Jan 24 (Reuters) – JPMorgan’s board voted to raise Chief Executive Jamie Dimon’s annual compensation for 2013, a turnaround from last year when it slashed his compensation by half in light of a trading debacle, the New York Times reported.
A series of meetings to formulate the pay package turned heated at times, with vocal minority of directors wanting to keep Dimon’s compensation largely flat, citing about $20 billion in fines the bank paid in the last year to federal authorities, the paper said, citing several executives briefed on the matter.
However, there were other directors who argued that Dimon should be rewarded for his stewardship of the bank during such a difficult period, according to the paper. ()
Details of the pay hike were not made public on Thursday, but could be disclosed in the coming days, possibly as soon as Friday, the newspaper said.
However, it is unlikely that Dimon will receive anything close to $23.1 million he got for 2011, when he was the highest-paid chief executive at a large bank, the paper said.
Last year, the bank’s board slashed Dimon’s pay by half to $11.5 million after failures in the bank’s chief investment office that led to $6.2 billion in trading losses — an incident widely known as “London Whale trades.”
A JPMorgan spokesman declined to comment to the newspaper. The bank could not immediately be reached for comment by Reuters outside of regular U.S. business hours.
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London Whale
The bank’s chief investment office gambled on credit derivatives, a href=”http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/07/13/jpmorgan-chase-q02-earnings-2012_n_1670629.html” target=”_hplink”losing $5.8 billion/a (so far), and its trading desk may have tried to hide the losses from the home office. The bank says it is being sued by shareholders over the losses and has gotten subpoenas and requests for information from “Congress, the OCC, Federal Reserve, DOJ, SEC, CFTC, UK Financial Services Authority, the State of Massachusetts and other government agencies, including in Japan, Singapore and Germany.”
Milan Swap Deal
The bank has faced a href=”http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2012-07-18/milan-swaps-prosecutor-seeks-ban-on-4-banks-from-government-work.html” target=”_hplink”lawsuits and criminal investigations/a over an interest-rate swap deal it made with the city of Milan, Italy, back in 2005. The bank settled a civil suit, but criminal charges are still pending against the bank and several employees, with hearings in the trial “occurring on a weekly basis since May 2010.”
Enron
The bank and some of its executives are still being sued over the bank’s relationship with the failed, fraud-ridden energy giant, more than a decade after its failure.
Energy Manipulation
Speaking of Enron, the a href=”http://www.huffingtonpost.com/mark-gongloff/jpmorgan-chase-power-market_b_1647131.html” target=”_hplink”Federal Energy Regulatory Commission is investigating/a charges that JPMorgan manipulated power markets in California and the Midwest.
Credit Card Swipe Fees
The bank said in the filing that a href=”http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2012-08-09/jpmorgan-says-credit-card-swipe-case-cost-1-2-billion.html” target=”_hplink”it will pay about $1.2 billion/a to settle charges that it conspired with MasterCard and Visa to rig credit-card swipe fees.
Libor
The bank is being investigated by regulators all over the world for its a href=”http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/08/09/jpmorgan-chase-libor-subpoenas_n_1760015.html” target=”_hplink”alleged involvement in manipulating Libor/a, a short-term interest rate that affects borrowing costs for people, businesses and governments all over the world.
Madoff Ponzi Scheme
Several lawsuits have accused the bank of aiding and abetting Bernie Madoff’s Ponzi scheme, the biggest in history. The Madoff bankruptcy trustee and others have also sued the bank to get back some Madoff clients’ money.
MF Global
The bank is under investigation by regulators for its a href=”http://www.google.com/url?sa=trct=jq=esrc=ssource=webcd=1ved=0CFEQFjAAurl=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.forbes.com%2Fsites%2Fhalahtouryalai%2F2012%2F06%2F04%2Fjpmorgans-other-messy-problem-mf-globals-missing-money%2Fei=Ui0lUNP7Eqe96QHP94CABAusg=AFQjCNEJVDksnFTh3KP1uS3u73bLgoSfZQ” target=”_hplink”relationship with the failed brokerage firm MF Global/a. It is also being sued for allegedly aiding and abetting MF Global misuse of customer money.
Mortgage Backed Securities
The bank is being sued by hordes of investors for its bundling and selling of mortgage-backed securities packed with bad mortgage debt before the financial crisis. “There are currently pending and tolled investor claims involving approximately $130 billion of such securities,” the bank says.
Mortgage Foreclosures
The bank was part of the big a href=”http://nationalmortgagesettlement.com/” target=”_hplink”$25 billion settlement/a with the government over mortgage-foreclosure abuses. But there are still several lawsuits and regulatory actions pending against the bank over its foreclosure practices.
Peregrine Financial
The bank didn’t mention this in its regulatory filing, but it is also involved in the failure of the Iowa brokerage firm Peregrine Financial. JPMorgan a href=”http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/07/12/pfg-customer-account-jpmorgan-chase_n_1668386.html” target=”_hplink”holds some customer money for the firm/a, and recently a href=”http://www.foxbusiness.com/news/2012/08/06/jp-morgan-objects-to-terms-proposed-by-peregrine-trustee/” target=”_hplink”tussled in court/a with the PFG bankruptcy trustee.
Billions Of Dollars In Fines Later, Jamie Dimon Gets A Raise: Report
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