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    Sunday, January 10, 2010

     

    Banks Prepare for Big Bonuses, Public Wrath (NYT)

    by Dollars and Sense

    From the New York Times:


    Banks Prepare for Big Bonuses, and Public Wrath

    By LOUISE STORY and ERIC DASH
    Published: January 9, 2010

    Everyone on Wall Street is fixated on The Number.

    The bank bonus season, that annual rite of big money and bigger egos, begins in earnest this week, and it looks as if it will be one of the largest and most controversial blowouts the industry has ever seen.

    Bank executives are grappling with a question that exasperates, even infuriates, many recession-weary Americans: Just how big should their paydays be? Despite calls for restraint from Washington and a chafed public, resurgent banks are preparing to pay out bonuses that rival those of the boom years. The haul, in cash and stock, will run into many billions of dollars.

    Industry executives acknowledge that the numbers being tossed around—six-, seven- and even eight-figure sums for some chief executives and top producers—will probably stun the many Americans still hurting from the financial collapse and ensuing Great Recession.

    Goldman Sachs is expected to pay its employees an average of about $595,000 apiece for 2009, one of the most profitable years in its 141-year history. Workers in the investment bank of JPMorgan Chase stand to collect about $463,000 on average.

    Many executives are bracing for more scrutiny of pay from Washington, as well as from officials like Andrew M. Cuomo, the attorney general of New York, who last year demanded that banks disclose details about their bonus payments. Some bankers worry that the United States, like Britain, might create an extra tax on bank bonuses, and Representative Dennis J. Kucinich, Democrat of Ohio, is proposing legislation to do so.

    Those worries aside, few banks are taking immediate steps to reduce bonuses substantially. Instead, Wall Street is confronting a dilemma of riches: How to wrap its eye-popping paychecks in a mantle of moderation. Because of the potential blowback, some major banks are adjusting their pay practices, paring or even eliminating some cash bonuses in favor of stock awards and reducing the portion of their revenue earmarked for pay.

    Some bank executives contend that financial institutions are beginning to recognize that they must recalibrate pay for a post-bailout world.

    "The debate has shifted in the last nine months or so from just 'less cash, more stock' to 'what's the overall number?' " said Robert P. Kelly, the chairman and chief executive of the Bank of New York Mellon. Like many other bank chiefs, Mr. Kelly favors rewarding employees with more long-term stock and less cash to tether their fortunes to the success of their companies.

    Though Wall Street bankers and traders earn six-figure base salaries, they generally receive most of their pay as a bonus based on the previous year's performance. While average bonuses are expected to hover around half a million dollars, they will not be evenly distributed. Senior banking executives and top Wall Street producers expect to reap millions. Last year, the big winners were bond and currency traders, as well as investment bankers specializing in health care.

    Even some industry veterans warn that such paydays could further tarnish the financial industry's sullied reputation. John S. Reed, a founder of Citigroup, said Wall Street would not fully regain the public's trust until banks scaled back bonuses for good—something that, to many, seems a distant prospect.

    "There is nothing I've seen that gives me the slightest feeling that these people have learned anything from the crisis," Mr. Reed said. "They just don't get it. They are off in a different world."

    The power that the federal government once had over banker pay has waned in recent months as most big banks have started repaying the billions of dollars in federal aid that propped them up during the crisis. All have benefited from an array of federal programs and low interest rate policies that enabled the industry to roar back in profitability in 2009.

    This year, compensation will again eat up much of Wall Street's revenue. During the first nine months of 2009, five of the largest banks that received federal aid—Citigroup, Bank of America, Goldman Sachs, JPMorgan Chase and Morgan Stanley—together set aside about $90 billion for compensation. That figure includes salaries, benefits and bonuses, but at several companies, bonuses make up more than half of compensation.


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    1/10/2010 02:56:00 PM