Finance's Top Earners Don't Work at a Bank
April 16 2019 - 5:59AM
Dow Jones News
By Patrick Thomas
The best place to make money in the world of finance and
investment may not be at a bank but in real estate.
Real-estate investment trusts had some of the highest median
worker pay among financial, real-estate and insurance companies in
2018, according to a Wall Street Journal analysis of annual pay
disclosures by hundreds of big U.S. companies. Property companies
such as Host Hotels & Resorts Inc. and HCP Inc. paid their
median employees more than some of the largest banks did.
Host Hotels & Resorts, the lodging REIT formed through deals
including a spinoff over 20 years ago from what was Marriott Corp.,
had median worker pay of $183,956, the highest of any company in
the sectors. The company has about 180 employees, all of whom work
in the U.S., according to its latest proxy filing. Host Hotels
& Resorts didn't respond to requests for comment. REITs often
contract out lower-wage operations, leaving higher-paid
professionals on their own payrolls.
HCP, a health-care REIT with about 200 employees, posted the
third-highest median pay of $156,921. The exchange operator Cboe
Global Markets Inc. had the second-highest median worker pay, at
$159,496.
HCP didn't respond to requests for comment. A Cboe spokeswoman
said the company's compensation plan takes into account expertise
and tenure.
Morgan Stanley led big banks with median worker pay of $142,604,
followed closely by Goldman Sachs Group Inc. at $136,513. But banks
with more retail branches including tellers and other lower-wage
workers were more likely to report median pay around $65,000.
JPMorgan Chase & Co., the largest bank in the U.S., paid a
median of $78,923.
Of the six largest U.S. banks, Citigroup Inc. had the lowest
median pay figure at $49,766, about $10,000 less than the Midwest
regional bank U.S. Bancorp. Wells Fargo & Co. posted median pay
of $65,191.
Slightly over a third of Citigroup's more than 200,000 employees
work in North America, according to its latest proxy statement. A
spokesman for Citigroup declined to comment beyond the filing.
The financial data company FactSet Research Systems Inc. had the
lowest median pay of $15,331 among the sectors. A company
spokeswoman said most of FactSet's employees are based outside the
U.S. She said the employee with the median pay was located in the
company's Hyderabad, India, office, where 34% of its 9,571
employees are based.
The companies with the lowest median worker pay reported by
S&P 500 companies in the financial, real-estate and insurance
sectors were S&P Global Inc., at $26,738, and the real-estate
and self-storage company Public Storage, at $24,909. A spokesman
for S&P Global, the financial-information firm, said that 75%
of its workforce is outside the U.S. and that its median employee
provides junior professional services in the Asia-Pacific region.
Of Public Storage's nearly 5,400 employees, 83% work at its
self-storage facilities and are paid on an hourly basis, according
to its latest proxy filing.
Most publicly traded firms are disclosing their median employee
pay for a second straight year, along with compensation for top
executives. Firms are asked to include part-time and temporary
workers, but not contractors, and have the option of giving annual
pay for some midyear hires. Companies may exclude up to 5% of their
global workforce, but only non-U.S. workers, and may use sampling
techniques to identify the median employee.
The Journal analysis, which includes more than 1,300 companies,
combined the financial, real-estate and insurance sectors as
defined by S&P Global. Those sectors include industry groups
encompassing banks, REITs, insurance, capital markets and consumer
finance.
Check out this interactive link for the full ranking of
companies or to search for a specific company or industry.
Write to Patrick Thomas at Patrick.Thomas@wsj.com
(END) Dow Jones Newswires
April 16, 2019 05:44 ET (09:44 GMT)
Copyright (c) 2019 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.
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