Goldman Sachs bankers reaped $2.6 billion from share awards last year

By Michael J. Moore
Updated February 27 2015 - 12:13pm, first published 11:57am
Options bonanza: Goldman's current partners have accounted for an outsize portion of the payoffs.
Options bonanza: Goldman's current partners have accounted for an outsize portion of the payoffs.

While Goldman Sachs employees may get less compensation than in the past, many cashed in last year for a payday they've been awaiting since the depths of the financial crisis.

Employees exercised options worth $US2.03 billion ($2.59 billion) in 2014. More than 96 per cent of the contracts were granted as part of 2008 compensation. Last year marked the first time bankers were able to take advantage of those awards.

Goldman Sachs's stock has more than doubled since it granted 36 million options in December 2008 to give top performers incentive to stay. The bank had been forced to slash compensation costs that year, as the global credit crisis endangered the firm and pushed its shares down 61 per cent.

The more than $US2 billion total disclosed in a regulatory filing this week is the pretax gain from exercising the options. Recipients - who can choose to keep the stock or convert it to cash - may include former employees who left the New York-based company after receiving the options.

Current partners, who make up fewer than 2 per cent of the firm's 34,000 staff, have accounted for an outsize portion of the payoffs.

As of August, partners had reaped pretax gains of almost $US800 million from the 2008 options. The bank has yet to disclose their activity in the last four months of the year.

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