精品国产_亚洲人成在线高清,国产精品成人久久久久,国语自产偷拍精品视频偷拍

立即打開
Big bonuses are back. Backlash isn't.

Big bonuses are back. Backlash isn't.

Colin Barr 2010年04月26日

????Whatever happened to bonus rage?

????This time last year, there was an uproar over the bonuses being paid at bailed-out AIG (AIG, Fortune 500), and big pay packages were turning into a public relations fiasco for taxpayer-supported banks such as Goldman Sachs (GS, Fortune 500).

????Yet few batted an eye this week when Wall Street revealed its latest round of pay excess. Giant Wall Street banks set aside $39.2 billion to pay their workers in the first quarter.

????That's up 9% from a year ago, driven in part by a return to bubble-era profit levels.

????The gains came even as the staff at the big six banks -- Citigroup, Bank of America (BAC, Fortune 500), Wells Fargo, JPMorgan Chase (JPM, Fortune 500), Morgan Stanley and Goldman -- shrank by 2%.

????While both Goldman and Morgan Stanley are devoting a smaller share of revenue to compensation, both also are on track to exceed last year's pay levels.

????Goldman, which set aside $5.5 billion in the first quarter to pay its 33,100 employees. That means the firm has accrued $166,163 for each worker for just one quarter's work.

????Pay more than doubled to $4.4 billion at Morgan Stanley, thanks to its acquisition of Citigroup's (C, Fortune 500) Smith Barney wealth management business. Average quarterly pay there was $70,740 per worker.

????But outlandish as Wall Street bonuses may be, pay figures generally have received little notice. Investors have been fixated instead on the Securities and Exchange Commission's fraud case against Goldman, which was announced Friday.

????Meanwhile, the Obama administration is trying to buck up support for an overhaul of financial regulation. The Democrats have so far had no success winning Republican support for all of their financial reform proposals. They need at least one Republican vote to avoid a filibuster in the Senate.

????More partisan clashes look inevitable. Both Republican SEC commissioners reportedly voted against bringing the Goldman case, for instance, and Rep. Darrell Issa, (R-Calif.) this week demanded the SEC reveal any case-related dealings with Democrats in the administration or Congress.

Attention shifts from bonuses to lobbying efforts

????Accordingly, much interest has turned from how big executives' wallets are to how much money the banks are spending in Washington to oppose the reformers.

????The big six banks spent $6.6 million lobbying the federal government in the first quarter, according to disclosure forms filed this week. That's up 24% from a year ago.

  • 熱讀文章
  • 熱門視頻
活動
掃碼打開財富Plus App

            主站蜘蛛池模板: 双流县| 衡南县| 丘北县| 巴青县| 黔西县| 久治县| 凤凰县| 延津县| 三明市| 株洲市| 土默特左旗| 普安县| 沁源县| 邳州市| 汉寿县| 威宁| 临沭县| 涪陵区| 巴林右旗| 平原县| 福海县| 赤城县| 宁津县| 富平县| 鹤庆县| 磐石市| 怀仁县| 深水埗区| 五莲县| 金门县| 兴和县| 宁远县| 洞头县| 佛山市| 庆城县| 澄江县| 阳城县| 隆安县| 松滋市| 子长县| 肃南|