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Dimon wins big pay hike despite JPMorgan’s jumbo fines

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JPMorgan Chase head Jamie Dimon's pay nearly doubled to $20 million for 2013 despite the bank being forced to pay out billions to resolve legal and regulatory cases arising under his tenure.

According to a filing Friday, JPMorgan said that Dimon would receive a 2013 bonus of $18.5 million worth of restricted stock to be vested over the next three years, "tying Mr. Dimon's 2013 compensation to the company's future performance, including continued progress on the company's regulatory agenda."

The base salary for Dimon, JPMorgan's chairman and chief executive, was $1.5 million, unchanged from 2012.

His total compensation was $20 million compared with $11.5 million in 2012. In 2011 and 2010, Dimon received an annual pay package of $23 million, up from $15.2 million for 2009.

The JPMorgan board decided his 2013 compensation according to key factors such as "the company's sustained long-term performance" and "the regulatory issues the company has faced and the steps the company has taken to resolve those issues," the filing said.

The largest US bank by assets paid a record $20 billion in legal and regulatory fines and settlements last year.

Those included $13 billion to settle charges that it misled investors on billions of dollars of mortgage-backed securities, and about $1 billion for poor oversight related to its huge "London whale" trading loss in 2012.

The bank earlier this month reported full-year 2013 net earnings of $17.9 billion, down nearly 16 percent from 2012, much of the fall due to the fines it has paid out.

The filing said that, under Dimon, "the company has fortified its control infrastructure and processes and strengthened each of its key businesses while continuing to focus on strengthening the company's leadership capabilities across all levels."

Shares in Dow component JPMorgan were down 2.3 percent at $55.18 in the last hour of trade friday amid a broad, steep sell-off on Wall Street.

JPMorgan Chase head Jamie Dimon’s pay nearly doubled to $20 million for 2013 despite the bank being forced to pay out billions to resolve legal and regulatory cases arising under his tenure.

According to a filing Friday, JPMorgan said that Dimon would receive a 2013 bonus of $18.5 million worth of restricted stock to be vested over the next three years, “tying Mr. Dimon’s 2013 compensation to the company’s future performance, including continued progress on the company’s regulatory agenda.”

The base salary for Dimon, JPMorgan’s chairman and chief executive, was $1.5 million, unchanged from 2012.

His total compensation was $20 million compared with $11.5 million in 2012. In 2011 and 2010, Dimon received an annual pay package of $23 million, up from $15.2 million for 2009.

The JPMorgan board decided his 2013 compensation according to key factors such as “the company’s sustained long-term performance” and “the regulatory issues the company has faced and the steps the company has taken to resolve those issues,” the filing said.

The largest US bank by assets paid a record $20 billion in legal and regulatory fines and settlements last year.

Those included $13 billion to settle charges that it misled investors on billions of dollars of mortgage-backed securities, and about $1 billion for poor oversight related to its huge “London whale” trading loss in 2012.

The bank earlier this month reported full-year 2013 net earnings of $17.9 billion, down nearly 16 percent from 2012, much of the fall due to the fines it has paid out.

The filing said that, under Dimon, “the company has fortified its control infrastructure and processes and strengthened each of its key businesses while continuing to focus on strengthening the company’s leadership capabilities across all levels.”

Shares in Dow component JPMorgan were down 2.3 percent at $55.18 in the last hour of trade friday amid a broad, steep sell-off on Wall Street.

AFP
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With 2,400 staff representing 100 different nationalities, AFP covers the world as a leading global news agency. AFP provides fast, comprehensive and verified coverage of the issues affecting our daily lives.

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