Generated by GPT-5-mini| Companies based in New York City | |
|---|---|
| Name | Companies based in New York City |
| Caption | Skyline with corporate offices in Manhattan |
| Type | Various |
| Founded | Various |
| Headquarters | New York City, New York, United States |
| Key people | Various |
| Industry | Various |
Companies based in New York City New York City hosts a dense concentration of multinational Corporations, Financial services firms, and creative enterprises centered in Manhattan, Brooklyn, and Queens, connecting to global markets such as London, Tokyo, Hong Kong, Frankfurt am Main, and Singapore. The city's corporate cluster includes storied names from JPMorgan Chase, Goldman Sachs, and Citigroup to media firms like The New York Times Company, Warner Bros. Discovery, and NBCUniversal, and technology-influenced companies tied to hubs like Silicon Alley, Greenwich Village, and the Flatiron District.
Firms headquartered in New York City drive fiscal metrics tracked by institutions such as the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, and New York Stock Exchange, influencing indices including the S&P 500, Dow Jones Industrial Average, and NASDAQ Composite. Corporate tax receipts to the State of New York and City of New York derive from activities involving Goldman Sachs, Morgan Stanley, MetLife, American International Group, and BlackRock while large employers such as Verizon Communications and Pfizer affect regional GDP, trade flows with ports like the Port of New York and New Jersey and aviation hubs such as John F. Kennedy International Airport and LaGuardia Airport. Financial, media, and professional service firms interact with regulators like the Securities and Exchange Commission and trade bodies such as the New York Stock Exchange and Financial Industry Regulatory Authority.
Key sectors centered in New York include Financial services with players like JPMorgan Chase, Citigroup, Goldman Sachs, Morgan Stanley, and BlackRock; media and entertainment anchored by The Walt Disney Company, Paramount Global, ViacomCBS, Netflix, and Warner Bros. Discovery; advertising and marketing represented by Omnicom Group, Interpublic Group, and WPP plc affiliates; legal and consulting firms like Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom, Deloitte, PwC, and KPMG; and technology and e-commerce presences from Amazon (company), Google, Facebook, Spotify, and startup clusters in Silicon Alley. Healthcare and pharmaceuticals are represented by Pfizer, Johnson & Johnson, and institutions linked to Columbia University Irving Medical Center and NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital.
Prominent headquarters located in Manhattan include JPMorgan Chase at 270 Park Avenue, Citigroup at 388 Greenwich Street, MetLife at 200 Park Avenue, Verizon Communications at 140 West Street, and The New York Times Company at The New York Times Building. Media conglomerates with major operations include Warner Bros. Discovery in Time Warner Center, NBCUniversal at 30 Rockefeller Plaza, and Paramount Global at One Astor Plaza. Retail and consumer companies with NYC roots include Macy's, Tiffany & Co., Coach (brand), Estée Lauder Companies, and Bloomingdale's, while industrial and transport firms such as Consolidated Edison and American Airlines Group maintain significant offices.
New York's startup ecosystem spans accelerators like Techstars, Y Combinator-backed cohorts, hubs in Chelsea, DUMBO, and SoHo, and investors including Sequoia Capital, Accel Partners, Union Square Ventures, Insight Partners, and Tiger Global Management. Venture activity is tracked by organizations such as New York Angels, Empire State Development, and research centers at Columbia University and New York University, feeding sectors from fintech with companies like Stripe and Plaid to biotech spinouts linked to Weill Cornell Medicine and Mount Sinai Health System.
The evolution from 19th-century trade houses and financiers in Wall Street to 20th-century manufacturing on the Hudson River and late-20th-century media consolidation in Times Square involved companies such as RCA, AT&T, General Electric, and International Business Machines, with influences from urban policies under mayors like Fiorello H. La Guardia, Robert F. Wagner Jr., and Michael Bloomberg. Corporate relocations have included moves by Amazon (company) (HQ2 debate), multinational shifts by Dell Technologies, and headquarters consolidations by Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley, influenced by tax incentives from Empire State Development and legal rulings such as decisions from the New York Court of Appeals.
Large employers such as JPMorgan Chase, Goldman Sachs, Citigroup, The New York Times Company, and Verizon Communications interact with labor organizations like Service Employees International Union, Communications Workers of America, and Actors' Equity Association while collective bargaining visible in sectors including publishing, broadcast unions such as Screen Actors Guild‐American Federation of Television and Radio Artists, and transit labor represented by Transport Workers Union of America. Workforce development initiatives involve partnerships with City University of New York, Columbia University, New York University, and workforce agencies coordinated by the New York City Department of Small Business Services.
Category:Companies of the United States Category:Economy of New York City