Managing Director 2025 Compensation: Market Debrief
1. Macro Context & 2025 Bonus Performance
After a volatile start to 2025 characterized by tariff uncertainty, the year concluded with a significant recovery in deal flow and trading activity.
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Total Industry Bonus Pool: Forecasted to reach $49.7 billion, an 8% increase over 2024 (NYC Comptroller).
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Average Industry Bonus: Approximately $247,000 per securities industry employee in New York City.
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Top Performing Sectors:
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Equities Sales & Trading: Saw the largest jumps, with increases of 15% to 25%
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Advisory/M&A: Rebounded strongly in H2, finishing up 10% to 15%
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Fixed Income: Underperformed relatively, with some credit desks facing declines of ~6%.
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2. Managing Director Compensation Structures
Total compensation for MDs remains highly bifurcated based on firm type and individual revenue generation.
Total Compensation Benchmarks
|
Firm Type |
Base Salary Range |
Median Total Comp |
High-End / "Elite" Range |
|
Bulge Bracket |
$300,000 – $450,000 |
$1.50M |
$2.38M+ |
|
Elite Boutique |
$300,000 – $500,000 |
$1.41M |
10-20% above bulge brackets |
|
Middle Market |
$250,000 – $400,000 |
$888K |
Significant variance based on boutique specialty. |
The MD "Pay Split" (Cash vs. Stock)
The 2025 cycle reinforced the trend of "deferred liquidity," where a majority of senior pay is non-cash.
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Cash Component: MDs typically receive less than 50% of their total bonus in immediate cash (eFinancialCareers).
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Stock/Deferred Component: Now routinely exceeds 50% of total incentive.
3. Structural Shifts & New Regulatory Hurdles
Retention strategies are being redesigned to comply with landmark legislation in California and New York.
CA AB 692 (Effective Jan 1, 2026)
California's new "Stay-or-Pay" law restricts the ability to claw back costs from departing employees (Akin Gump).
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Strict Proration: Any sign-on or retention bonus repayment must be prorated over a period of no more than two years.
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Stand-alone Agreements: Repayment provisions must be in a document separate from the primary employment contract.
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Right to Counsel: Employees must be given 5 business days to review and consult an attorney.
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No Interest: Repayment amounts cannot accrue interest.
NY Trapped at Work Act (TAWA) (Effective Dec 19, 2026)
New York amended its "Stay-or-Pay" rules to clarify exceptions for financial professionals (Littler).
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Delayed Effective Date: Operative provisions are now delayed until December 19, 2026.
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Bonus Safe Harbor: Explicitly allows for the repayment of sign-on bonuses and relocation assistance, provided they are not tied to job performance.
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Misconduct Trigger: Repayments generally cannot be enforced unless the employee resigns voluntarily or is terminated for misconduct.
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No Acceleration: Prevents firms from requiring immediate, accelerated repayment of a prorated debt upon departure.
4. Retention & Risk Provisions
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Performance Stock Units (PSUs): Increasing use of "performance-vesting" (tied to firm ROE or TSR) rather than just "time-vesting."
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Clawback Duration: Scope is expanding to cover reputational harm and excessive risk-taking, with windows now reaching 5 to 7 years at major institutions (eFinancialCareers).
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Garden Leave: Standardizing at 90 days for Directors and MDs, acting as a secondary barrier to immediate lateral movement
Sources




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