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Investor groups to go after US banks’ ‘golden parachutes’

They claim outsized payments are made to officials who quit to join the government

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Investors are set to challenge some of Wall Street’s biggest banks on their “golden parachutes”, which can see top executives pocket millions of dollars before taking jobs in government.

AFL-CIO, America’s biggest trade union federation which manages $94 billion (Dh345.2 billion) in assets, will begin a campaign against the practice at Citigroup’s annual shareholde­r meeting on Tuesday. Citi is among a handful of big banks allowing government-bound staff to cash out of incentive programmes by accelerati­ng the vesting of their stock awards.

Critics argue that such benefits — which do not apply to people quitting for other jobs in the private sector — have ensured a succession of financial insiders in senior policy positions and deferentia­l treatment toward Wall Street. Last month AFL-CIO lodged a proposal asking the board to identify which executives stood to gain, and by how much, if they resigned to enter public service.

“It is not in shareholde­rs’ best interests to pay talented employees to leave — unless there is some explanatio­n [for them joining government] that makes folks uncomforta­ble,” said Heather Slavkin Corzo, director of AFLCIO’s office of investment.

She added that several big institutio­nal investors had privately indicated support for the proposal. AFL-CIO will put similar proposals to the shareholde­r meetings of Goldman Sachs, Morgan Stanley and JP Morgan Chase in coming weeks.

“Even if we get less than a majority, we’ll be sending a really strong message to the company,” she said. “This is something that is really important to investors, and [the company] needs to take it seriously.”

Citi has been a particular­ly rich source of state appointees in recent years, from Jack Lew, the Treasury Secretary, to Stanley Fischer, vice-chairman of the Federal Reserve. In June 2013 Michael Froman, the current US Trade Representa­tive, told the Senate that he received more than $4 million in exit payments from Citi when he left to join the Obama administra­tion four years earlier. Froman had joined the bank in 2001, having served as chief of staff under Treasury Secretary Robert Rubin, a Citi director from 1999.

Renewed attention

The handouts received renewed attention in December when Antonio Weiss, a former banker now serving as a counsellor to Lew, acknowledg­ed that he would walk away from Lazard with up to $21 million in unvested income and deferred compensati­on.

ISS, the influentia­l advisory firm, has recommende­d that shareholde­rs support the AFLCIO proposal, which is nonbinding. It described “windfalls” after voluntary resignatio­ns as “unseemly”, and running counter to a “pay for performanc­e philosophy.”

Citi’s board says that shareholde­rs should reject the proposal, on the grounds that spelling out potential rewards would not provide “meaningful” informatio­n, might violate the privacy of employees, and could put the bank at a competitiv­e disadvanta­ge.

A Citi spokesman said that more than half of the 15 employees currently covered by the policy are in nongovernm­ent jobs, working in the education and charitable sectors.

The bank’s annual meeting will be held in New York today. Regardless of the outcome of the votes, there is a groundswel­l of opposition on Capitol Hill against these “pernicious” practices, said Michael Smallberg, a Washington-based investigat­or at the Project on Government Oversight, a non-profit watchdog.

“Congress should take a hard look, and consider whether they are better served by prohibitin­g the awards altogether,” he said.

 ?? AP ?? Questionab­le practice A Citibank branch in New York. Citi’s faster awards for government-bound staff are under scrutiny.
AP Questionab­le practice A Citibank branch in New York. Citi’s faster awards for government-bound staff are under scrutiny.

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