Wall Street braces for NYC mayoral vote, while governor races give possible midterms view
By Lewis Krauskopf, Davide Barbuscia and Laura Matthews
NEW YORK (Reuters) -Wall Street is on edge heading into the New York City mayoral election on Tuesday, with a potential victory for Zohran Mamdani set to reverberate through the heart of global capitalism, where financiers worry about the city’s lasting competitiveness and appeal.
Investors also are watching the results of governors’ races in New Jersey and Virginia to gauge whether Democrats are gaining momentum against President Donald Trump’s Republican Party ahead of next year’s U.S. midterm elections.
Mamdani, a 34-year-old state lawmaker who won the Democratic nomination, has been leading in polls and betting markets in a fierce contest to run New York, the U.S. financial capital.
Wall Street and the finance industry have expressed broad misgivings about the prospect of a Mamdani mayoralty, as the democratic socialist pushes for higher taxes on corporations and the wealthy. However, they are also hopeful that he moderates his positions or finds roadblocks to achieving some of his aims.
A Mamdani win is “a risk I’m watching in 2026,” said Dean Lyulkin, CEO of Cardiff, a private investment firm and small business lender in San Diego, California.
“Actual policy often turns out much more benign than campaign rhetoric, but if other major cities follow this pattern, markets may start pricing in more tax and regulatory risks,” Lyulkin said.
Mamdani’s main opponent is Andrew Cuomo, the former Democratic governor of New York state running as an independent, with Republican nominee Curtis Sliwa third in most opinion polls.
Mamdani has focused his campaign on affordability. His agenda includes a rent freeze, free bus service, universal childcare and city-run grocery stores. Mamdani’s policies also include hiking taxes on New York City’s wealthiest and raising the corporation tax, driving worries among the finance community that the city’s competitiveness will suffer.
While New York’s mayor has no direct oversight over Wall Street, the mayor sets the tone on whether the city is perceived as business-friendly.
Some heavyweights in finance had poured money into efforts to defeat Mamdani, including high-profile investors Bill Ackman and Dan Loeb.
Still, some are optimistic about Cuomo’s chances. Worries tied to Mamdani’s victory are “somewhat overexaggerated,” said Peter Cardillo, chief market economist at Spartan Capital Securities in New York, who believes Cuomo may have a better chance to win than polls indicate, while as mayor Mamdani would face obstacles to implementing his proposals.

Leave a Comment
Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *