Wall Street is in an uproar as the Federal Trade Commission has officially put the brakes on non-compete agreements. Businesses entrenched in the financial hub are now in a frenzy to overhaul their contracts and figure out new strategies to keep their big-ticket employees from walking.
Long a cornerstone of employment contracts at major financial institutions such as big banks, brokerage firms, asset managers, and hedge funds, non-compete clauses traditionally barred employees from joining a competitor soon after leaving a company.
This practice has been uprooted following a tight 3-2 vote by FTC commissioners led by Chair Lina Khan. The ruling strikes down existing non-compete agreements for most workers and bans all new ones starting this August.
The FTC’s move dismantles familiar elements of Wall Street operations, such as enforcing “gardening leave” and holding back deferred bonuses if an employee decides to jump ship to a competitor. This change is expected to liberate many skilled traders, investors, and bankers, allowing them to leave unsatisfactory roles and potentially enhancing well-run firms that offer better pay and a more agreeable workplace atmosphere.
In response, industry groups are raising alarms that the absence of non-compete clauses will diminish the competitiveness of U.S. financial firms, inflate compliance costs, and trigger a wave of legal disputes between companies and their former employees. They argue that high-earning professionals can negotiate fair compensation in exchange for agreeing to such restrictions.
Complicating matters, the U.S. Chamber of Commerce has initiated a lawsuit claiming the FTC has exceeded its regulatory authority, with more legal battles anticipated. Meanwhile, law firms and financial companies are poring over the rule’s extensive documentation—over 500 pages—searching for loopholes that might allow Wall Street to keep guarding its trade secrets and intellectual property.
A significant concern is whether firms can still enforce gardening leave to safeguard sensitive information, given the FTC’s stance seems to outright prohibit common non-compete formats. Legal experts believe, however, that it might be possible to reframe contracts to include extended notice periods that effectively bench departing employees temporarily.
The repercussions of these changes are already visible as instances of trade secret theft lawsuits are on the rise, like the one trading firm Jane Street filed against two ex-employees who defected to competitor Millennium, though the accusations are denied.
The FTC’s regulations carve out an exception for senior executives who make over $151,164 and hold policymaking roles, but this exemption only applies retrospectively. Forward-looking, the ban encompasses all levels of employees, preventing any new non-compete clauses.
This regulatory change is also expected to shake up how companies handle employee bonuses, with industry pundits predicting firms will no longer be able to cancel deferred bonuses if an employee departs mid-payment. This reduces the financial burden on new employers to buy out old contracts, leveling the playing field for smaller firms vying for talent.
The effects of the FTC’s decision are predicted to alter corporate cultures broadly, akin to the changes observed when New York City prohibited employers from inquiring about job candidates’ current salaries—a policy that quickly spread throughout the financial sector.
The industry group Sifma has voiced concerns that the FTC may lack the jurisdiction to regulate banks and credit unions. This might afford traditional banks more leeway with non-competes compared to asset managers, private equity firms, and hedge funds, though banking regulators may still choose to enforce FTC rules.
With non-competes on the way out, companies will need to get creative, focusing on confidentiality and non-solicitation agreements as alternative means to safeguard private information.
For Wall Street professionals, the end of non-compete agreements may compel employers to provide more compelling reasons to stay, such as improved pay or better working conditions, shifting from “contractual handcuffs” to “golden handcuffs.”
A quant trader expressed support for the FTC’s move, criticizing hedge funds for abusing non-compete provisions and highlighting it as a step forward in the labor negotiation battle.
As the FTC’s new rule phases in, Wall Street faces a transformation that will require adaptation and ingenuity. No longer can companies rely solely on legal bindings to keep their employees. They now need to focus on creating a more attractive and supportive working environment.