'It doesn't look good': Lawmakers grill bank CEOs on lavish pay

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The seven big bank CEOs who testified on Capitol Hill Wednesday morning are facing pressure over their lavish compensation.

In an exchange between New York Democrat Nydia Velázquez and Citigroup CEO Michael Corbat, Velázquez asked Corbat to defend the fact that his $24.2 million yearly salary for 2018 was 486 times his own company’s median worker salary at $49,466.

“I don’t think that’s fair for me to judge,” Corbat said. “I would say that I completely acknowledge that I’m very fortunate.”

‘She may have my job one day’

Compensation has been one talking point on a list of many topics covered in the hearing, which marks the first time that the large bank CEOs (representing JPMorgan Chase, Citigroup, Bank of America, Goldman Sachs, Morgan Stanley, State Street, and Bank of New York Mellon) have simultaneously addressed Congress since the financial crisis.

In a separate exchange, California Democrat Katie Porter questioned JPMorgan Chase CEO Jamie Dimon about whether a bank teller at his company gets paid a living wage.

Dimon said lower paying entry-level jobs provide the promise of elevating up through the company.

“She may have my job one day,” Dimon said.

The eight largest U.S. banks all have a higher pay gap (between CEO and the company's median employee) than the average U.S. company. (Credit: David Foster / Yahoo Finance)
The eight largest U.S. banks all have a higher pay gap (between CEO and the company's median employee) than the average U.S. company. (Credit: David Foster / Yahoo Finance)

Among the large banks, Citigroup has the highest CEO pay ratio when measuring the top executive’s pay to the median employee’s salary. JPMorgan Chase comes in second place with a pay ratio of 381:1. Bank of New York Mellon and Goldman Sachs have a higher salary levels for the median employee because they don’t employ the lower wage bank tellers that the more consumer-facing banks do.

In pure dollar amounts, Corbat does not make the most. Dimon made the most in 2018, netting $30 million, mostly in the form of shares.

According to proxy statements since 2006, the CEOs from the four largest U.S. banks — JPMorgan Chase, Citigroup, Bank of America, and Wells Fargo — have had their compensation steadily rise over the post-crisis period. Those figures include bonuses, stock awards (valued at the date granted), change in pension values, and other forms of compensation.

The four largest U.S. banks have been increasing the levels of compensation for their CEOs, close to pre-crisis levels. (Credit: David Foster / Yahoo Finance)
The four largest U.S. banks have been increasing the levels of compensation for their CEOs, close to pre-crisis levels. (Credit: David Foster / Yahoo Finance)

Pay levels dipped during the crisis as companies pared back salaries to avoid the optics of inappropriate executive pay. They also dipped because the government required banks that took bailout money to impose temporary salary caps on its executives.

The steady climb up in bank CEO pay since the crisis has been the result of the banks’ improving performance, says Laura Hay, head of the banking industry team at executive pay consultancy Pearl Meyer. Hay says that in addition to a favorable U.S. economy that continues to extend its recovery, banks are benefiting from the regulatory pendulum swinging toward reduced red tape on the industry. Since the Trump administration took office, lawmakers — including some moderate Democrats — have supported efforts to pare back some of the post-crisis Dodd-Frank regulations that forced banks to beef up regulatory capital.