Top
Stories

Featured Article Getting Minorities to Buy In on Retirement February 13, 2012
Featured Article State Law Favored Over Feds in Overtime Case February 12, 2012
Featured Article Adopting a Social Media Mind-Set February 12, 2012
Featured Article Social Media and Collaboration Tools February 12, 2012
Featured Article Arbitration Pact Barring Class Lawsuits Violates NLRA February 12, 2012
Featured Article The Last Word: Backyard Retirement Plan February 11, 2012
Featured Article State Public Sector Retirement Plan Roundup February 10, 2012
Featured Article States Taking a Hard Look at Pensions February 10, 2012
Featured Article Wisconsin's Tough Choice February 10, 2012
Featured Article Small Employers Exploring Health Care Exchange Options February 8, 2012

Latest News

Back-Off on Bonuses at Banks Will Shake Up Ranks of Top-Paid CFOs

Merrill Lynch indicates that finance chief Nelson Chai has elected to forgo his annual bonus payment, following a similar move last month by Goldman Sachs’ top management, including CFO David Viniar.

  • December 10, 2008
  • Comments (0)

CFOs on Wall Street have been walking away from the bonuses that typically made them some of the highest-paid finance officers in the country.

The trend continued Monday, December 8, when Merrill Lynch indicated that finance chief Nelson Chai has elected to forgo his annual bonus payment.

Chai’s action follows a similar move last month by Goldman Sachs’ top management, including CFO David Viniar, who was ranked as Financial Week’s top-paid CFO last year with a $58.5 million package.

Merrill Lynch said in a statement Monday that Chai, along with CEO John Thain and three other top executives at the company, had requested that Merrill’s board not award them any bonuses for 2008, a year in which the company’s stock price declined by roughly 30 percent. The brokerage was officially acquired by Bank of America on Friday after Merrill and BofA shareholders approved the transaction.

The bonus back-offs at Merrill come after a report in The Wall Street Journal suggested Thain had requested a bonus of as much as a $10 million. The article said Thain thought he deserved a bonus because he helped avert what could have been a much larger crisis at the company.

Either way, total compensation for Merrill Lynch executives this year will be a far cry from what they made last year. Indeed, the brokerage’s top officers earned more than $90 million in combined bonuses, stock and options awards in 2007. Chai, who joined Merrill in December 2007, earned a $1.25 million bonus for 2007, according to the company’s proxy filing.

Meanwhile, executives at Morgan Stanley will receive substantially lower bonuses for 2008, with CEO John Mack and co-presidents Walid Chammah and James Gorman asking the board Monday to forgo their bonuses entirely for the year.

The 14 members of Morgan Stanley’s operating committee—which includes CFO Colm Kelleher, one of Financial Week’s highest-paid CFOs for 2007—will receive total compensation packages that are worth 75 percent less, on average, than their pay last year.

Kelleher was paid $11.7 million in total compensation for 2007, which means he would be in line to take home roughly $2.9 million in total pay for 2008.

Now that Goldman, Merrill and Morgan Stanley executives have chosen to forfeit their bonuses for a dismal 2008, all eyes will turn to Citigroup.

Last week it was reported that executives at the bank—including CFO Gary Crittenden—would give up their bonuses. As of yet, however, there has been no formal announcement of the move.

If Citi were to follow its rivals, Crittenden would see his pay dramatically reduced. Nearly three-quarters of his nearly $20 million in compensation last year came from his bonus. Crittenden came in at No. 5 on Financial Week’s list of top-paid finance officers in 2007.

The highest-paid non-bank CFO on the list was Occidental Petroleum’s Stephen Chazen. Of his nearly $30 million in total compensation, Chazen received a bonus of just $633,600.

Filed by Mark Bruno of Financial Week, a sister publication of Workforce Management. To comment, e-mail editors@workforce.com.

Workforce Management’s online news feed is now available via Twitter.

Leave A Comment

Guidelines: Comments that include profanity or personal attacks or other inappropriate comments or material will be removed from the site. We will take steps to block users who violate any of our posting standards, terms of use or privacy policies or any other policies governing this site. You are fully responsible for the content you post.

Daily Q&A

What Can We Do When an Employee Has Exhausted the Leave-of-Absence Time Allowed by Our Workers' Comp Policy?

We have an employee who has been on workers' compensation for two years now—the claim is grandfathered under our old policy, but it's since changed. Now, when injured employees are on workers' compensation, they receive two-thirds of their pay and must use sick days and vacation to cover the remaining one-third. May we begin requiring the injured employee to use personal time?

—Sick About This, benefits coordinator, mining/oil/gas, Illinois

Read Answer

Stay Connected

Join our community for unlimited access to the latest tips, news and information in the HR world.

HR Jobs

View All Job Listings

Search