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Strategic Importance of Wall Street West

Strategic Importance of Wall Street West. Lehigh Valley Community Forum August 23, 2007 Luc M. Miron DCED Technology Investment Office. Strategic Importance of Wall Street West. Key Component of the Rapidly Evolving “ Innovation Economy ”

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Strategic Importance of Wall Street West

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  1. Strategic Importance of Wall Street West • Lehigh Valley Community Forum August 23, 2007 • Luc M. Miron • DCED Technology Investment Office

  2. Strategic Importance of Wall Street West Key Component of the Rapidly Evolving “Innovation Economy” Opportunity + Competitive Advantage

  3. Wall Street West / WIRED Initiative Two (2) Components • “Economic Development” Component(Wall Street West) • Extend synchronous fiber optic connectivity between Northeast PA (NEPA) and NYC • “Workforce Development” Component(WIRED) • Federal DOL program - successful $15M grant award • Goal: Implement a transformational regional strategy through the intersection of workforce/economic development objectives around Wall Street West remote facilities

  4. Wall Street West: Impetus for Project Project Impetus • September 11 terrorist attacks caused major interruptions • Demonstrated vulnerabilities of US financial system • Interagency Paper on Sound Practices to Strengthen the Resilience of the U.S. Financial System (April 3, 2003) • DCED/Commonwealth commitment to implement • WIRED funding – $15 million federal DOL grant

  5. Interagency Sound Practices White Paper S.E.C. Recommendations (Sound Practices): • Identify clearing and settlement activities in support of critical financial markets • Determine appropriate recovery and resumption objectives for clearing and settlement activities in support of critical markets • Maintain sufficient geographically dispersed resources to meet recovery and resumption objectives • Routinely use or test recovery and resumption arrangements

  6. Law of Physics • Two types of data processing lead to two different requirements 1. Batch Processing - Typical of most banks, and some insurance companies (asynchronous) • Requirement is for space, power, and bandwidth, no inherent latency limitations 2. Real Time Processing - Typical of brokerage houses and mutual funds (synchronous) • All transactions must be mirrored in real time • This translates to maximum latency of roughly 6 milliseconds; this latency corresponds to 125 route miles or less of fiber

  7. . NYC Attractiveness of NEPA Proximity to NYC –within 125 fiber miles Separate power grid from NYC Different water shed Potential labor pool; fastest growing counties in PA “Business Case”: lower realty costs, labor costs, etc Availability of potential locations Critical mass of back office industry peers

  8. Pennsylvania’s Strategy Elements: • Focus • Research & Commercialization • Capital • Workforce • Infrastructure

  9. Focus: • IBM Global Competitiveness Report Identified four growth-oriented industry clusters and 11 subclusters: • Life sciences • Integrated Biopharma Manufacturing • Biotech Research • Medical Equipment and Devices • High technology • Next Generation Electronics • Alternative Energy • Advanced manufacturing and materials • Powdered Metals • Agro-Food Processing • Prefabricated Housing • Business services • Creative Industries • Regional Headquarters • Financial Services/back office/transactions

  10. Targeted Business Development

  11. IDEAL Cost-Quality Ranking

  12. Pennsylvania’s Strategy Elements: • Focus • Research & Commercialization • Capital • Workforce • Infrastructure

  13. Research: Economic Engine & Leverage Effect • 260 Colleges and Universities • Pennsylvania ranks fourth in academic Research and Development and its world-class academic/research institutions garner substantial NIH funding-- $1.4 billion in 2004. • More than 22,000 students received degrees in the engineering and sciences fields. • Pennsylvania provides over $130 million to academic research projects each year.

  14. Research is a Powerful Tool • Job Creation – approximately 36 jobs per $1 million of research + Construction and service sector positions + Indirect jobs (multiplier effect) • Increase the number of start-ups and the number of company attractions to the state through enhanced research pipeline • Innovation in existing companies

  15. Commercialization: Keystone Innovation Zones • Capitalizes on the Commonwealth’s greatest asset – our young and talented graduates and our world-class college and university system. • Designates zones in colleges and university communities that will foster innovation and create entrepreneurial opportunities to keep young, talented graduates in Pennsylvania. Pennsylvania Provides: • Operational funding for public/private partnership, incubators • “Starter Kits”: Funding for university technology transfer and key faculty hires • Tax credits for start-ups • Capital for growth

