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Are bonuses to blame (for everything)?

29 January 2008

Sarah Butcher

Are revelations that SocGen’s bête noire had his eye on a €300k payout yet more proof that bonuses are the root of all evil?

Mesdames et Messieurs, for those who side with Nicolas Sarkozy in calling for more responsibility “in a system of high rewards...”, and for those holed up in La Défense, the case against bonuses is as follows:

1. Folie. Bonus-lust is liable to drive impressionable young (or old) traders to do foolish things sans regard for the potential downside (see point 2). The case in point involves Jérôme Kerviel, who it now transpires may have been inspired to drive France’s finest close to ruin by the prospect of tripling his bonus.

2. Risk. Bonuses are paid on the basis of short-term profits and don’t accurately reflect long-term risks. Voiced by everyone from Martin Wolf in the Financial Times to derivatives trader turned author Nassim Taleb on Bloomberg today, the argument goes that bonuses paid on the profits from CDOs, in particular, didn’t reflect the fact that the market would value them at close to zilch when it came to selling them on.

3. Inflexibility. More flexible than Darcey Bussell on the way up, bonuses have proven strangely sclerotic on the way down. Banks may have written off $104bn (according to Financial News), but Bloomberg says that didn’t stop them rising to a total of $39bn last year. “We were worried that if we didn’t pay, Goldman would pick off our best people,” confesses one comp and benefits professional.

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However, while bonuses may appear odieux, it’s not immediately clear what might replace them. “There’s no perfect solution to this problem,” confesses Ian Cooper, a professor of finance at the London Business School. “You need to balance short and long term considerations.”

What about making everyone a partenaire in the business? “The only people who were completely tied into partnerships were the partners and they had unlimited liability, which in today’s environment wouldn’t be a comfortable thing,” says an MD at one European bank.

Which leaves…aligning recipients with shareholders by paying a higher proportion of bonuses in restricted stock, et surprise surprise, banks have alighted on this already.

According to Financial News, UBS is paying anything above $750k in stock, Citigroup is now paying 20% of MD bonuses in stock, JPMorgan is paying 40% of bonuses worth $1.5m in stock, and Merrill will be paying 40% in stock rather than cash.

The comp and bens insider says UBS is to blame: “UBS announced they were paying a higher proportion of stock and suddenly the floodgates broke – all other banks were forced to do the same thing for the sake of their shareholders.”

A lot of the new stock is restricted for only 12-18 months instead of the standard three years. That may change: “Paying stock is a cheap option for banks because it can be expensed over the vesting period. If profitability falls again this year, the vesting period will need to be lengthened,” says Mr Comp and Bens.

Calls to send bonuses to the guillotine may therefore be unnecessary: they are already en route.

Comments (22)

Considering the fact that a lot of these banks are going to end up owned by the government (either ours or more likely a combination of China and Middle Eastern countries) over the next few years, then these people should really be paid the same as civil servants. How's £25k grab ya?

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Comments (22)

  • I call to stop these bonus' and even worse are the golden handshakes the bankers get...even after leaving the bank in shambles...the banks say the payoffs hardly influence the shareholders, but if you add them all up, bet you´ll get some interesting numbers. Bankers and their like are cattle rustlers with a licence.

    Anonymous 29 Jan 2008

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  • I understand the humorous approach in the use of French in the article, but please have it proofread. Some of it is truly shocking.

    Linguist 29 Jan 2008

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  • Je pense que le French dans l'article is meant to be "une joke"

    Reponse 29 Jan 2008

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  • C'est ne pas funny!

    Jerome err... Smith 29 Jan 2008

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  • I constantly hear stupid comments from people about bonuses probably from those who arent actually in the business and therefore do not have a clue.  I dont mind the concept of not paying bonuses but then people must realise that the base salary must change as well if bonuses are not paid.

    Let me give you an example.  An MD will usually have a base of £100-150K and can earn bonuses ranging from £500K to many millions.  If people want to remove the bonus structure in banking then they must realise that the base for an MD should move up to around £800K+ with a bonus potential of a lesser amount than before.  You cant expect the poor base to remain if you strip out the bonus because no one is going to do the job.  You will see this in non finance c corporations where executives are often paid a base salary of many millions with a smaller bonus.

    What I am basically pointing out is that the bonus is not actually a bonus.  It is a part of the true compensation that is held back.  Although it is performance related you no one can expect an MD to work for a salary of £100-£150K just like you wouldnt expect David Beckham to play for a team for £50K a week.

    Trader 29 Jan 2008

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  • i agree - let's remove the main thing that keeps us all working at banks

    anon 29 Jan 2008

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  • That's right...not sure why these people expect to be paid more than the harder working people doing 19-20 hours shifts at a Tesco..at the end they are just milking the flow. Time to pack to India and China and employ people who can do these jobs with even higher skill for total packages less than the base only..Why are banks still paying that much?? I could understand when they were partnerships but hey, they're the ones who got themselves in this mess where there are a few people who can do a single simple thing and hence expect to be worth a penny....time to recruit a sea of them from different countries for the price of one may be?

    The 29 Jan 2008

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  • I agree with trader debt that the bonus is in fact part of the  salary. I think that every trader should be paid a rather low fix just as Steve Jobs ($30000 seems enough) and a very high bonus entirely in shares of which they could sell according to a schedule. That schedule would be determined by the maturities & liquidity of the products in open positions at year end. Of course if the P&L is less than    the risk free interest of the capital needed for the activity the bonus is 0 unless the management considers the person contributed somehow and is willing to share some of the profits.

    Risk Equities 30 Jan 2008

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  • I agree with 'Trader, Debt/Fixed Income'.  Our industry is similar to that of sports.  It is a tough career with a much shorter average life than the other industries.  Plus the reward system is set up in such a way that bonus is the utter most important part of our total package.  If bonus will indeed by slashed, then we shall either all drop out f this industry or largely increase our base salaries to reflect the values we put into the financial system.  Yes, we have had subprime, CDOs & trading fraud but not everyone in this industry is doing such things.  Only a small % of the people who were doing the damages and from that not all of us shall get to blame.  Fair?

    Big Swinger 30 Jan 2008

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  • I do feel sorry for the poor MD making only GBP150k per year on the base ... Is there a charity they can turn to?

    Response - John Smith 30 Jan 2008

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