Bidenflation: Huge Bonuses Send Wall Street Pay Soaring with Biggest Payouts in a Decade
Wall Street firms are paying huge bonuses as the economy emerges from the pandemic, with compensation packages growing to levels not seen in a decade.

Wall Street firms are paying huge bonuses as the economy emerges from the pandemic, with compensation packages growing to levels not seen in a decade.
The head of America’s largest bank says inflation will likely force the Fed to hike even more than markets currently expect.
According to recent reports, tensions between Tesla CEO Elon Musk and JPMorgan Chase CEO Jamie Dimon are continuing to rise. The banking giant recently filed a $162 million lawsuit against Tesla over a stock trade arranged by the bank in 2014.
WePay, an online payment processor owned by the largest bank in the U.S., JPMorgan Chase, forced the cancellation of an event featuring Donald Trump Jr. in Missouri after it blacklisted the conservative organization hosting it — a decision the financial giant later said was a mistake.
President Donald Trump’s tight labor market from 2017 to 2019 pulled many left-behind Americans into work and jobs, setting the stage for higher economic growth, says a report by JPMorgan.
The elite wall street investment banks smashed earning expectations on Tuesday, while the American worker struggles with rising consumer good prices due to President Joe Biden’s inflation.
JPMorgan economists said Friday that they expect the economy to contract slightly in the first quarter of next year.
Wall Street investors are increasingly confident in a victory for Democrat presidential candidate Joe Biden, Axios reports, as they cheer a “blue wave” on November 3 against President Trump.
Democrat presidential candidate Joe Biden’s plans to return the United States to more normal trade relations with China is a win for Wall Street investors, JPMorgan Chase analysts say.
“Betting odds that earlier had Trump well behind challenger Joe Biden are now nearly even – largely due to the impact on public opinion of violence around protests, as well as potential bias in polls,” Kolanovic wrote according to Bloomberg News.
Former Vice President Joe Biden is bashing the outsize influence billionaires are having on the race for the 2020 Democrat nomination, despite his own campaign relying heavily upon their money.
Presidential hopeful Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-MA) said she believes Americans need big government to be successful.