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It's A Deal

Clawing Back … A Bit Too Late

Wall Street’s newest version of risk management is upon us.

In what’s being dubbed in some circles as a “remarkable” move, Morgan Stanley said Monday it was instituting a bonus policy that will essentially hold back a piece of an employees’ bonus for three years, pending proof the individual didn’t engage in conduct detrimental to the firm. It’s called a “clawback.”

Creative, to be sure, but the remarkable aspect from this vantage point is this: what about the past three years?

I keep reading about how these CEOs of financial-services companies are “forgoing” their bonuses, as if we’re supposed to be impressed by their humility, or inspired by their decisive action. Instead we’re left shaking our heads.

Executive compensation at Wall Street firms is a bizarre topic, even in normal times. There’s a perverse fascination with how much these guys make, and some folks seem genuinely shocked that – surprise! – it’s a lot. But when John Mack tells his troops at Morgan Stanley that he has recommended to his compensation committee that he and a few of his underlings will “forgo” a bonus for 2008, I just don’t know what to think:

'Tough call, sir. Your stock’s only down about 60% this year, and the company you steer only wrote down tens of billions in bad bets ‘detrimental’ to the firm, and you only made 50 bazillion in the past five years. You sure you want to be so hard on yourself?’

We can all hope that “compensation committees” around the financial-services globe don’t have to be told by their CEOs that maybe, just maybe, they didn’t earn the extra pay this year. After all, aren’t bonuses doled out for good work? The argument you typically hear – with some effect – is that the bonus was for the previous year’s work. Well, there’s surely not much to merit a performance bonus this year, unless you think it’s a right and not a privilege that is to be earned.

No one here begrudges anyone what they’ve earned or what they’re entitled to, and most of us would prefer that Street execs were still pulling in ungodly bonuses; at least we’d know things were flush. But don’t try to come off as if you’re doing us favor by not taking a bonus when in fact you’re lucky to still have your job.

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3 Comments

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Posted by: lymanknap l | August 5, 2010 8:45 PM


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Posted by: folcklord f | July 19, 2010 9:04 AM


You are correct to say this is always a bizarre topic. The idea of flogging one's self for bad performance means stooping to first class on a commercial jet or paying out of pocket for anything.

Posted by: James E | January 8, 2009 10:47 AM

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Tom Granahan

Tom Granahan is the Editor of IDD. He has more than 15 years of financial-journalism experience, having written about the stock market for Dow Jones Newswires and The Wall Street Journal for several years. He also supervised the Newswires' U.S. bureaus, and was the founding editor of Dow Jones Market Talk, which some consider to be one of the earliest forms of financial-news blogging. He graduated with a BA in journalism from Temple University in his hometown of Philadelphia.