Bankers Wanted: Why Wall Street’s Job Market Is Red Hot

招聘银行家:为何华尔街的就业市场如此火爆

WSJ What’s News

2025-09-25

13 分钟
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单集简介 ...

P.M. Edition for Sept. 24. Hiring may be slowing for many industries, but the biggest banks on Wall Street have been adding headcount. We hear from WSJ reporter AnnaMaria Andriotis about what’s behind the hot job market, and whether it’s sustainable. Plus, a rule change at the Internal Revenue Service could have a big impact on a tax break for high-earning workers 50 and over. WSJ personal finance reporter Ashlea Ebeling breaks down what the rule means. And a shooting at an immigration facility in Dallas has left one detainee dead and two injured. Alex Ossola hosts. Sign up for the WSJ's free What's News newsletter. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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  • A shooting at an immigration facility in Dallas leaves one detainee dead and two injured.

  • Plus, as dealmaking picks up on Wall Street, big banks are on the hunt for talent.

  • This is about banks seeking to take more market share from each other,

  • and we are talking about pretty much the biggest banks in the investment banking space.

  • And why high earners 50 and over are about to lose a major tax break for their 401Ks.

  • It's Wednesday, September 24th.

  • I'm Alex Osela for The Wall Street Journal.

  • This is the PM edition of What's News,

  • the top headlines and business stories that move the world today.

  • We begin this evening with the latest on the shooting at a Texas immigration facility.

  • The Homeland Security Department said that one detainee was killed and two more were critically injured when a shooter opened fire at an immigration and customs enforcement field office in Dallas.

  • The Dallas Police Department said a preliminary investigation determined that a suspect shot at the office from an adjacent building.

  • Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem said in a post on X that the suspected shooter was dead from a self-inflicted gunshot wound.

  • No other information about the suspected shooter was provided.

  • Joseph Rothrock,

  • special agent in charge of the Federal Bureau of Investigations' Dallas Field Office,

  • said early evidence showed rounds found near the suspected shooter,

  • quote, contained messages that are anti-ice in nature.

  • We'll have more on this developing story on wsj.com.

  • We'll leave a link in the show notes.