Big U.S. banks face delayed bonuses
WASHINGTON |
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - U.S. regulators on Monday made their most forceful attempt yet to clamp down on bank bonuses since the 2007-2009 financial crisis, but the proposals pale in comparison to harsher restrictions already set in Europe.The Federal Deposit Insurance Corp proposed that executives at the largest financial institutions have half of their bonuses deferred for at least three years.
Yet the U.S. plan is markedly softer than the European Union, which in December set guidelines that top bankers be limited to receiving 20 percent of their annual bonuses upfront in cash, with some exceptions.
Massive cash payouts that reward bank executives and traders for short-term returns, without regard to long-term risk, have been blamed by international regulators as a factor in the recent financial crisis.
The FDIC plan responds to both the Dodd-Frank financial overhaul law of 2010 that directed regulators to curb pay plans that encourage excessive risk-taking and principles agreed in 2009 by the world's group of 20 leading economies (G20).
Many Wall Street firms have already spread out their bonus payments in response to the impending rules.
"This has all been kind of baked into people's plans and thinking today," said Alan Johnson of the compensation consulting firm Johnson Associates, about the FDIC's proposal.
But there are signs that in both the United States and Europe that there is upward creep in total compensation figures that offsets the curbs.
Goldman Sachs Group revealed last month that it tripled Chief Executive Lloyd Blankfein's base salary and awarded him $12.6 million of stock, even after the bank's net income plunged last year.
And earlier this month, Citigroup's board approved a base salary of $1.75 million for CEO Vikram Pandit. Pandit had vowed in 2009 to receive an annual salary of $1 until Citigroup returned to sustained profitability.
In Britain, banks such as HSBC and Barclays have raised the fixed part of bank pay in what they say is an essential move to retain staff.
GLOBAL VARIATIONS
The FDIC's proposal would tackle pay for top executives at financial companies with $50 billion or more in assets such as Bank of America Corp, JPMorgan Chase & Co, Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley.
How much of the deferred pay an executive could receive would be tied to the performance of the company based on decisions made by the executive during the period covered.
The FDIC's proposal is just a first step that must be approved by other U.S. financial regulators, such as the Federal Reserve and Securities and Exchange Commission, before being finalized. It is unclear when the other regulators will act.
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