ISBN 978-0-8050-8134-3
- Perkins, Edwin J. Wall Street to Main Street: Charles Merrill and Middle-class Investors (1999)
- Sobel, Robert. The Big Board: A History of the New York Stock Market (1962)
- Sobel, Robert. The Great Bull Market: Wall Street in the 1920s (1968)
- Sobel, Robert. Inside Wall Street: Continuity & Change in the Financial District (1977)
- Strouse, Jean. Morgan: American Financier. Random House, 1999. 796 pp. ISBN 978-0-679-46275-0
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