HomeNewsWorldMorgan Stanley chief defends 25% pay hike

Morgan Stanley chief defends 25% pay hike

Morgan Stanley Chairman and CEO James Gorman defended the 25 percent pay hike he was awarded last year – reportedly the highest among Wall Street chief executives – saying it was justified by the bank's performance.

May 28, 2015 / 13:16 IST
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Morgan Stanley Chairman and CEO James Gorman defended the 25 percent pay hike he was awarded last year – reportedly the highest among Wall Street chief executives – saying it was justified by the bank's performance.
 
"We had three years where the stock went up," Gorman told CNBC on the sidelines of the Morgan Stanley China Summit in Beijing on Thursday. "So the board, representing shareholders, thought that justified very strong performance, not just for myself, but for the leadership of the firm."

Shares of the bank have risen handsomely over past three years, up 19 percent in 2012, 60 percent in 2013 and 23 percent in 2014.


"By the same token, in previous years, when we underperformed, we were payed down and that's the way it should be," he said.

Gorman's pay raise brought his total compensation to USD 22.5 million in 2014, above that of Jamie Dimon, the chief executive of JPMorgan Chase, but below that of Lloyd Blankfein, the chief executive of Goldman Sachs, according to the New York Times.

Read More: Morgan Stanley chief lands USD 22.5 million pay package

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The debate around bankers' pay returned to the fore in recent days after a sizable portion of JPMorgan shareholders objected to Dimon's pay package at the company's annual meeting held on April 19.

Over 38 percent of shareholders voted against the compensation of Dimon and other top executives at the bank, according to the Financial Times.