Toronto Star

Smallest bonus increase for bankers in six years

Six biggest banks raised variable compensati­on by 2 per cent

- DOUG ALEXANDER BLOOMBERG

Canada’s six biggest banks set aside 2 per cent more for bonuses this year than last, the smallest increase since 2010, as Royal Bank of Canada and National Bank of Canada pared performanc­ebased pay even as the industry had one of its best years for deal-making.

The banks earmarked about $12.8 billion for variable compensati­on in the fiscal year ended Oct. 31, compared with $12.5 billion in 2015, according to financial disclosure­s. That’s the smallest bump in six years, when payouts rose 1.1 per cent. The banks boosted bonus pools 11.5 per cent in 2014 and 4.4 per cent in 2015.

“The Grinch won’t steal Christmas, but the holiday feast is going to be smaller than usual,” said Bill Vlaad, president of Vlaad & Co., which monitors compensati­on trends.

Bank of Montreal and Bank of Nova Scotia had the biggest jump in performanc­e-based pay, while Royal Bank and National Bank set aside less, according to disclosure­s.

Variable compensati­on reflects the amount reserved, not paid out, and doesn’t include base salaries or other compensati­on. The compensati­on is typically awarded this month.

Capital markets The slowdown in payouts comes despite Canada having one of its best years for deal-making, fuelled by energy acquisitio­ns and stock sales. Announced takeovers involving a Canadian company rose 13 per cent to $314.8 billion for fiscal 2016, the highest amount in nine years, while domestic equity financing increased 17 per cent to $46.9 billion, the most since 2009, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. Bond trading surged across banks this year, countering a slowdown in stocks trading.

The country’s six biggest banks collective­ly reported a record $4.66 billion in underwriti­ng and advisory fees, up 6.5 per cent from fiscal 2015, according to disclosure­s.

“Those in M&A and fixed income are going to have good years,” Vlaad said. “Equity and resource bankers are going to be facing the biggest pinch.”

Royal Bank, Canada’s largest lender by assets, set aside $4.4 billion for variable compensati­on, 2.8 per cent less than a year ago. Bonuses at the lender rose 3.3 per cent in 2015.

RBC, TD “The variable compensati­on decline is indicative of the fact that the pools are slightly down,” Royal Bank chief administra­tive officer Janice Fukakusa said. “If you look at areas like in capital markets, while we had solid performanc­e year over year the earnings were actually flat to down.”

Royal Bank also adopted new accounting methods for deferred compensati­on to align itself with industry standards, which affected bonuses. The Toronto-based firm paid out 34.9 per cent of its capital markets revenue to salaries, benefits and variable compensati­on, down from 37.2 per cent last year, Fukakusa said in a Nov. 30 earnings call.

Toronto-Dominion Bank, the second-largest lender, set aside $2.17 billion, a 5.5-per-cent increase. That compares with a 6.7-per-cent increase in 2015.

“That is all subject to how the bank performs from year to year,” CFO Riaz Ahmed said in a phone interview. “If you look at our earnings performanc­e, you’d see that it was very good this year.”

Scotiabank, BMO Bank of Nova Scotia, the third-largest lender, said performanc­e-based compensati­on rose 7 per cent to $1.54 billion from 2015, reversing last year’s 2.4-per-cent cut. It’s the biggest increase in at least three years.

“Scotiabank’s incentive compensati­on programs are based on the premise of ‘pay for performanc­e,’ ” Rick Roth, a company spokesman, said in an emailed statement. “Our business performanc­e in 2016 was generally stronger relative to the various financial and non-financial targets upon which our incentive pools are based.”

Bank of Montreal, the fourth-largest lender, lifted its performanc­ebased compensati­on 8.4 per cent to $2.28 billion, marking the biggest increase among big banks for the year. The jump compared with an 8-per-cent increase in 2015.

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