Economy of Stamford, Connecticut

The economy of Stamford, Connecticut is unusual for having a cluster of corporate headquarters (many of which moved from New York City in the 1980s both to lower their tax bill and to be closer to the homes of their top executives).

The city has four Fortune 500 Companies, nine Fortune 1000 Companies, and thirteen Courant 100 Companies, as well as numerous divisions of large corporations. This gives Stamford the largest financial district in New York Metro outside New York City itself and one of the largest concentrations of corporations in the nation.

Royal Bank of Scotland announced in October 2005 that it would consolidate its North American headquarters in downtown Stamford and build the largest trading floor in North America (the current largest trading floor is in the UBS building across the street from where the new building is under construction). In addition, many specialized hedge funds, asset managers and trading houses are localized in and around the city.

Large and distinctive companies

UBS Investment Bank's offices in Stamford, Connecticut. When the building opened it featured the largest trading floor ever built

In 2006, Virgin Atlantic Airways occupied an office in Norwalk, Connecticut as its United States headquarters. During that year signed a 15-year lease to occupy space in a building in Stamford, Connecticut to use as its new United States headquarters. Virgin was scheduled to be the first tenant in the recently renovated at the time 15,200 square feet (1,410 m2) building, which was scheduled to be renamed "Virgin Atlantic Center." Richard Lee of The Stamford Advocate said that Virgin Atlantic was "the first marquee business that Stamford has lured from Norwalk in recent years."[5] Brooke Lawer, a spokesperson for Virgin Atlantic, said that the company needed less space and desired a smaller office building for the company; she added that the company preferred the Stamford location as it was closer to rail lines and New York City. Michael W. Freimuth, Stamford's director of economic development, stated that Virgin Atlantic would get tax breaks since the company was relocating to an enterprise zone; he also stated that Virgin's relocation would bring 75 jobs to the city.[6] As of 2009 Virgin Atlantic occupies a different office building in Norwalk and uses it as its U.S. headquarters.[7][8]

Top Employers

According to the City's 2012 Comprehensive Annual Financial Report,[9] the top employers in the city are:

# Employer # of Employees
1 City of Stamford 3,034
2 UBS 3,000
3 Stamford Town Center 2,500
4 RBS Securities 2,400
5 Stamford Hospital 2,350
6 GE Capital 1,043
7 Pitney Bowes 1,000
8 Starwood Hotels and Resorts Worldwide 1,000
9 Gartner 875
10 SAC 685

Footnotes

  1. Harrington, Shannon D., "Aladdin starts company to handle risky transactions", Bloomberg News article, as published in The Advocate, business section, November 22, 2007, p B1
  2. "SIGG Addresses." SIGG. Retrieved on 12 May 2010.
  3. Fishman-Lapin, Julie, "New fund offered at Suranya", article in The Advocate, business section, November 22, 2007, p B1
  4. "Factbook". Xerox Corporation. Retrieved 2008-06-20.
  5. Lee, Richard. "Virgin Atlantic shifts U.S. headquarters to Stamford, Conn." The Stamford Advocate. January 4, 2006. Retrieved on December 14, 2009.
  6. Holtz, Jeff. "IN BRIEF; Virgin Atlantic Offices Are Moving to Stamford." The New York Times. January 8, 2006. Retrieved on December 14, 2009.
  7. "Contact Us." Virgin Atlantic Airways United States. Retrieved on December 14, 2009.
  8. "USA Office." Virgin Atlantic Airways. Retrieved on December 14, 2009.
  9. City of Stamford CAFR

External links

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