Cuomo Starts The Bonus Charade: New York AG Wants Details From 8 Bailed-Out Banks
Jan 11, 2010 at 3:45 PM
DailyBail in Bank Bailouts, TARP, andrew cuomo, bailout, bank bonus, bank bonus, banks, bonus, tarp, wall street, wall street

Expect to see a lot more of this political grandstanding in the next few weeks as Goldman Sachs (and many, many others) pay out as much as $50 billion in bonuses for 2009.

Source: AP

NEW YORK — New York Attorney General Andrew Cuomo on Monday pressed the nation's eight biggest banks to reveal how much they plan to pay out in employee bonuses for 2009.

Cuomo told reporters that he also wants to know how the size of the banks' bonus pool would have been affected if the banks hadn't received a taxpayer rescue at the height of the financial crisis in late 2008.

The fact-finding effort comes as Wall Street banks this month prepare to hand out near-record compensation for last year's performance. Several banks earned huge profits in 2009, aided by billions in government bailout funds and a rebounding stock market.

"The banks made a lot of money, in some case only because taxpayers gave them a lot of money," Cuomo said.

Cuomo said he was only asking for information and didn't threaten legal action against the eight banks – Bank of America, Bank of New York Mellon, Citigroup, Goldman Sachs, JPMorgan Chase, Morgan Stanley, State Street and Wells Fargo.

Cuomo asked the banks to provide bonus information by Feb. 8 in letters sent Monday. He didn't say what actions he would take if the banks don't comply.

The nation's six biggest banks set aside $112 billion for compensation in the first nine months of 2009, according to the New York State Comptroller's Office. At that rate, the banks' total 2009 compensation pool could top $150 billion, slightly less than the record $164 billion they paid out in 2007 before the financial crisis upended the banking industry.

Cuomo said he wants to ensure that banks are compensating employees in a way that doesn't encourage excessive risk-taking or endanger taxpayers.

"Any attempts to better tie compensation to long-term sustainable growth is a good thing in our opinion, as opposed to incentives that promote short-term profits," Cuomo said.

Major banks are expected to disclose their 2009 compensation costs in quarterly earnings reports due in the next two weeks, starting Friday with JPMorgan Chase.

 

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