Goldman Sachs and the $100 million question 

 

Chris Despopoulos, 54, and his wife Leslie, 51, protest outside Goldman Sachs 
headquarters in New York after the Wall Street bank reports record profits and 
bumper bonuses for staff

 

Helen Power in Davos 

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Goldman Sachs, the world’s richest investment bank, is facing a potential 
political storm over how much it pays its chief executive, Lloyd Blankfein. 

Bankers in Davos for the World Economic Forum (WEF) told The Times they 
understood that Mr Blankfein and other top Goldman bankers outside Britain were 
set to receive some of the bank’s biggest-ever payouts, in defiance of 
President Obama’s attempt to shame banks into cutting bonuses. “This is Lloyd 
thumbing his nose at Obama,” said a banker at one of Goldman’s rivals. 

Mr Blankfein took home his biggest bonus so far in 2007, when he was paid $67.9 
million. Goldman’s profits last year were $1.8 billion higher than in 2007. 
This leaves the bank with a justification to pay him even more although payouts 
will be made in shares rather than cash to make them more politically 
palatable. Some rival bankers claim Mr Blankfein could receive up to $100 
million, though even a much lower figure could prove politically explosive. 

Lucas van Praag, Goldman’s spokesman, said:”Although the Board has yet to 
detemine executive compensation, given everything we have said and done on the 
subject, the idea that the directors would award Lloyd Blankfein $100 million, 
or anything close to it, beggars belief.” 

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*       GRAPHIC: average pay and bonuses 
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Goldman Sachs’ London-based partners have agreed to limit their pay for last 
year to £1 million each in response to the British Government’s bonus tax. 

Last week, the US President described bonuses paid out by some banks as “the 
height of irresponsibility” and “shameful”. 

“The American people understand that we have a big hole to dig ourselves out 
of, but they do not like the idea that people are digging a bigger hole, even 
as they are being asked to fill it up,” he said last week. 

Goldman will reveal the pay of its top five earners in a filing with America’s 
banking regulator the Securities and Exchange Commission by the end of next 
month. 

The bank — sometimes referred to as a vampire squid — is disliked and envied by 
rivals in equal measure. It paid back the billions of dollars it borrowed from 
the Government under America’s state-funded financial assistance programme 
early, in part because it wanted to avoid political interference. 

A bumper payout for Mr Blankfein would come after discussions by Goldman’s 
rivals in Europe to limit executive pay in order to appease politicians and the 
public failed last week. Joseph Ackermann, the chairman of Deutsche Bank, 
floated the idea of a remuneration cap at a private meeting of top bankers in 
Davos on Thursday, but failed to gain sufficient support. Last night it 
appeared that Deutsche had abandoned the plan and decided to pay some of its 
own top executives bonuses of millions of pounds. 

The possibility of a bonus cap was discussed at a recent meeting between 
Alistair Darling, the Chancellor, and top executives from Morgan Stanley, 
JPMorgan, Standard Chartered, Citigroup and Barclays Capital. A banking source 
said it quickly became apparent at that meeting that a bank-led pay cap would 
be unenforceable because rival bankers would not stick to any agreement. “These 
guys have been rivals for years and they just don’t trust each other to do it,” 
said one source who was at the meeting. 

Bankers and politicians, including Mr Darling, and US regulators also met on 
the sidelines of the Davos conference to discuss a global response to a bank 
tax proposed by Mr Obama and to regulatory issues such as plans to make sure 
banks have more capital, pay and bonuses. 

Goldman originally declined to comment for this article which has been edited 
after it issued a statement. 

• The singer Billy Bragg has reiterated calls for bonuses at RBS to be capped 
as he prepared to withhold his taxes in protest. The entertainer was supposed 
to pay his tax by midnight last night. He told crowds at Speaker’s Corner in 
Hyde Park: “Millions are already facing stark choices: are they willing to work 
longer hours for less money, or would they rather be unemployed? I don’t see 
why the bankers at RBS shouldn’t be asked the same.” 

 

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