It is fitting that market participants are embracing reform. In investment banking, it took a crude bonus cap imposed by European lawmakers to rein in the financial risks caused by traders' winner-takes-all mentality. Asset managers pose less systemic threat and are therefore less deserving of heavy-handed intervention. Like investment bankers, though, fund managers tend to take a big share of any upside while clients suffer almost all of the pain. Average pay per fund manager fell in just three years between 2004 and 2014, according to a study of 18 global firms by think tank New Financial. But, compensation quickly rebounded to exceed the previous high.
That undermines the longstanding industry argument that variable pay gives firms cost flexibility, by allowing them to slash bonuses in a downturn and raise them when a fund outperforms. Woodford Investment Management (WIM) boss Craig Newman, meanwhile, rubbishes any purported link between bonus payments and fund performance.
But, the best reason to cut out annual bonuses is that they encourage short-sighted behaviour. That's unsuitable for firms aiming to take a longer view: the Woodford Patient Capital Trust, which has just under £800 million in assets and expects to hold investments for at least five years, is a case in point. Godfrey's investment trust is likely take a similar approach, says a person familiar with his plans.
As owners of WIM's management company, Woodford and Newman's earnings will still rise and fall with the performance of the business. But, if more firms across the industry adopt a no-bonus policy then it is possible that fund manager pay could be less prone to being ratcheted up.
Fundamentally, though, it is good to see fund managers tackling their own pay problem. Few have resisted exorbitant corporate compensation packages in recent years, fuelling suspicions that asset managers' own remuneration is equally indefensible. Simplified pay structures should at least make it harder for that accusation to stick.
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