Directors considered recent progress toward new targets when
setting Corbat's pay, according to a public filing on Friday.
A year earlier, Corbat's annual compensation was cut 6 percent
to $15.5 million after the bank missed financial performance
targets and saw one-third of its voting shareholders disapprove
of his prior pay.
After that vote, the company made changes to its pay plan, which
was then endorsed by 97 percent of voting shareholders at its
annual meeting in April.
In July, Citigroup recast targets set in 2013 as new goals for
2020.
In 2017, Citigroup stock jumped 25 percent and its profit rose 4
percent, excluding a charge for the impact of the U.S. tax law
change on the value of its deferred tax assets.
Corbat, 57, has been CEO since 2012. Citigroup is the
fourth-biggest U.S. bank by assets.
The change in Corbat's pay compares with annual raises of 5 to
20 percent for some other Wall Street executives. Jamie Dimon,
CEO of JPMorgan Chase & Co, <JPM.N> the biggest U.S. bank, was
paid $29.5 million, a 5.4 percent increase.
Morgan Stanley <MS.N> CEO James Gorman's compensation was raised
20 percent to $27 million.
Lloyd Blankfein, chief executive of Goldman Sachs Group Inc <GS.N>
received a 9 percent raise to $22 million, the company said on
Friday.
Bank of America Corp <BAC.N> CEO Brian Moynihan was paid $23
million, up 15 percent.
(Reporting by David Henry in New York; Editing by Bernadette
Baum)
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