U.S. banking regulators issue final guidance on incentive compensation |
Date: Tuesday, June 22, 2010
Author: Investment Executive
U.S. banking regulators have issued final guidance on how
financial firms should be structuring compensation to avoid incentives
to take excessive risks, noting that there’s more work to be done by the
industry.
The U.S. Federal Reserve Board, the Office of the
Comptroller of the Currency, the Office of Thrift Supervision, and the
Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation issued joint guidance on Monday,
finalizing guidance that was originally proposed by the Federal Reserve
last year.
“The guidance is designed to ensure that incentive
compensation arrangements at banking organizations appropriately tie
rewards to longer-term performance and do not undermine the safety and
soundness of the firm or create undue risks to the financial system,” it
says. “Because improperly structured compensation arrangements for both
executive and non-executive employees may pose safety and soundness
risks, the guidance applies not only to top-level managers, but also to
other employees who have the ability to materially affect the risk
profile of an organization, either individually or as part of a group.”
The
regulators report that they have conducted a coordinated examination of
compensation practices across firms, and last month the Fed delivered
assessments to the firms that included analysis of current compensation
practices and areas requiring prompt attention. Firms are submitting
plans to the Federal Reserve outlining steps and timelines for
addressing outstanding issues to ensure that incentive compensation
plans do not encourage excessive risk-taking.
Next, the
regulators will be conducting additional reviews of incentive
compensation practices at the large, complex banking organizations for
employees in certain business lines, such as mortgage originators. The
agencies will also be following up on specific areas that were found to
be deficient at many firms, such as: identifying which employees can
expose banking organizations to material risk; fully capturing the risks
involved and applying risk sensitive methods to enough employees; not
tailoring deferral arrangements according to the type or duration of
risk; and, not adequately evaluating whether established practices are
successful in balancing risk.
In addition to the work with the
large, complex banking organizations, the agencies are also working to
incorporate oversight of incentive compensation arrangements into the
regular examination process for smaller firms.
“Many large
banking organizations have already implemented some changes in their
incentive compensation policies, but more work clearly needs to be
done,” said Federal Reserve governor Daniel Tarullo. “The Federal
Reserve expects firms to make material progress this year on the matters
identified as we work toward the ultimate goal of ensuring that
incentive compensation programs are risk appropriate and are supported
by strong corporate governance.”