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Goldman Sachs Bonuses: CEO Lloyd Blankfein Gets $9 Million Stock Bonus For 2009

STEVENSON JACOBS   02/ 5/10 06:48 PM ET   AP

NEW YORK — Goldman Sachs Group Inc. CEO Lloyd Blankfein is getting a $9 million stock bonus for 2009, a modest payday by Wall Street standards that appears aimed at quelling criticism of the bank's compensation practices.

Blankfein will receive more than 58,000 shares of restricted stock that can't be cashed in for five years, the bank said in a securities filing Friday. Blankfein will receive no cash as part of his bonus.

Blankfein's bonus was less than some had expected. But it reflects Wall Street's changing pay culture. Several banks are paying their CEO restricted stock and adopting clawback provisions in response to a furor over outsized paydays at financial institutions that helped push the economy into a recession and then later took billions in federal bailouts.

Still, Blankfein led Goldman to a stellar 2009 performance, and some had predicted his bonus would range between $15-$20 million.

"It was certainly less than expected," said Mark Borges, a principal with Compensia Inc., a Northern California compensation consulting firm. "While the fact that he's making this much won't sit well with people out of work, it seems Goldman is being sensitive to the political considerations and optics of this amount."

"It's almost as if he's taking a bullet for everyone else," Borges added.

Earlier Friday, JPMorgan Chase & Co. said CEO Jamie Dimon received a $16 million stock bonus, making him the highest paid CEO among the nation's largest banks that have announced their pay plans.

Morgan Stanley CEO James P. Gorman received a stock bonus valued at $8.1 million for 2009. Gorman was co-president of the bank for that period. He replaced John Mack as CEO last month. Mack, who remains chairman, received no bonus for 2009 or the previous two years.

Goldman and JPMorgan have emerged from the financial crisis as two of the nation's strongest banks, earning billions in profits while rivals including Citigroup Inc. and Bank of America Corp. have suffered losses. Still, neither JPMorgan nor Goldman have escaped scrutiny over employee pay packages.

Under Blankfein's leadership, Goldman earned a record $4.79 billion profit in the last three months of 2009. But Goldman bolstered its fourth-quarter profits by slashing the size of its bonus pool in a move aimed at quashing criticism of outsized paydays at elite New York investment banks.

Blankfein received compensation valued at $42.9 million during fiscal 2008, virtually all of it coming from stock and options awarded for his previous year's performance.

He got no performance-based pay for his work in fiscal 2008, when Goldman reported its first quarterly loss since becoming a public company and its stock fell more than 60 percent amid the deepening credit crisis.

Aside from not being able to sell the stock for five years, Goldman's top 30 executives' stock awards could be taken back by the bank in cases where the employees took too large a risk or failed to raise concerns about risk in the company.

Under JPMorgan's new pay structure, Dimon will be restricted from selling 75 percent of his total accumulated JPMorgan stock until he leaves the company, spokesman Joe Evangelisti said. In addition, JPMorgan's board can recoup the entire 2009 stock bonus under any circumstances, Evangelisti said.

JPMorgan received $25 billion in bailout money in the fall of 2008 at the peak of the credit crisis. It paid back that money in the middle of 2009.

Dimon received no bonus for 2008. He received a $27.8 million bonus for 2007, just before the financial crisis began to accelerate. Since then, JPMorgan has solidified its status as one of the nation's top banks. Dimon led the bank to four profitable quarters in 2009, including a $3.28 billion profit in the final three months of the year.

Even as furor over bank bonuses has grown, JPMorgan increased pay for its workers in 2009. The average pay per employee rose to $121,124 in 2009 from $101,110 a year earlier. The average pay in the investment banking division was about $380,000.

Dimon's and Blankfein's stock compensation was disclosed in a securities filing called a Form 4. While those stock-based awards were to reward the CEOs for their work in 2009, those awards will not be included in the calculation of total compensation that the companies will present in their annual proxy statements due out later this year. The pay amounts included in the proxies will only reflect what was granted and paid in the fiscal year 2009.

The stock awards Dimon and Blankfein just received will be included in calculations of their total pay for 2010.

___

AP Business Writer Rachel Beck contributed to this report from New York.

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NEW YORK — Goldman Sachs Group Inc. CEO Lloyd Blankfein is getting a $9 million stock bonus for 2009, a modest payday by Wall Street standards that appears aimed at quelling criticism of the ban...
NEW YORK — Goldman Sachs Group Inc. CEO Lloyd Blankfein is getting a $9 million stock bonus for 2009, a modest payday by Wall Street standards that appears aimed at quelling criticism of the ban...
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02:39 PM on 02/10/2010
If ol' Lloyd really wants to take a bullet......
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
AtheistUS
11:20 PM on 02/06/2010
Lots of $$$.

