Sun, Feb 26, 2012, 8:06 AM EST - U.S. Markets closed

Goldman executives get access to restricted stock

(Reuters) - Top Goldman Sachs Group Inc executives received previously restricted stock awards that are now worth $47.7 million, according to regulatory filings, though the executives are still limited in selling most of their Goldman stock.

Chief Executive Lloyd Blankfein, Chief Financial Officer David Viniar, Chief Operating Officer Gary Cohn and top investment banker and vice chairman John Weinberg each received 45,497 shares worth $5.1 million, based on Goldman's closing price of $111.77 on Friday.

Seven other executives each received previously awarded shares worth $2.8 million to $5 million, according to Form 4 filings with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission. Among those executives are vice chairmen Michael Evans and Michael Sherwood, as well as Goldman's legal chief, Gregory Palm, its accounting chief, Sarah Smith, and compliance chief Alan Cohen.

The stock awards became unlocked on Wednesday, but the 11 executives did not immediately sell those shares. They did sell an additional $20.2 million worth of Goldman stock at $107.44 apiece to cover tax obligations.

The transactions took place on Wednesday, when executives received access to the previously restricted stock.

Starting in 2009, Wall Street banks began shifting more of their bonus awards into stock that executives are required to hold for multi-year periods in an effort to align incentives with long-term performance.

In 2011, some of those payments started coming due, leaving compensation costs stubbornly high for big investment banks, even as they cut jobs and bonus pools due to weak business.

Last year, Goldman paid $12.2 billion in compensation costs, down 21 percent from 2010, and reduced its payroll by 2,400 jobs. Yet because revenue fell even more, compensation as a percentage of revenue rose to 42.4 percent from 39.3 percent the previous year.

(Reporting By Lauren Tara LaCapra; editing by Andre Grenon)

(Corrects story to make clear that Goldman Sachs executives cannot immediately sell all of the shares received from a previous award)

 
  • R.T.  •  28 days ago
    I would like to see Goldman Sachs management breaking rocks in a striped suit that
    is government issue rather than from Armani.
  • beautypageantjudge  •  Jacksonville, Florida  •  28 days ago
    Scummiest company on the planet! They would steal pennies off of a dead man's eyes!
  • Sick of the BS  •  Anchorage, Alaska  •  28 days ago
    I am in the wrong line of work, crime really does pay.
  • Ty  •  Fayetteville, Georgia  •  28 days ago
    What makes me sick is how many have gotten away with theft, Henry Paulson left as CEO of Goldman Sacs to become the Secretary of the Treasury, sold off over $400,000,000.00 worth of stock just before it crashed and went into government to swindle even more! Why did we have the wolf guarding the hen house?!?! He was one of the masterminds behind all the dirty deals and scams that crashed the market! He stole your money! He was behind deregulation, he helped create the CDO's and is personally responsible for much of the crash. He got away with it, he and his buddies are laughing at us!
  • CptSnark  •  28 days ago
    Lesson one in staying in the 1%
    get laws passed to make cheating legal.

    Medicare were just cheated out of 3.5 million dollars by this maneuver.
  • mika  •  28 days ago
    Isn';t it funny that these are the Bas*$&^#s that caused the finacial collapse and the goverment bailed them out, yet here again they get rewarded with millions of dollars more at the expense of laying off people who worked for them....These pigs need to be put in prison for the rest of their lives and all the profits they have made be given to the people they laid off :)~
  • janice  •  Anchorage, Alaska  •  28 days ago
    Americans should be using credit unions instead of banks because credit unions are member owned
  • Cosmos  •  Carlsbad, California  •  28 days ago
    These guys should be in Jail!
  • Jimmy b  •  Bangkok, Thailand  •  28 days ago
    Blankfein and his Goldman band of WS thugs should pay their clients who bought worthless CDO's in 2008 which Goldman exec's admitted were s**tty investments!!! Criminals the lot.
  • Alan  •  28 days ago
    Maybe these "executives," who have wrought so much financial pain for others, should simply be executed!
  • Kazango the Great  •  28 days ago
    This just in: The Rich get richer. Film at 11. Okay, not really.
  • S  •  Seattle, Washington  •  28 days ago
    as long as we keep electing these kind of politicians we will get the same results
  • Luis  •  Sacramento, California  •  28 days ago
    Who? says crime don't pay?.
  • Sherman  •  28 days ago
    Their 'compensation costs' rose because they got rid of the wrong employees. The only ones that needed to be gotten rid of to 'conserve' are the executives, who cumulatively make more than all the company's 'standard' employees.
  • Ebikeguy  •  Los Angeles, California  •  28 days ago
    Once you get your card punched as a "One Percenter," the money just rolls in...
  • My Two Cents  •  28 days ago
    It's past time for our government to do something about the thugs of Wall Street. Republicans and Democrats look the other way and allow them to do what they want.
  • throwingstones  •  28 days ago
    This is how the investment companies will get around the bonus laws. You can't hurt them, they will find a way to get what they want, in spite of any laws Washington creates. Putting more regulations, makes them more creative, so we shouldn't get all upset when we try to regulate them more...they have so many attorneys looking for loopholes in the code you could stretch them out coast to coast.
  • Donald  •  28 days ago
    In other late-breaking news, the sun rose in the east this morning, the US Govt is running a budget deficit and the Arabs and Israelis are still mad at each other.
  • Tom Triumph  •  Oak Ridge, Tennessee  •  28 days ago
    The only way to curb the outrageous practies of investment bankers like Goldman Sachs is to stop dealing with them, which as we know, people are to greedy to do.
  • A Yahoo! User  •  Bogota, Colombia  •  28 days ago
    They should be paying back the bailout money they received with interest. Should've been a loan.
Loading...
 
Recent Quotes
Symbol Price Change % Chg 
Your most recently viewed tickers will automatically show up here if you type a ticker in the "Enter symbol/company" at the bottom of this module.
You need to enable your browser cookies to view your most recent quotes.
 
Sign-in to view quotes in your portfolios.

Trading Center

Yahoo! Finance on Facebook

  YAHOO! FINANCE ON TWITTER