Millionaire bankers on the rise in Europe in decade after crisis

FRANKFURT--Financiers in Europe earning more than 1 million euros ($1.23 million) rose by a third in the six years to 2016 to 4,597, with investment bankers and London dominant, data showed on Tuesday.


A European Banking Authority study showed how pay has rebounded in banking, whose spectacular crash ten years ago triggered state bailouts and has depressed profitability since. While most of Europe's high earners each made between 1 and 2 million euros in 2016, the EBA research found that over 500 had been paid more than this, while around a dozen received at least 13 million euros each.
One executive in asset management topped the table, earning a 30 million euro bonus, taking home total pay of more than 33 million euros. The payouts are sometimes at the expense of shareholders in Europe's banks, the EBA said, pointing to low dividends.
New rules to curb bonuses, introduced after the financial crisis, mean such windfalls account for a smaller part of pay than in the past, but overall top earners are thriving. They represent an elite among the roughly 2.8 million bank staff across the European Union.
Although the EBA study found that the number of million-euro-plus pay packets fell between 2015 and 2016, this was largely as a result of a drop in the value of the pound after Britain's vote to leave the European Union in June 2016. Because most of the big earners are based in London, this skewed the data when compiled in euros but in the long run, the number of high earners rose from less than 3,500 in 2010 to 4,597 in 2016, the EBA said.
More than half of the million-euro-plus a year earners are classed as investment bankers by the EBA, while a smaller number fall under categories such as management or retail banking.
The EBA's findings, which take a snapshot before the full impact of Britain's Brexit vote was felt across the industry, highlight the stark difference in the number of high earners between Britain and the rest of Europe. More than three quarters of the bankers paid over 1 million euros are based in London, which is Europe's dominant financial hub and also one of its most expensive cities.
Germany and France are among the European countries trying to win business from Britain as it prepares for new trading arrangements after Brexit, with Frankfurt and Paris vying for jobs and operations which are being moved out of London. The EBA data showed the gulf between them. In 2016 Germany had just 253 bankers who earned more than one million euros and Paris had roughly 200, while London counted more than 3,500.

The Daily Herald

Copyright © 2020 All copyrights on articles and/or content of The Caribbean Herald N.V. dba The Daily Herald are reserved.


Without permission of The Daily Herald no copyrighted content may be used by anyone.

Comodo SSL
mastercard.png
visa.png

Hosted by

SiteGround
© 2025 The Daily Herald. All Rights Reserved.