So, let see, for comparison, what actually mankind gives ""to those who, during the preceding year, shall have conferred the greatest benefit on mankind" (Alfred Nobel).

Say, "to the person who shall have made the most important 'discovery' or 'invention' within the field of physics".

That would be something like one and half million $.

This dude, I mean this banker, sure has great nerves and thick skin.
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02:26 PM on 02/09/2010
S0ci0paths have eradicated all empathy and compassion for anything living!
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
AtheistUS
11:13 PM on 02/06/2010
This dude sure has low intellect - he does not look like somebody who'd go to shrink (like some celeb or a wife of rich) over unearned money.
10:38 PM on 02/06/2010
I'd do him, what a cutie pie!
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02:27 PM on 02/09/2010
I guess you like village ide0ts
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10:37 PM on 02/06/2010
12 year old student:
CRIME: doodling on desk
arrested
handcuffed
jailed
community service
book report
essay on what she’s learned from experience

Goldman Sachs CEO Lloyd Blankfein:
CRIME: massive bank fraud
$9,000,000 bonus

People, what the hell is wrong with this country?!! Are the schools now being policed by Homeland Security? Is the kid now on a Terrorist No-Fly List? Have we lost our collective minds and the common sense God gave a rock? This is an outrage. Fire, then sue everyone involved!

A CHILD goes to jail for being a child, while a known banking THIEF is rewarded with even more money.

Student’s essay: I learned I should become a banker.

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2010/02/05/desk-doodling-arrest-alex_n_450859.html
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02:28 PM on 02/09/2010
It is no Measure of health to be well adjusted to a profoundly sic society! .. krishnamurti
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Tim Janssen
defoliate the 1%
05:05 PM on 02/06/2010
Blankfein looks reptilian, half raptor, half minuature T-Rex.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
AtheistUS
11:21 PM on 02/06/2010
And more than half as a banker.
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02:30 PM on 02/09/2010
I equate him with more a money grubbing little weasel or maybe ferret!
02:16 PM on 02/06/2010
Borge's comment is so insane it's hard to know what to say.

Using the phrase "taking a bullet" regarding a multimillion dollar payout is an insult to our troops. Our cops, too. They don't get to "take a bullet" metaphorically. They get shot for real, and they sure as hell don't get paid much for it.
02:01 PM on 02/06/2010
Wonder if Blankfein realizes how much society loathes him and the Wall Street banksters..or doesn't he care? What do you all think?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Jeffin90019
Your religion is your lifestyle choice. Not mine.
01:59 PM on 02/06/2010
There's really only one way to deal with these smiling jackals.
01:44 PM on 02/06/2010
Aren't all these CEOs etc are simply stealing from the shareholders?
02:08 PM on 02/06/2010
No, Goldman shareholders did amazingly well. Goldman is not the problem. They are easy to hate because they are smart and wealthy but they are not the problem. No doubt they jacked up the taxpayer for 20b when they dumped their worthless CDOs to the NY Fed, but beyond that they are a well run money making machine.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
AtheistUS
11:23 PM on 02/06/2010
"money making machine" - OK. Whatever this means...
01:44 PM on 02/06/2010
Yeah right...I'm sure the bonus is structured so it is not evident as a bonus...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
DannyEV
01:32 PM on 02/06/2010
republicans and neo-liberals brought us the deregulated banking and credit card industry. All of us including Lloyd Blankfein have a lot for which to thank Ronnie Reagan and Bill Clinton and his DLC types.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
spinns17
TEAMSTER
03:12 PM on 02/06/2010
you can even go back to cater.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
spinns17
TEAMSTER
03:13 PM on 02/06/2010
carter lol
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
DannyEV
03:28 PM on 02/06/2010
I hate to say it cuz I love the guy, but--you are right.
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timetraveler2039
Choose peace.
01:30 PM on 02/06/2010
Oh, by all means, hold a place in line for him at the nearest soup kitchen - Pobrecito!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
DannyEV
01:15 PM on 02/06/2010
Taking a bullet. Ohchrist.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Balancement
Timendi causa est nescire. -- Seneca
01:03 PM on 02/06/2010
Oh! Poor Baby! How can he *possibly* survive on such a pittance? My heart goes out to him and his destitute family. Oh, woe! What has happened to this nation? I weep for him. Such tragedy on such a grand scale! Does anyone know what filet costs nowadays? How will he survive? Won't anyone help him? Couldn't we give him more taxpayer money? We must be merciful.