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JPMorgan shareholders vote down pay bump for CEO Jamie Dimon

By Nicole Goodkind, CNN Business

JP Morgan Chase investors on Tuesday voted down a multimillion-dollar payout for CEO Jamie Dimon.

The pay proposal they rejected included a massive $52.6 million retention bonus as part of Dimon’s 2021 compensation package, just months after the bank’s board approved the incentive. With the bonus, Dimon’s total compensation was $84.4 million in 2021, up from $31.7 million in 2020.

But Dimon may yet get that payout. The compensation package is for 2021 and results of the “say on pay” votes are non-binding. Still, this is an embarrassing blow to the bank, not to mention Dimon himself, and JPMorgan’s board said it takes investor feedback “seriously.”

The new compensation package was designed to keep Dimon at the helm of the bank for the next five years by awarding him 1.5 million stock options that vest in 2026. Shareholders also voted down a similar one-time $27.8 million special awards package for JPMorgan Chase COO Daniel Pinto.

Less than a third of shareholders approved Dimon’s pay package at the bank’s annual meeting this week. That’s the first time since 2009, when JPMorgan first began investor votes on executive compensation, that a majority voted against such a measure. Last year 90% of shareholders voted in favor of the bank’s 2020 pay packages.

The rejection suggests that shareholders may be unhappy with Dimon, who has led the bank since 2006 and guided JPMorgan through two recessions as it emerged to become the biggest US bank by assets. Or maybe they thought the pay increase was just too high.

Two ​​prominent proxy advisory firms, Glass, Lewis & Co. and Institutional Shareholder Services, campaigned heavily against the bonuses, arguing that the huge payday didn’t line up with the bank’s recent performance. JPMorgan shares are down more than 25% in 2022, and are performing worst among the large US banks.

“Excessive one-off grants to the CEO and COO amid tepid relative performance worsen longstanding concerns regarding the company’s executive pay program,” Glass, Lewis & Co. wrote in a report to shareholders. “The lack of performance-based vesting conditions tied to the awards while the Company has not achieved adequate alignment between executive pay and performance warrants shareholders scrutiny,” they wrote.

A JPMorgan spokesperson said after the vote that the compensation package was a rare one-time payment meant to reflect “exemplary leadership.”

Goldman Sachs’s 2021 pay package, meanwhile, included a one-time bonus of $50 million for CEO David Solomon and passed with almost 82% shareholder approval. Goldman stock is down about 22% in 2022.

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