With all the public ire over Wall Street compensation and the public inquiry occurring this week demanding the heads of the major Wall Street banks testify (oddly, they’re grilling the heads of firms that survived rather than the ones that failed), one key theme has been Wall Street compensation. Politicians are grilling executives over compensation and the risk-taking that ensued, which surely, at least indirectly, was a result of tying compensation to some of the behaviors that led to the financial crisis (notwithstanding the role of Congress and failure of oversight from regulatory bodies). From Cash Bonuses to Stock and Options – Does it Matter? In order to divert attention away from the enormous bonus pools by the likes of Goldman Sachs and JPMorgan that were estimated to average $600K and $400K per employee, respectively (don’t be fooled by statistics of course), many large firms are doing away with or reducing the amount of cash bonuses and instead using stock and stock options (see How Stock Options Work ) as a primary form of compensation. This begs the question as to whether this is even effective. Weren’t the 90’s and 2000’s wrought with stock option abuse and risk-taking to juice share prices? And remember the stock option back-dating scandals? By relying on leveraged returns from options or restricted stock, it’s somewhat incenting the same behavior, isn’t it? And as outlined in my article on Selling Covered Calls against company stock and options, executives with massive blocks of stock can still reap a near-term payday no matter what share prices do. And as far as placating mainstreet, it may have the opposite effect. With many Wall Street firms doubling and tripling their share prices over the past year during the recovery, employees that were rewarded with stock instead of cash are looking at huge windfalls when the vesting period expires. So, instead of a Goldman senior trader taking in $700K in total compensation next year, it might be something like $2.9 million because of the unprecedented rise in shares from the grant price. Will Congress then start all over

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Does Switching Wall Street Compensation to Stock Really Decrease Risk-Taking?
