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EDITOR’S TAKE: Myners is wrong to set the UK apart on bonus restrictions
4 November 2009By Sarah Butcher
COMMENTS
all of the points are correct, but as we have a group of politicians still covered in thier own muck from the expenses scandal who also possess the foresight of a mole they will drive the city into ruin... Read all comments »Lord Myners appears to be making a bad situation worse. Fresh from last week’s news that the UK has slipped to third place behind New York and Singapore as the place where investors would prefer to do business, and following closely on from concerns that a two tier pay structure is emerging in which New York-based bankers will receive larger bonuses over a shorter space of time than their counterparts in the City, this doesn’t seem a propitious moment to boast that, the UK is taking a tougher line on banking compensation than, “anywhere [else] in the world.”
Specifically, Myners said yesterday:
"We are not only at the cutting edge of the G20 and the EU but are setting higher standards and are continuing to bear down on dangerous and unjustifiable elements of the bonus structure."
UKFI has banned cash bonuses for anyone earning above £39k at RBS and Lloyds. This sounds unduly draconian: Kenneth Feinberg, the US pay czar has imposed what appear to be more limited restrictions in the US, stating that salaries must be limited to £300k for only the top 25 senior executives at the biggest recipients of TARP money. Earlier, the US government said bonuses for the top 25 must be restricted to 33%% of salaries, payable entirely in stock.
Naturally, there are ways to evade the restrictions in the UK: RBS could always increase salaries substantially; or – as RBS staff appear to be anticipating, it could pay bonuses in notes which are not technically cash, but which are immediately convertible into cash.
However, in global terms, the compensation regulation game is all about perception. In the US, Timothy Geithner has been careful not to depart from globally agreed norms; Geithner is aware that to do so could damage the position of Wall Street globally.
Therefore, while the UK has gone so far as to oblige all banks in the City to sign up to rules agreeing to postpone 40-60% of bonuses over three years (and is rumoured to coerced some international houses into cooperating with the threat of bad publicity), the US has restricted itself to comparatively feeble exhortations for banks to avoid pay structures that promote excessive risk taking.
Myners is being driven by moral and political considerations. RBS has eclipsed Citigroup as the biggest banking bailout in the world. He is right to claim that the bank was monumentally badly managed, and it is right that anyone responsible for the decisions that led to this situation deserves little or nothing.
However, Myners is wrong to highlight the exceptionally draconian treatment being meted out to bankers in the City. In the perceptions game, this is an own goal. London is reliant on an international workforce – the City of London estimates that 40% of financial services staff are overseas nationals. If the UK government is perceived to be more ferocious than its global peers, those people will do their best to go somewhere more accommodating instead.
COMMENTS
not surprised., HR & Recruitment, Wed 04 Nov 09
all of the points are correct, but as we have a group of politicians still covered in thier own muck from the expenses scandal who also possess the foresight of a mole they will drive the city into ruin to gain the smallest bit of cheap favour from sun reading idiots and gauridan reading socialists.
And the government can take credit for destroying the only competitive global industry the UK has to support its economy and then everyone can relax and watch slide down every index related to wealth and standard of living till we nestle closely alongside chad and angola.
Good times!
off to Hong Kong for me.
jayD, Debt / Fixed Income, Wed 04 Nov 09
There is still huge and I mean HUGE anger across the country against rich, uncaring, unrepentant bankers who seem to be driven only by short term greed. The majority of Londoners on the other hand, barely seem to be able to afford living here. Myners is right. He knows good politics and his move is good politics.
Add your comment »Curzon, Compliance / Legal, Wed 04 Nov 09
UKFI might be short-sightedly attempting to gain moral ground over US Kenneth Feinberg, leading to fund managers leaving for US, Switzerland etc. Is Paul Myners pulling up the drawbridge a little late ? I recall he was CEO of Gartmore during the 1980s, and when RBS took over NatWest he also became Wealth Management Director in charge of Gartmore, Coutts, NatWest Investments and NatWest Markets. With bonuses it was calculated he grossed many millions over 10 years, is it right that he now "calls time" on those still employed within the City ?
Add your comment »jase, Derivatives, Wed 04 Nov 09
agree with jayD. Myners is no fool and if labour want to get reelected next year he has to be seen to do the right thing.
Add your comment »An Honest But Greedy Banker, Capital Markets, Wed 04 Nov 09
In that case, if Paul Myners would donate a fraction of his wealth he made in those times, I would donate the comparable fraction of mine. Ha ha, I think I will end up donating zilch if I am right about the chap.
Add your comment »realist, Private Equity / Venture Capital, Thu 05 Nov 09
Higher taxes + decreased compensation = relocation of major financial centre
Add your comment »

