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Citigroup gives pay hikes to top execs in stock

Fri Sep 24, 2010 1:17 PM EDT
us-news, business, us, pay, executive, citigroup, executive-pay, ceo-vikram-pandit
Pallavi Gogoi, AP Business Writers
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showing 1 of 2 photos
<p>FILE - In this March 27, 2007  file photo, people pass the Citigroup Center  in New York. Citigroup, still partly owned by the government after a rescue during the financial meltdown, is giving raises to top executives that could amount to millions of dollars and using stock to get around a cap on cash pay at bailed-out banks. (AP Photo/Mark Lennihan, File)</p>

FILE - In this March 27, 2007 file photo, people pass the Citigroup Center in New York. Citigroup, still partly owned by the government after a rescue during the financial meltdown, is giving raises to top executives that could amount to millions of dollars and using stock to get around a cap on cash pay at bailed-out banks. (AP Photo/Mark Lennihan, File)

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NEW YORK — Citigroup, still partly owned by the government after a rescue during the financial meltdown, is giving raises to top executives that could amount to millions of dollars.

CEO Vikram Pandit, who is drawing a salary of $1 for the second year in a row, did not get a raise, but the chairman of the bank hinted it plans a big payout for him next year.

The announcement Friday by Citi, which remains weaker than most of the large American banks two years after the meltdown, raised questions among experts on corporate governance.

By paying the raises in company stock, not cash, Citi has decided to follow previously issued guidelines that limited salaries to $500,000 for the top 25 executives at financial institutions still receiving large amounts of federal help.

"The question is do they deserve higher salaries, and are they evading rules to avoid losing talent?" asked Charles Elson, director of the Weinberg Center for corporate governance at the University of Delaware.

Citi is fighting to keep talented bankers from jumping ship to any of its rivals on Wall Street, all of whom have repaid their federal bailout money and are not under the same kind of compensation restrictions.

Edward Skyler, a spokesman for the bank, said the compensation levels "correspond with similarly situated executives in the industry."

Citi was the hardest-hit U.S. bank during the credit crisis of 2008, and received $45 billion in government bailout money under the Troubled Asset Relief Program, part of which was converted to stock last year. The government is gradually selling its stake and still owns about 17 percent of the bank.

Though Citi has posted profits recently, Citi continues to be weighed down by large amounts of bad loans and investments it made in the run-up to the crisis.

Pandit, who pledged last year to take a $1 salary until the bank returned to profitability, elected to keep that figure for this year, but he seems set for a big payday in 2011. Citi's chairman, Richard Parsons, said in a statement that beginning next year the bank's board "intends to compensate Vikram commensurate with the job of CEO of Citi."

Rolfe Kopelan, a managing partner at search firm Capstone Partnership and an expert on corporate compensation, said $1 still seems appropriate for Pandit.

"It's not ridiculous when you're living on public funds, and when you're one of the major causes of the recession," Kopelan said.

The biggest raise disclosed in Citi's regulatory filing will go to John Havens, head of the bank's institutional clients group. He will get a cash salary of $500,000 this year, the maximum under the cap, and $9 million of salary paid in stock.

That compares with a salary of $975,000 last year for Havens, also in a blend of cash and stock. Including other awards of stock and options last year, Havens' total compensation last year came to $11.2 million.

Citibank did not disclose how much Havens might be awarded in other stock grants, but he could be eligible for a bonus this year of up to 50 percent of his salary, or $4.75 million.

Manuel Medina-Mora, head of consumer banking for the Americas, will also get a cash salary of $500,000 and $7.45 million of salary in stock, making him eligible for a bonus of up to $4 million. Last year, Medina-Mora's base salary was $972,000, and his total compensation including other awards of stock and options was $9.8 million.

Chief Financial Officer John Gerspach's salary will be $500,000 in cash and $4.17 million in stock, making him eligible for a bonus of up to $2.3 million. Last year, his cash and stock salary was $3.3 million, and his total compensation including other stock awards was $5 million.

Under an amendment to the bank bailout law of 2008, Citi is still subject to the compensation restrictions as long as the government remains a shareholder. That means the top 25 executives cannot receive bonuses exceeding 50 percent of their salaries. In deciding to give their salary raises in stock, Citi chose to abide by a previous rule that governed the bailout, under which top executives could not receive more than $500,000 of their salary in cash.

