JPMorgan, Goldman Sachs come top of banker pay league in
Britain
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[January 04, 2018]
By Lawrence White
LONDON (Reuters) - JPMorgan and Goldman
Sachs paid their top bankers in Britain an average of $1.5 million each
in 2016, compared with $1 million for local rivals HSBC and Barclays,
data released by the banks last year shows.
Data compiled by Reuters from 13 banks' filings, some of which were
released only late last month, shows they paid an average of $1.06
million to such staff in 2016, down from $2 million for the year ended
Dec. 31, 2013 when new European Union rules aimed at curbing banker
bonuses took effect.
The Wall Street banks' higher pay packages show how they have bounced
back more quickly from the financial crisis than their peers in Britain,
some of which have faced hefty post-crisis costs that have limited
banker pay.
The data also shows that EU rules to rein in banker bonuses, blamed for
driving excessive risk-taking in the run up to the 2008 crisis, are
having an impact.
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JPMorgan paid 672 staff in senior or risk-taking positions a total of
$1.02 billion in 2016 for an average of $1.52 million each, while 724
Goldman bankers took home an average of $1.48 million each, according to
Reuters' calculations from the filings.
U.S. banks were also able to capitalize more effectively than European
rivals on spikes in volatility in financial markets in 2016 from
Britain's June Brexit vote.
Europe's top investment banks' trading in fixed income products fell by
6 percent in the second quarter of 2016, while their five biggest U.S.
rivals reported a 21 percent increase to $13.1 billion in revenue from
the same business.
The disclosures are among the most comprehensive released on bankers'
pay in Britain, which remains a controversial subject ten years on from
the financial crisis.
A report by the Chartered Institute of Personnel and Development
released on Thursday showed that a median worker salary in Britain is
about $38,493. In contrast, the average pay of a senior banker in 2016
was $1.06 million.
The report highlighted that the average boss of one of Britain's top
companies will by Thursday have already earned the same as the typical
worker will make in the entire year.
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The late winter light shines on the buildings in the City of
London financial district of London, Britain November 24, 2017.
REUTERS/Simon Dawson/File Photo
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The banks' pay disclosures make no mention of gender pay gaps, but banks in
Britain may have to begin reporting such data after the government last April
announced employers would have to disclose the difference between what they pay
men and women by April 2018.
The average pay levels for bankers in the filings were boosted by a handful of
top earners, with 10 Goldman bankers earning the highest band of more than 9
million euros in 2016 while 14 JPMorgan executives took home that lender's top
bracket of over 5 million euros each.
The pay disclosures focus on banks' senior executives and 'material risk
takers', and show how an EU rule that came into force in 2014 capping variable
or bonus pay at 200 percent of fixed pay has cut fat bonuses.
While Goldman Sachs paid senior staff more than five times more in variable pay
than fixed in 2013, before the rule took effect, that ratio fell in 2016 to 0.6
times.
Goldman in 2016 paid the top bankers $679 million in cash, and gave them 1.63
million shares in the bank which were worth a total of $389.6 million based on
the bank's year-end share price of $239.
Analysis of the filings also shows how regulators have sought to broaden the
number of bankers deemed material risk takers, with the total whose pay is
captured by the data rising from 2,604 in 2013 to 8,360 in 2016.
The disclosures cover British banks globally and overseas banks' British-based
staff, and contain more detail than is found in pay disclosures in other non-EU
regions.
Most banks released the details earlier last year, but some banks such as
Goldman reported last month just before the year-end deadline.
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Goldman declined to comment.
(Reporting By Lawrence White. Editing by Jane Merriman)
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