Category Archives: CEO compensation

On Wall Street Pay, “Talent”, and the Curious Case of Andrew Hall

I was on the Andrew Hall/Phibro beat for a while and must confess I dropped it in the finish-the-book crunch. I neglected to follow up on and important aspect of the story that is still germane. Readers may recall the brouhaha: Hall, a high stakes oil trader, had received nearly $100 million in 2008 at […]

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AIG Pays “Retention” Bonuses to Secretaries and Kitchen Staff; Execs Renege on Promised Repayments

An interesting contract in reporting today. Reader (Tom C) sent me the Wall Street Journal version of this story, by Michael R. Crittenden and Liam Pleven, titled “AIG Execs Returned Only $19M Of $45M In Pledged Repayments.” I decided to look at Bloomberg as well, as found one on the same subject, “AIG Should Trim […]

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The Problem With Financial Services Compensation (AIG/Pay Czar Edition)

The Financial Times reports that the so-called pay czar Kenneth Feinberg, who is in charge of overseeing compensation at TARP recipients, is going to crack down on some of the bonuses paid at AIG: The Obama administration’s pay tsar has indicated he will take a tough stance on executive pay at AIG, the state-controlled insurance […]

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Fed Plays Politics on Banker Pay

The Wall Street Journal has a headline that would warm the cockles of any populist’s heart: “Bankers Face Sweeping Curbs on Pay.” And even more impressive, who is going to rein in banker compensation? The Fed. That alone should tell you there is less here than meets they eye. Let’s look at the outline of […]

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Further Confirmation That Real Bank Reform is Dead on Arrival

The Financial Times tonight reports that Goldman CEO Lloyd Blankfein made “startling” remarks in Germany, for instance, that a lot of banking activity is rather thin on redeeming social value. Oh, and he admitted bankers might be paid too much, too. Gee, with revelations like that, what might he to ‘fess up to next? That […]

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EU Ministers Asserting Selves as Alpha Predators Versus Bankers

Perhaps I place too much emphasis on turn of phrase. However, the fact that the EU officialdom is starting to use feral imagery in describing the posture they intend to take relative to the financial services industry says they have a keen appreciation of what they are up against. The battle lines are being drawn […]

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Mirabile Dictu! Is It Becoming Respectable to Challenge the Finance Brain Drain?

A new and welcome front may be opening in the efforts to rein in an overly powerful and now explicitly state-backed financial services industry: challenging its claims that its activities are good for society. While the provision of credit is important to any economy beyond the barter stage, finance should be the handmaiden of commerce, […]

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AIG CEO Gives Uncle Sam (and Us) the Finger (Financial Services Industry Arrogance Watch)

Tim Duy pointed out this priceless remark from AIG’s new CEO, Robert Benmosch: Benmosche told employees that he “had the luxury to say to the government, I’m not going to rush to do this. I’m appalled at how much pressure has been put on all of you to just sell it no matter what, because […]

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"Pay Czar" Refusing to Back Down Over Possible $100 Million Citi Bonus

Ooh, this is getting interesting. Sports fans may recall that as of last week, Citigroup was refusing to back down on the issue of the contract for Andrew Hall, the head of commodities trading unit PhiBro, which could be worth as much as $100 million this year. A side comment: Hall seems to be trying […]

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Could a "Crisis Insurance" Wrinkle Make Banks Managers More Prudent?

One of my (many) pet peeves is the lousy incentives that investment bank top brass and staff have had for some time. In particular, the advent of the “other people’s money” model has meant that everyone has reason to be cavalier. The industry has a proud tradition of people failing upwards, or at least sideways, […]

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SEC Taking More Aggressive Stance on CEO Clawbacks

The SEC is pursuing a rather odd case, odd in the sense that while the media is getting very excited about it, it strikes me as having perilous little general applicability. The broad strokes via the Financial Times: The US Securities and Exchange Commission’s attempt to use – for the first time – a “clawback” […]

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Citi Trader, Who Made $100 Million Last Year, Insists on Keeping His Deal in Place

On the surface, the particulars of this case seem simple. A Citigroup commodities trader who says he has a contract that could yield him a $100 million payment this year is crossing swords with the new Treasury pay czar, Kenneth Feinberg. The Wall Street Journal story portrays the pay deal for the trader, Andrew Hall, […]

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Asymmetric information and corporate governance in bank bailouts

Submitted by Edward Harrison of Credit Writedowns. So, things are looking a lot brighter we are told by most economists and policy makers. The crisis is over and the banking system is on the mend. Now is the time for true reform and for bankers to get back to business as usual. While the foregoing […]

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