The Associated Press' calculation for executive pay aims to isolate the value the company's board placed on the CEO's total compensation package. The figure includes salary, bonus, incentives, perks and the estimated value of stock options and awards.

The calculations don't include changes in the present value of pension benefits, and they sometimes differ from the totals companies list with federal regulators.

___

AP Business Writer Matthew Craft contributed to this report.

© 2010 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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  • Public Discussion (8)
L083086

Funny. I am an employee of Citi Card for 19 yrs making less than 30K a year. How about giving those of us who have been loyal to the company a raise. 2% in 3 yrs is not much of a raise considering the Health Care and all other "Benifits" have gone up more than 10% per year.

  • 2 votes
Reply#1 - Sat Sep 25, 2010 8:39 AM EDT
daojishiDeleted
Chunky-Monkey

Everyone should max out their Citigroup cards then don't pay. Make them work for their money for a change instead of ripping the consumers off with all these high interest rates they put on people carrying their cards.

If you don't want to do that, then cut up your cards and mail them back to this company and let them know that have no more use for these overpaid, greedy bastards, but I say max them out and spend their money and make them go down by not paying.

Citigroup is a crooked company like most others that hand out credit cards to the people, and then bump up the interest rates just to keep the average person stuck in debt while they live off your dollars.

We don't need them, they just make you think you do!

  • 2 votes
Reply#3 - Sat Sep 25, 2010 10:52 AM EDT
J. W. Welch

With all the alternatives available, anyone stupid enough to have a Citigroup card these days deserves to get ripped off and robbed at every opportunity.

    #3.1 - Sat Sep 25, 2010 1:05 PM EDT
    Repoman-1208817

    It's isn't really fair to blame the banks for the interest rates on credit cards because that is a direct result of federal legislation. The banks told congress most credit card interest rates would go variable and go up if they passed the legislation...congress passed it anyhow.

    As for defaulting on the citi card...why even use it. Just pull your business away and go to a local bank or a credit union. One or two people doin it doesn't hurt but when thousands do it they realize the customers are unhappy.

      #3.2 - Sat Sep 25, 2010 1:10 PM EDT
      Reply
      Honor and Harmony

      coporate america is the united states version of the romanovs. LOL eventually the american people will realize they are being phucked over and a REAL revolution will begin. Funny thing is how did the rightwingers convince some of the american people that blind obedience to corporations was patriotism???

      The corporate backed tea baggers fiasco is going to burn the corporate types who are tugging on their leash but there will be a real movement building in the country as soon as people realize corporations are not people and money should not equate to political power. Until then you all will suffer through this. The trickle down theory hasn't worked yet, why are some still dumb enough to believe in it?

      • 2 votes
      Reply#4 - Sat Sep 25, 2010 12:53 PM EDT
      Freewill

      How about we don't bail them out in the first place? If they know the Government will swoop in to back them up, and continue to give raises to the Executives (ala Chris Dodd's bonuses for AIG, and now this), then how do you expect them to make good decisions with other people's money? We are simply cultivating more dependency and more entitlement mentality; only now we've extended it to highly paid corporate stooges. Our Government was not designed to shield us (or corporations) from failure any more than it was designed to redistribute our wealth.

      If you don't like the FACT that a Democratically controlled Congress is allowing raises for executives of tax-payer backed corporations, then I suggest you write to your Congressmen and let he/she know. And next time, maybe you ought ask them not to bail out a corporation in the first place. America is the Land of Opportunity, NOT The Land of Guaranteed Success.

      • 1 vote
      Reply#5 - Sat Sep 25, 2010 1:21 PM EDT
      sixfeetunderhope

      our economy is based on TBTF lies and the FED .RES.' s printing machine...till the Chinese will realize and come to get the money on their bonds...

        #5.1 - Sat Sep 25, 2010 4:48 PM EDT
        Reply
        sixfeetunderhope

        So the Asian (especially Indian )Ponzi scheme is working...they will bring that economy to its knees ...they deserve(citi crim$nals ceos) a huge raise ...Good job!

          Reply#6 - Sat Sep 25, 2010 4:46 PM EDT
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