National Post

TD’S Masrani takes pay cut on anti-money-laundering probe

Reduction of $1M in direct compensati­on

- Christine Dobby

Toronto-dominion Bank chief executive Bharat Masrani took a pay cut last year over the lender’s scuttled acquisitio­n of First Horizon Corp. and the U.S. probe it faces over anti-money-laundering controls.

“In acknowledg­ment of the terminatio­n of the First Horizon transactio­n and certain U.S. regulatory issues, the CEO recommende­d, and the board approved” the $1-million reduction in his direct compensati­on for fiscal 2023, the Canadian bank said in its annual proxy circular filed Tuesday.

He received total compensati­on of $13.4 million last year, down from $15.1 million in 2022.

TD was poised to expand its U.S. footprint with a $13.4-billion deal to buy Memphis-based First Horizon, but scrapped the transactio­n in May 2023. The timing of closing had been thrown into doubt as it faced inquiries from U.S. regulators and law enforcemen­t into its handling of suspicious customer transactio­ns.

Analysts estimate the probe, which remains unresolved, could lead to a fine of between US$500 million and US$1 billion, and TD has already said it is spending hundreds of millions of dollars to improve its risk and control infrastruc­ture.

“Notwithsta­nding the progress we have made in our U.S. business, it was disappoint­ing that some shortcomin­gs in our anti-money-laundering control environmen­t were identified during the year, which we are working hard to address, and I am confident that in time we will,” Masrani said in a letter to shareholde­rs.

The “uncertaint­y of the approval timeline” led the Toronto-based bank and First Horizon to mutually agree to call off the deal last year, he said, adding that while “this was a difficult decision — and one not taken lightly — it was the right one for the bank under the circumstan­ces.”

Masrani’s target for salary, bonus and share- and option-based awards had been $15 million. In addition to the $1-million reduction, his direct compensati­on was also lowered by the bank’s failure to hit its earnings target for the year.

Still, “the board believes that the CEO demonstrat­ed excellent personal leadership and performanc­e through a challengin­g year,” Toronto-dominion said in the proxy.

The CEOS at three of Canada’s other largest banks also took home less than their target pay last year as their earnings fell short of expectatio­ns amid a difficult operating environmen­t. Among the top executives at Royal Bank of Canada, Bank of Nova Scotia, Bank of Montreal and Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce, only Royal Bank’s Dave Mckay was awarded more than his target for direct compensati­on in fiscal 2023.

 ?? LAURA PEDERSEN / FINANCIAL POST FILES ?? TD Bank chief executive Bharat Masrani received total compensati­on of $13.4 million last year, down from
$15.1 million in 2022, as a U.S. investigat­ion into the bank’s anti-money-laundering controls took a toll.
LAURA PEDERSEN / FINANCIAL POST FILES TD Bank chief executive Bharat Masrani received total compensati­on of $13.4 million last year, down from $15.1 million in 2022, as a U.S. investigat­ion into the bank’s anti-money-laundering controls took a toll.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada