# The Long Goodbye: How Wall Street Fell Out of Love With New York > Published on ADIN (https://adin.chat/s/the-long-goodbye-how-wall-street-fell-out-of-love-with-new-york) > Type: Article > Date: 2026-05-06 > Description: The view from the 54th floor of 1201 Brickell Bay Drive takes in Biscayne Bay, the port of Miami, and on clear mornings, the faint outline of the Bahamas on the horizon. There is no Hudson River, no Central Park, no canyon of limestone and glass that has defined American financial power for a... The view from the 54th floor of 1201 Brickell Bay Drive takes in Biscayne Bay, the port of Miami, and on clear mornings, the faint outline of the Bahamas on the horizon. There is no Hudson River, no Central Park, no canyon of limestone and glass that has defined American financial power for a century. Warmer, newer, and to the growing number of hedge fund managers who have traded Park Avenue for Brickell Avenue, that difference is precisely the point. Ken Griffin announced last week at the Milken Institute Global Conference that Citadel is expanding that building further, swapping hotel space for additional offices in the tower that became the firm's global headquarters when Griffin relocated from Chicago in 2022. The immediate provocation was a campaign video by New York City Council member Zohran Mamdani, promoting a "pied-à-terre" tax on second homes -- a clip Griffin called evidence of the city's hostility toward business. The expansion had been coming regardless. The video was a convenient headline. The underlying logic had been accumulating for years. ## The Firms That Moved and What Drove Them The modern finance migration to Florida did not begin with Citadel. Carl Icahn moved Icahn Enterprises from New York to the Miami area in 2020, during the early months of the pandemic, when the logic of paying New York tax rates to work from a home office had become genuinely difficult to defend. A wave followed: Millennium Management expanded its Miami operations, Point72 Asset Management added portfolio managers in South Florida, Apollo Global Management deepened its Florida footprint, and a long tail of smaller hedge funds and family offices relocated quietly, without press conferences, and have not come back. Citadel's 2022 move was different in character. Griffin did not slip out of Chicago -- he announced his departure publicly, thanked the Florida governor by name, and framed the decision as an explicit statement about what kind of political environment he was willing to operate in. The financial case behind these decisions is straightforward. Florida carries no state income tax, while New York City's combined state and city rate reaches 14.7% for top earners. For a portfolio manager earning eight figures annually, that differential represents a sum large enough to fund an entirely separate life. The broader advantages compound quickly: - **No state income tax** versus New York's combined top rate of 14.7% - **Commercial real estate** running 40 to 60 percent below comparable Midtown Manhattan space - **A regulatory environment** that state officials have actively marketed as business-friendly - **Lower overall cost of living** for employees below the senior executive level - **A growing local talent pool** as feeder firms and universities establish Florida presences But the tax savings were never the whole story. Several executives who made the move describe something harder to quantify -- a sense that New York's political climate had shifted toward active hostility. The pied-à-terre tax proposal, congestion pricing battles, aggressive progressive budget proposals, and a mayoral race in which multiple candidates competed to be seen as skeptical of Wall Street had, in the minds of many in the industry, accumulated into a signal that the city's priorities had fundamentally changed. ## What New York Still Offers Jamie Dimon has not moved. Neither has Larry Fink. Neither has the institutional machinery that processes trillions of dollars in transactions every day and that remains, despite every headline about departures, concentrated in a few square miles of lower and midtown Manhattan. New York's advantages are rooted in density -- the kind that takes generations to build and cannot be replicated by a favorable tax code: - **Talent pipelines** from elite universities feeding directly into financial firms - **Proximity to counterparties** -- law firms, investment banks, prime brokers, and institutional allocators within walking distance - **Client relationships** built on decades of physical proximity and shared institutional culture - **Deal flow and information networks** that still reward presence over remote access A hedge fund running a multi-strategy book with 40 portfolio managers can operate from Brickell. A firm whose business depends on daily proximity to Goldman Sachs, Sullivan and Cromwell, and the pension fund of the State of California will find Miami a longer commute than a flight schedule can easily fix. JPMorgan Chase is building a new global headquarters on Park Avenue -- 232,000 square meters, 430 meters tall, the largest private real estate project in New York history. Citadel's own $6 billion Park Avenue project is proceeding, promising thousands of construction and permanent jobs in the city it publicly departed. The firms most likely to leave, the data suggests, are those that already operate with a degree of geographic independence -- quantitative hedge funds, family offices, and private investment vehicles whose client relationships do not require a physical address on 57th Street. The firms anchored by relationship banking, deal flow, and institutional client service are staying for reasons that have less to do with civic loyalty than with the practical reality of how their businesses work. ## How the Moves Have Actually Played Out Citadel's Miami headquarters has grown into a genuine center of gravity for the firm. The Brickell neighborhood has been transformed -- new restaurants, new residential towers, the ambient professional energy of a place that believes it is becoming something significant. For Griffin personally, the move appears to have delivered what he said it would. The talent picture, though, is more complicated. A Business Insider analysis found that Citadel, Millennium, and Point72 collectively have fewer investors based in Miami now than they did during the peak of the relocation boom -- evidence that the workforce did not follow the letterhead as completely as the announcements implied. Senior portfolio managers with children in Westchester school districts and social lives built over decades in New York have proven resistant to permanent relocation. Several describe a pattern that has become recognizable across the industry: - A primary Florida address for tax purposes - A New York apartment maintained for weeks when client meetings require it - A commute pattern that functions more as a tax optimization strategy than a genuine relocation Miami has built real financial infrastructure where none existed five years ago. Whether it becomes a true rival to New York, or remains a well-capitalized satellite of it, will take another decade to answer with any confidence. ## A City Recalibrating Mayor Eric Adams's swift condemnation of the Mamdani video -- calling it "irresponsible" against the backdrop of a $7 billion city budget gap -- reflected a clear-eyed awareness that the finance sector funds roughly 20% of the city's tax base. Albany has resisted the most aggressive tax proposals floated in recent sessions. The city's Economic Development Corporation has launched targeted outreach to financial firms weighing their options. These are measured responses, but they are real ones. The underlying tension, though, is structural. New York's cost of doing business, the pace of its political shifts, and the gap between what the finance industry wants from a city government and what a progressive urban electorate tends to elect are not going to converge on terms that will reverse decisions already made. The city's position depends on whether enough of what it offers -- the talent depth, the client proximity, the counterparty ecosystem, the institutional history -- is sufficiently sticky that the firms still deliberating conclude, as JPMorgan and BlackRock apparently have, that those advantages outweigh the cost differential. The finance industry is moving, with increasing deliberateness, toward a geography in which New York is one significant hub among several rather than the unchallenged center of American financial life. Brickell Bay Drive is another hub. So is Greenwich. So is Dallas, where Goldman Sachs has built a campus employing thousands. Griffin is expanding in Miami because the original bet has held up. The firms still weighing the decision are watching those results carefully, and New York has yet to offer a compelling answer to what they are considering.