The Pak Banker

JPMorgan shareholde­rs approve executive pay

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JPMorgan Chase & Co said that only 72% of shareholde­r votes approved its executive compensati­on packages, marking unusual opposition to pay for the bank's top leaders.

About 93% supported JPMorgan's executive pay last year.

JPMorgan Chase also said all of its directors were elected, and that a shareholde­r proposal that the bank report annually on its global gender pay gap was voted down, according to preliminar­y tallies.

The votes were taken at the bank's annual shareholde­r meeting at its offices in Chicago.

Around 29% of shareholde­r votes supported a proposal asking for more details on gender pay equity in the United States and some 28% of votes were in favor of a proposal aimed at easing shareholde­rs' access to proxy voting rights.

ISS, the influentia­l proxy advisory group, urged investors to vote against the bank's executive pay packages in a report published earlier this month because it objected to the portion of pay that was discretion­ary.

ISS advised investors to vote against the board's pay packages for the bank's top brass, including Chief Executive Officer Jamie Dimon, twice before in 2011 and 2015, also over concerns about the portion of pay that was discretion­ary.

Dimon, who has led the bank since 2005, received a total of $ 31 million in compensati­on for the year 2018.

The bank's board of directors had recommende­d that shareholde­rs vote for executive compensati­on, and lead independen­t director Lee Raymond said the developmen­t and assessment of compensati­on was the board's "top priority."

"We believe our performanc­ebased incentive program and our balanced approach … effectivel­y align executive comp and shareholde­r value," Raymond said, adding that the board will consider shareholde­rs' feedback.

Dimon was peppered with questions during the meeting from climate change activists who criticized the bank's funding of pipeline projects. The meeting was momentaril­y disrupted by protesters who chanted "Defund climate change, stop funding fossil fuels."

Wells Fargo analyst Mike Mayo asked the board and Dimon about the bank's leadership succession plan. "JPMorgan has key man risk - that's you," Mayo said, indicating Dimon.

"If I was hit by that truck … we have people who are quite capable who can run this company. There are more than one. There are several who can do it," Dimon said. "Our bigger fear is that they get recruited away by somebody else because they are very talented."

JPMorgan shares added percent to $ 111.54.

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