Daily Mail UK
Morgan Stanley ignores calls for restraint and doles out £8.8bn to bankers
By Simon Duke
20th January 2010
Wall Street giant Morgan Stanley has defied the growing calls for restraint after doling out huge rewards to its staff.
The salary and bonus pot at the bailed-out U.S. firm jumped 31per cent to £8.8billion last year (about $14.4 Billion), despite turning a profit of just £705million (about $1.15 billion) in 2009, it revealed today. An astonishing 62 per cent of revenues were set aside for pay - the highest level in at least a dozen years and nearly twice the 33 per cent level earmarked by rival JP Morgan.
Under Morgan Stanley's Premier League-style wage structure, an average employee will have banked £144,500 ($235,400) in salary and bonuses for their efforts last year. However, many of its high-flying traders and rain-makers will have 'earned' seven- and eight-figure pay days.
In 2008, the average Morgan Stanley worker took home £150,000. The company, which employs around 5,000 staff in the City, added 15,000 to its global workforce after buying the Smith Barney brokerage from ailing rival Citigroup.
The lavish payouts are likely to anger taxpayers on both sides of the Atlantic, who will have to pay for the cost of the mammoth banking bailout for many years to come.
President Barack Obama last week slammed the 'obscene' rewards dished out on Wall Street at a time when many 'continue to face real hardship in this recession'. The U.S. government is now planning to hit American banks with a punishing levy to help re-coup the estimated £72billion US taxpayers have lost from bailing out its financial industry.
New York-based Morgan Stanley was rescued from the edge of oblivion with a £6.1bn taxpayer handout in late 2008. Although it has since re-paid the loan, it still operates with an effective guarantee of the taxpayer.
Morgan Stanley's pay-outs came as rival Goldman Sachs prepared to publish its 2009 financial results tomorrow. Wall Street's most profitable firm is expected to reveal a dramatic bounce in the bank's profits thanks to the colossal economic packages implemented across the world.
The earnings bounce is expected to see Goldman raise its total pay pool to more than £12 billion. This equates to a pay and bonus of nearly £400,000 for each every worker of the firm, which employs around 5,500 people in London.
However, Goldman has delayed telling its staff how much they'll receive for their efforts in 2009 in the wake of Obama's planned raid on Wall Street.
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