By Lawrence White and Iain Withers
LONDON (Reuters) – HSBC cut its annual bonus pool by 4% to $3.4 billion in 2022, the bank said on Tuesday, as a global slump in dealmaking led it to trim awards for its bankers.
Despite the overall bonus cuts for staff, Chief Executive Noel Quinn saw his pay package jump 14% to 5.6 million pounds ($6.7 million), from 4.9 million pounds the prior year.
Once long-term incentive awards are included, Quinn’s total pay could reach 10.5 million pounds, the bank said.
Quinn told reporters the board set his pay and that the bank’s overall performance was strong, adding that executive bonuses and staff awards would go “in swings and roundabouts”.
HSBC reported a leap in fourth quarter profit to end 2022 but a cautious outlook left some investors pondering whether the boost to earnings from higher central bank rates may already have peaked.
The bank’s bonus pool for staff was slightly smaller than the $3.5 billion paid last year.
HSBC said it prioritised increasing payouts for high performers in its commercial bank and for more junior staff across the bank, whereas bonuses fell in its global banking and markets arm after a torrid year for deals.
Year HSBC bonus pool
2013 $3.92 bln
2014 $3.66 bln
2015 $3.46 bln
2016 $3.04 bln
2017 $3.30 bln
2018 $3.47 bln
2019 $3.34 bln
2020 $2.66 bln
2021 $3.5 bln
2022 $3.36 bln
British banks have faced criticism for continuing to pay substantial bonuses while millions of people are being squeezed by rising mortgage rates, the lingering energy crisis and inflation pushing up the cost of everyday goods.
“Rather than imposing more costs on ordinary households, the government should tax the windfall profits of banks,” said Fran Boait, executive director at Positive Money, which campaigns for a fair financial system.
HSBC’s rival NatWest raised its bonus pool by nearly a quarter to 368 million pounds in earnings last week, and bumped up CEO Alison Rose’s pay package to 5.2 million pounds.
Barclays meanwhile trimmed its bonus pool slightly, but still paid out 1.8 billion pounds in bonuses.
($1 = 0.8313 pounds)
(Reporting by Lawrence White and Iain Withers; editing by Sinead Cruise and Louise Heavens)