Big Fat Wall Street Bonuses Imperiled

07/27/07 - 06:17 AM EDT

Mark DeCambre

The debt market's summer swoon could hit Wall Street's high rollers where it counts.

Normally, by late July, bankers at JPMorgan (JPM Quote - Cramer on JPM - Stock Picks), Citigroup (C Quote - Cramer on C - Stock Picks) and Bear Stearns (BSC Quote - Cramer on BSC - Stock Picks) are busy jockeying for morning tee times. But with their firms stuck holding billions of dollars in loans they had hoped to sell, hard-hitting investment bankers suddenly have a more pressing concern: Will I get my bonus this year?

For years, the Wall Street banks have pulled down fat fees for financing private equity's private-equity corporate buying spree. Those fees fed record bonus pots that lined the pockets of bankers who worked on the deals.

But now investors are balking at buying debt tied to Cerberus Capital Management's buyout of Chrysler, among other deals. That has left the Wall Street firms that backed the LBOs holding loans they meant to sell -- loans that are now eating a scary hole in their balance sheets and, potentially, in the profit numbers that figure in the bonus pool.

It remains to be seen if this is simply a natural resetting from a frothy market or, as one banker put it, a "classic unwinding of a liquidity boom that was false and based on financial alchemy."

Either way, the turnabout has left M&A pros fearful that even the outsized fees generated earlier in the year -- when the buyout boom was rocking and rolling, and Wall Street was reporting record profits -- might evaporate by bonus time, under the weight of lost fees and hefty write-offs.

« Previous Page
1 2 3 4 5
Your Recent Quotes: Quote Up0 | Quote Down0
Dow S&P 500 NASDAQ
Oil*
Gold
10 Yr
0.00%
%
%
%
Data delayed 20 min
Sign up for our FREE newsletters now. See All

  • Cramer's Daily Booyah!
  • Before the Bell

Premium Stock Ideas
Premium Services