[Link] Wall Street Power Map 2026.pdf

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The American Newspaper
www.americannewspaper.org
Published: Wednesday, June 10, 2026, (06/10/2026) at 6:11 P.M.
[Editorial Note]
This article was produced with AI-assisted drafting and human editorial direction. The final version was reviewed for structure, sourcing, clarity, and analytical coherence by the editor.
[Source/Notes]
This article was written/produced using AI ChatGPT. Written/authored entirely by ChatGPT itself. The editor made no revisions. The model used is GPT-5.5 Thinking. Images were made/produced using ChatGPT.
[Prompt History/Draft]
“You are a top-tier financial strategist specializing in Wall Street power structures, global capital markets, investment banking, hedge funds, private equity, asset management, prime brokerage, financial regulation, central-bank policy, and institutional capital flows. I want to understand the Wall Street power map as of 2026, not as a simple list of famous financial firms, but as a true power map showing who actually allocates capital, controls transaction flow, receives market information first, influences policy and regulation, and stands at the center of bailouts, restructurings, and mergers and acquisitions during crises. Classify Wall Street power into investment banks, commercial banks and major financial holding companies, asset managers, hedge funds, private equity and private credit managers, prime brokers, institutional investors such as pension funds, sovereign wealth funds, university endowments, insurance companies, and family offices, exchanges and clearinghouses, market infrastructure, credit rating agencies, index providers, data companies, law firms, accounting firms, consulting firms, and policy power centers such as the U.S. Treasury, Federal Reserve, SEC, CFTC, OCC, FDIC, Congress, the White House, and the Federal Reserve Bank of New York. Explain the power functions performed by JPMorgan Chase, Goldman Sachs, Morgan Stanley, Bank of America, Citigroup, BlackRock, Vanguard, State Street, Blackstone, KKR, Apollo, Carlyle, Ares, Brookfield, Citadel, Millennium, Point72, Bridgewater, Elliott, Jane Street, Susquehanna, NYSE, Nasdaq, CME, ICE, DTCC, S&P Global, Moody’s, MSCI, Bloomberg, LSEG, Sullivan & Cromwell, Davis Polk, Simpson Thacher, Wachtell, PwC, Deloitte, McKinsey, Bain, and BCG. In particular, analyze who serves as the core channel for the U.S. Treasury market and dollar liquidity; who dominates M&A, IPOs, bond issuance, and restructuring transactions; who actually allocates institutional capital; who has pricing power in hedge funds, private equity, and private credit; who exercises hidden power through prime brokerage, leverage, derivatives, repo, and securities lending; who has strong networks with Washington, D.C. regulators; who enters the center of market-stabilization and policy-consultation processes during crises; and who controls information, data, indexes, credit ratings, terminals, research, and algorithmic trading infrastructure. Include the major changes shaping 2026, including the change in the cost of capital after the high-interest-rate era, U.S. Treasury market volatility, the rise of private credit, delayed private equity exits, the AI infrastructure investment boom, ETF and index power, the platformization of hedge funds into multi-strategy firms, prime brokerage profitability, bank regulation, the Basel III Endgame debate, SEC and CFTC regulatory changes, the current administration’s financial-policy direction, geopolitical risk, and the relationship between Wall Street and capital from China, the Middle East, and Europe. Structure the output as a high-level financial strategy report covering the core summary of the 2026 Wall Street power map, the main axes of Wall Street power, representative institutions, representative figures, and sources of power for each axis, the networks of investment banks, asset managers, hedge funds, private equity, private credit, prime brokerage, the Treasury market, dollar liquidity, policy power, data infrastructure, law firms, and accounting firms, rising and weakening powers in 2026, a Wall Street power pyramid, how Korean companies, investors, media organizations, and startups can use this power map, and a conclusion answering the question: “Where does real power reside on Wall Street in 2026?” Verify the latest information using sources such as the Federal Reserve Bank of New York primary dealer list, the U.S. Treasury, the Federal Reserve, SEC Form PF, CFTC, OCC, FDIC, the SIFMA Capital Markets Fact Book, HFR, Preqin, PitchBook, Bloomberg, Reuters, the Financial Times, The Wall Street Journal, Goldman Sachs Prime Brokerage, Morgan Stanley, JPMorgan, BlackRock earnings reports, annual reports of major banks and asset managers, Form ADV, 13F filings, proxy statements, and congressional hearing records; present figures and rankings using the most recent available standards whenever possible, clearly label uncertain information as estimates, and write in the style of an elite financial strategy report that connects the flow of money, information, regulation, and relationships to explain how power actually operates on Wall Street. Present the above content as a PDF file. In the document, list the author as The American Newspaper and place the website address https://americannewspaper.org next to The American Newspaper. Also list the author as AmericanTV and place the website address https://americantv.org next to AmericanTV. Generate suitable images related to the content and insert them into the document.”
(The End).