Banking job cuts are back — Meet mall-king David Simon — PE recruiting drama

wall street trader sad
A man pauses outside of the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) on January 15, 2016 in New York City.

At the height of the pandemic, when seemingly everything remained up in the air, some Wall Street banks looked to offer employees comfort. 

Many on the Street pledged to hold off on layoffs for the remainder of the year, vowing to weather the storm together with their employees. 

Six months later, times have changed.

Bloomberg reported Goldman Sachs will start cutting jobs again. The bank joins peers Wells Fargo, Citigroup, and JPMorgan in a return to downsizing.  

The news comes on the same day CNBC reported Citigroup is making cuts to its equities trading division, some of which include senior staffers.

If you're not yet a subscriber, you can sign up here to get your daily dose of the stories dominating banking, business, and big deals.

Like the newsletter? Hate the newsletter? Feel free to drop me a line at ddefrancesco@businessinsider.com or on Twitter @DanDeFrancesco


The man with the plan: Simon Property Group's David Simon

david simon profile 4x3

Daniel Geiger has a great profile on David Simon, Simon Property Group's chief executive and chairman. 

Daniel spoke to more than a dozen insiders who have worked with Simon to get a peak inside his world

Simon led the group set to acquire bankrupt department store JCPenney and is a key player in the mall business

Click here for the full story.


Inside this year's private-equity recruiting drama: how PE firms and headhunters are trying to enforce a new pact to delay a fierce battle for young talent

headhunters and recruiters sourcing talent for wall street 4x3

Reed Alexander and Casey Sullivan have a nice follow up to their report last week that headhunters and private-equity firms are holding off on recruiting for 2022 jobs. Turns out at least one recruiting firm has already broken the informal agreement made by the industry's top players. Read more about all the drama here


Gusto, a $3.8 billion small-business payroll startup, is muscling in on fintechs like Earnin by adding a feature to let workers get paid early

Gusto CEO Joshua Reeves.
Gusto CEO Joshua Reeves.

Gusto, the $3.8 billion payroll platform, is offering free earned wage access. Shannen Balogh spoke to the startup's CEO about why the company decided to launch the offering, and what it could mean for the future of the red-hot company. Check out the story here


Lawyers who specialize in cannabis are eyeing the burgeoning psychedelics industry as companies studying magic mushrooms go public

dazed and confused Universal

Forget cannabis. Psychedelics are the new frontier. Yeji Jesse Lee spoke to top law firms already advising cannabis companies about the rise of psychedelic companies. You should totally check it out


Odd lots:

Meet the 30 young leaders who are forging a new future for healthcare in the pandemic's shadow (BI)

Palantir insiders struggled to sell shares at debut because they couldn't access trading platform (CNBC)

5 tax law and accounting experts weigh in on Trump's $70,000 hairstyling writeoff and how his personal brand could factor into rolling over his $421 million in debts (BI)

Investment bank's analyst class said to be hit by COVID-19 (eFinanicalCareers)

Barclays memo names new head of markets in massive senior reshuffle (FinancialNews)

Parrots were removed from a UK safari park after teaching each other to swear and then laughing about it (Insider)

Read the original article on Business Insider


from Business Insider https://ift.tt/33knkAq

No comments

Powered by Blogger.