Trading Firms Make Contrarian Bets on Downtown Chicago Offices – Bloomberg

"His (Mayor Brandon Johnson's) administration has proposed new levies, including higher real estate transfer taxes and a financial transaction tax, prompting a reaction from Chicago’s trading community to push their case to the city. Their argument is simple — the derivatives industry currently employs some 59,100 people in Illinois, the majority in Chicago. Employment grew 17% over the past decade, outpacing the state’s overall growth of 5.9% in the period, according to the US Labor Bureau of Statistics."
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Giddyap
2 years ago

There’s always someone thinks that the Earth is really flat — what lender in their right mind would get behind this plan — it’s like buying tickets for the Titanic after the ice-berg hit

debtsor
2 years ago
Reply to  Giddyap

There’s too much cash chasing too little yield. There’s still trillions of dollars floating around the financial system from COVID and it all has to go somewhere.

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Mark Glennon on AM560’s Morning Answer: Chicago pension buyout plan mostly shifts debt rather than eliminating it, property tax surge doubles inflation over three decades

Chicago’s political leadership is floating a pension buyout program as evidence it is seriously addressing the city’s thirty-six-billion-dollar unfunded pension liability, but Mark Glennon, founder of the Illinois policy research organization Wirepoints, said that the proposal moves debt from one column to another rather than reducing it, and that the broader fiscal picture facing the city continues to deteriorate across every measurable dimension. Audio here.

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