Popular Articles

Bald and beautiful!
Filmmaker, translator of Sanskrit erotica, and India"s famous "shaved head" Pritish Nandy is committed to making "movies that rock".

e-filing of returns from January
The Orissa government will introduce the e-filing of returns and e-challan for the dealers in the state starting from 1 January, 2010. The finance minister Prafulla Chandra Ghadai has approved a proposal in this regard. Initially, this will be launched as a pilot project using the portal of the State Bank of India (SBI) and the system is proposed to be expanded to all the areas of the state later, Ghadai told the media.

News of the day

Passing the buck
With the report of the special audit into the accounts of Reliance Communication (RCom) stating that the company had misclassified its income to avoid paying licence fees and overstated its mobile phone income (by around a fourth) in other ways, you’d think the Ministry of Corporate Affairs would be interested in examining the report and taking appropriate action.
Management

JP Morgan to pay $29 bn in salaries, bonuses: report

World"s biggest banks will pay out more than $65 billion in salaries and bonuses over the next fortnight, with banking conglomerate JP Morgan Chase alone likely to shell out a record $29 billion, barely a year after the bailout of the banking system. - Viceroy Hotels to raise Rs 70cr via QIP - Yodlee"s account aggregation software powers Artha Money - Firms put plans on hold in AP - Record raising of funds in 2010 - Axis Bank recasts retail banking - Temasek, Sequoia eye Prestige"s pre-IPO sale "JP Morgan Chase is set to defy calls for constraint over bankers" bonuses this week when it delivers an expected $29 billion compensation pot for its executives," the Sunday Telegraph reported. JP Morgan"s 220,861 employees are on average set to earn $131,300 for the year, against $100,000 in 2008. However, top performers in its investment banking arm will be much more highly remunerated. Quoting analysts, the report said the world"s biggest banks will pay more than $65 billion to their staff over the next fortnight despite efforts by governments in Europe and the US to restrict excessive remuneration. "The investment bank"s (JP Morgan Chase) refusal to rein back bonuses is likely to be seen as an act of defiance both by the US and the UK governments," the newspaper said. Chancellor Alistair Darling had previously told the Sunday Telegraph that "bonuses have been a symptom of the excessive behaviour of some banks over the last few years and even over the last few months". Wall Street"s year-end bonus season is likely to re-ignite fears that the financial services sector wants to go back to "business as usual" and has put behind it its role in bringing the global economy to the brink of a major depression. JP Morgan had received $25 billion of capital from the US Treasury"s Troubled Assets Relief Programme (TARP). Citing Andrew DeSouza, of Sifma, the US investment banking body, the report said, "While the numbers will appear big, the story behind those numbers reflects changes many companies have made. These include a kind of "pay for performance" that more closely links compensation practices to the long term success of the company." Quoting a report by Andrew Cuomo, New York Attorney General, the daily said found that 1,626 JP Morgan bankers received bonuses of more than $1 million in 2008 – more than any other Wall Street bank. The same study found JP Morgan"s 200 best-paid employees took home $1.12 billion, more than even Goldman Sachs, whose top 200 staff shared in $995 million. JP Morgan Chase will be the first Wall Street bank to report its fourth-quarter results on Friday.


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