  16. Erie Susquehanna Warren McKean Potter Tioga Bradford Wayne Crawford Forest Wyoming Elk Cameron Sullivan Lackawanna Venango Pike Mercer Lycoming Clinton Clarion Luzerne Jefferson Columbia Monroe Lawrence Montour Clearfield Union Centre Butler Carbon Armstrong Northumberland Northampton Beaver Snyder Mifflin Schuylkill Indiana Lehigh Juniata Allegheny Cambria Blair Berks Bucks Perry Dauphin Lebanon Westmoreland Huntingdon Montgomery Washington Cumberland Phila. Chester Lancaster Fayette Somerset Bedford Fulton Franklin York Delaware Greene Adams

  17. Pennsylvania’s Strategy Elements: • Focus • Research & Commercialization • Capital • Workforce • Infrastructure

  18. Capital Goal is to encourage and partner with private sector to fill gaps Early Stage • Ben Franklin Technology Partners • Venture Capital: $60 million state investment generated $240 million in new capital. Growth Stage: • Venture Capital: $310 million state investment will generate $900 million in new capital. Maturity and Reinvention • Working Capital • Second Stage Loan Guarantee + PNC’s Pennsylvania Working Capital Growth Fund = $200 million • Construction • PIDA + Sovereign Bank’s Pennsylvania Small Business Growth Lending Program • Machinery and Equipment • Core Industries + Citizens Job Bank

  19. Technology-based Economic Development Tools Along the Continuum

  20. Pennsylvania’s Strategy Elements: • Focus • Research & Commercialization • Capital • Workforce • Infrastructure

  21. Workforce: Advanced technology “knowledge workers” to retain and attract high-tech employers • Without a highly skilled workforce, employers in life sciences, information technology, advanced manufacturing and business services are less likely to locate in Pennsylvania. • PA needs to capitalize on a solid base of students and research activity; translating it into new “family sustaining” employment.

  22. Workforce: WIRED Grant • Through WIRED (Workforce Innovation in Regional Economic Development) initiative, the U.S. DOL will invest $195 million in thirteen regional economies • NEPA is one of 13 national awards in 1st cycle funding- $15 million over next 3 years (“A WIRED Wall Street West”) • Regional transformational strategy involving economic development, workforce development and education

  23. Pennsylvania’s Strategy Elements: • Focus • Research & Commercialization • Capital • Workforce • Infrastructure

  24. Infrastructure/Sites • More than $1 billion in infrastructure improvement funding available through the Economic Stimulus Package. • Used for acquisition/site preparation/on-site infrastructure/construction • Focus on brownfield sites

  25. The Business Case • DCED IBM Global Competitiveness Studyidentifies Financial Services as a key growth industry where PA has a competitive advantage • Moran, Stahl & Boyer, LLC: 25,000 residents in Northeast PA employed in the Financial Services and Insurance Industry (Bank of America; Sallie Mae; Wachovia; Sovereign; PNC Bank; Prudential Financial, etc.) • U.S. Dept of Labor Financial Services Factbook 2005: Financial Services and Insurance constitute nearly 8% of PA Gross State Product ($36 B) • U.S. Dept of Labor Financial Services Factbook 2006: Financial Services and Insurance Industry will grow by 12% to 2012

  26. The Business Case • New York Times 12/05: “Allentown, Bethlehem and Easton drew 14,000 new residents from the New York Metro Area in 2005 -- doubling migration numbers from 1998.” • Penn State Data Center: Pike County led all PA counties in population increase from ‘04 to ‘05, followed by Monroe County. Pike has also been the fastest growing PA county since 2000, up 21.7 %, +10,035 persons, followed by Monroe, up 17.7 %, +24,547 • Penn’s Northeast: “Locating a 500-employee business unit in Northeast PA (vs NY/NJ Metro) would save the company $83 M over 5 years in taxes, payroll and real estate costs -- if located in a KOEZ, $165 M by 2013”

  27. Financial Services Industry in NEPA Region “Build It and More Will Come” Lackawanna & Luzerne Counties Back office operations, data center, business processes, insurance, etc • 15,077 employees (source: Penn’s Northeast) Lehigh Valley Call centers, back office operations, etc • 10,016 employees (source: Lehigh Valley EDC)

  28. Wall Street West/WIRED Key Deliverables • 5 to 10 mid- to large-sized financial services firms establishing or growing operations in NEPA • Creation of approximately 1,000 jobs and training 1,500+ during the WIRED grant period • Branding NEPA as industry standard for business continuity and disaster recovery while bolstering NYC as ‘financial services capital’ of the world • NEPA business growth in financial services and in all vendor support operations to the industry

  29. And It Gets Better… • Wall Street West leads to other opportunities • Data centric or data intensive needs • And it’s also about “Main Street” • Improving “last mile” situation in NEPA

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