Wall Street grudgingly allows remote work as bankers dig in
Finance employees who couldn't imagine working from home before the pandemic are now reluctant to return to the office. Their bosses can't figure out how to bring them back
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New York
IN HER two decades on Wall Street, Nadia Batchelor never once thought she could do her job from home. Face-to-face meetings were a must for Batchelor, a senior executive at Jefferies, a New York investment bank. Without being in the same room as her clients and colleagues, she assumed, there was no way she could win their trust and do her job of introducing companies to potential investors.
She often woke up at 4.30am to drive from her home in New Jersey, catch a bus into Manhattan, hop on the subway, squeeze in a workout and get to Jefferies' trading floor by 7.30am. Work dinners ran late into the night, and red-eye flights to London were common.
But after the pandemic forced Batchelor, a 42-year-old mother of three, to work from home and realise that she could manage just fine, a full return to her gruelling schedule is out.
"I was crazy," she said. "I don't think that I could go back to it."
Wall Street is in revolt. Across the financial industry, at firms big and small, workers are slow-walking their return to the office. Bankers for whom working from home was once unfathomable now cannot imagine going back to the office full-time. Parents remain worried about transmitting the coronavirus to their children. Suburban dwellers are chafing at the thought of resuming long commutes. And many younger employees prefer to work remotely.
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The reluctance to return to office cubicles is hardly unique to the financial industry. All across America, companies are wrestling with their employees' demands for flexibility as the pandemic reshapes the future of work. But on Wall Street - known for its hard-charging culture that values face time and long hours, and where toughness is celebrated - it is remarkable.
One reason: Wall Street banks posted record profit and revenue during the pandemic, as government stimulus supported consumers stuck at home and companies sought to do deals, proving to bankers and traders that they have little need to work out of the office the way they used to.
The attendance numbers are low. The financial industry employs 332,100 people in New York City. In October, only 27 per cent of those people came in daily, according to data from a survey conducted by the Partnership for New York City, a business advocacy group.
Office attendance at financial-services firms is projected to climb to 47 per cent by the end of January as companies lean more heavily on staff, according to the group. Still, that is a long way off from the 80 per cent that was typical before the pandemic, accounting for employees who were travelling, on vacation or sick.
"The bigger institutions are having more difficulty getting people back," said Kathryn S. Wylde, chief executive officer (CEO) of the Partnership for New York City. "From the employer perspective, the longer this goes on, the more difficult it is to get people back, the greater their frustration."
Some large banks ordered their employees to begin returning to the office over the summer. Top bosses have been saying for months that their clients should be catered to in person, that banking is an apprenticeship business where juniors learn the ropes by observing their seniors, and that teamwork benefits all. Their orders have had mixed impact, leaving bosses flummoxed - and in some cases, vexed.
At an investing conference in June, James Gorman, CEO of Morgan Stanley, said: "If you can go to a restaurant in New York City, you can come into the office."
The bank called employees in the New York metropolitan area back after Labor Day. About 65 per cent of employees based in Morgan Stanley's Times Square headquarters are now coming in at least three days a week.
Gorman has recently taken a more accommodating tone, saying at an Oct 27 town hall with employees that although spending time in the workplace was essential to maintaining the bank's culture, "we have learned to function very differently during the pandemic". He said the bank would allow greater flexibility for workers.
In February, Goldman Sachs CEO David Solomon called remote work an "aberration" for the company's traders. The bank asked employees to come back in June. In an e-mailed statement, Solomon said Goldman was among the first banks to ask workers to come back, viewing it as essential for its apprenticeship culture. "What is clear through the process is that we are better together than apart," he said.
Still, Goldman's office in downtown Manhattan is staffed at about 60 per cent.
JPMorgan Chase, the largest US lender, required staff to return in rotations starting in July. "People don't like commuting, but so what?" Jamie Dimon, the bank's CEO, told The Wall Street Journal in May.
Dimon has also cited instances in which the bank had lost business to competitors who visited clients in person.
Most JPMorgan employees have returned to the office in recent months, with many of them on hybrid schedules, "just as our senior management team has requested", a bank spokesman, Brian Marchiony, wrote in an e-mail. "In fact, roughly half of our midtown employees are working from our offices on any given day."
For now, banks are resorting to coaxing and coddling. Food trucks, free meals and snacks are occasionally on offer, as are complimentary Uber and Lyft rides. Dress codes have been relaxed. Major firms have adopted safety protocols such as on-site testing and mask mandates in common areas.
Goldman, Morgan Stanley and Citigroup are requiring vaccinations for workers entering their offices, while Bank of America asked only inoculated staff to return after Labor Day.
JPMorgan has not mandated vaccines for workers to return to the office.
At Citi, which asked employees to come back for at least two days a week starting in September, offices are about 70 per cent full on the days with the highest traffic. Citi, whose CEO, Jane Fraser, started her job in the middle of the pandemic, has hired shuttle buses so that employees coming into midtown Manhattan from suburban homes can avoid taking the subway to the bank's downtown offices.
Jefferies, where Batchelor works, has embraced hybrid working on a longer-term basis, in sharp contrast with some of its Wall Street peers. It is allowing employees to work at home on solo tasks while also encouraging teamwork and collaboration in the office - and even picking up the tab for group meals.
On peak days, the office is at 70 per cent capacity as a result, said Brian Friedman, Jefferies' president. "Our approach has not been one to set a regimen or prescription, but rather to provide support and guidance and allow people to both be trusted by us, and by each other."
For Batchelor, Jefferies' new policy means coming in to the office three days a week. Although she plans to travel to meetings when necessary, she said she was grateful to spend more time with her children and cut back on her long commute.
"I didn't know what I was missing," she said. NYTIMES
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