As we bid farewell to 2023 and eagerly anticipate the holiday season, it’s an opportune moment to reflect on the remarkable turnaround in the U.S. stock market this year.
At the beginning of the year, tech stocks in the Nasdaq 100 index were trading below the 11,000-point mark, battered by the wave of the Federal Reserve’s aggressive interest rate hikes in 2022.
Tech companies had plummeted by over 35% from their peak in late 2021. It was a turbulent start to the year, to say the least, with the pessimism over inflation and continuing rate hikes reigning supreme.
Fast-forward to the days leading up to Christmas 2023, the story takes a dramatic U-turn.
Tech stocks, as tracked by the Invesco QQQ Trust (NYSE:QQQ), surged to unprecedented all-time highs, soaring to 16,780 points and delivering astonishing year-to-date gains of 54%. Such an impressive performance has not been witnessed since the heady days of the tech dot-com boom in 1999 when the Nasdaq doubled in value within a year.
Read Also: Tech Stocks Set New All-Time High, Small Caps On Fire As Wall Street Bulls Run Wild
Chart: SPY vs QQQ Year-To-Date Returns As Of December 19, 2023
Is It Time For A Portfolio Manager To Hit The Sell Button?
Now put yourself in the hands of a portfolio manager who has achieved a similar or even higher performance than the SPDR S&P 500 ETF’s (NYSE:SPY) 25% gain this year.
The average portfolio manager’s salary in the U.S., as per Salary.com’s latest data, stands at $116,610. However, much of a fund manager’s income is derived from performance-based incentives closely tied to the fund’s annual performance.
The allure of Wall Street’s cash bonuses, which can reach several thousand dollars annually, is undeniable. A study by New York State Comptroller Thomas P. DiNapoli in 2021, during the peak of the prior market cycle, revealed an average bonus of $240,400, with a record bonus pool totaling $42.7 billion.
With the market performance witnessed in 2023, it’s entirely plausible that the bonus pool for this year may surpass even the record-breaking 2021 figure. In stark contrast, 2022, the year of the market collapse, saw Wall Street’s bonuses decline by 26%, with the average fund manager still adding $176,000 in cash to their income.
For seasoned hedge fund managers, the bonuses can…
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