JPMorgan boosts Dimon’s annual pay 3.7% to $28 million

JPMorgan Chase increased Chief Executive Jamie Dimon’s compensation by 3.7% for last year as the bank’s stock advanced 31%.

Dimon, who is also chairman, received $28 million for 2016, according to a regulatory filing Thursday. The package includes $21.5 million in performance shares tied to future goals. He also got a $5 million cash bonus and $1.5 million in salary.

Under Dimon, 60, JPMorgan became the most valuable U.S. lender by market capitalization last year, taking the crown from Wells Fargo, which stumbled because of a scandal tied to bogus customer accounts. JPMorgan, also the biggest U.S. bank by assets, boosted revenue and cut expenses in 2016, helping it produce a record annual profit of $24.7 billion. The firm has posted record profits in six of the past seven years.

The New York-based lender previously revamped its executive compensation program for 2015 to link it more closely with performance. Dimon, who in previous years had received restricted shares that vest over time regardless of JPMorgan’s financial results, instead got performance units tied to the bank’s return on tangible common equity over three years.

For Dimon to collect his $20.5 million 2015 stock award for performance, he needs to keep the firm out of the bottom five in a ranking of 12 major banks. If he does better, he can earn up to 150% of the award, increasing its target value by more than $10 million, according to a February filing.

The CEO got a 35% pay boost to $27 million in 2015, after receiving $20 million a year for 2013 and 2014. For 2012, his pay was cut in half to $11.5 million after the board said he bore some responsibility for the London Whale trading debacle.

Bloomberg News
Commercial banking Compensation Corporate governance Jamie Dimon JPMorgan Chase
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