Remuneration

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1

Application and Definitions

1.1

Unless otherwise stated, this Part applies to:

  1. (1) a CRR firm in relation to its:
    1. (a) UK activities; and
    2. (b) [deleted.]
    3. (c) other activities wherever they are carried on, in a prudential context; and
  2. (2) a third country CRR firm in relation to its activities carried on from an establishment in the UK.

1.2

This Part applies:

  1. (1) in relation to regulated activities;
  2. (2) in relation to the regulated activity, specified in Article 14 of the Regulated Activities Order (Dealing in investments as principal), disregarding the exclusion in Article 15 of the Regulated Activities Order (Absence of holding out etc.);
  3. (3) in relation to ancillary activities and (in relation to MiFID business) ancillary services;
  4. (4) in relation to the carrying on of unregulated activities in a prudential context; and
  5. (5) taking into account activities of other members of a group of which the firm is a member.

1.3

(1) In this Part, the following definitions shall apply:

accounting reference date

means

      1. (1) (in relation to a body corporate incorporated in the UK under the Companies Acts) the accounting reference date of that body corporate determined in accordance with section 391 of the Companies Act 2006; or
      2. (2) (in relation to any other body) the last day of its financial year.

average total assets

means the recent average of the firm’s total assets calculated as follows:

  1. (1) for a CRR firm:     
    1. (a) identify the occasions (due dates) in the preceding 36 months by which the firm was required to report its total assets; and
    2. (b) calculate the arithmetic mean of the total assets that the firm was required to report on those occasions; or
  2. (2) for a third country CRR firm, calculate the arithmetic mean of the firm’s total assets on each of the last three accounting reference dates.

business unit

means any separate organisational or legal entities, business lines, or geographical locations.

buy-out

means that part of an employee’s variable remuneration:

      1. (a) agreed in any contracts relating to the commencement of employment with, or provision of services to, a new firm; and
      2. (b) the aggregate value of which is less than or equal to such unvested variable remuneration:
        1. (i) in the employee’s contracts relating to the employee’s employment with, or provision of services to, a previous firm, and
        2. (ii) which terminated when the employee left employment with, or ceased to provide services to, the previous firm.

buy-out notice

means the information provided by a firm to a previous firm in accordance with 15A.5.

consolidation group entity

means an institution or financial institution which is:

      1. (1) an undertaking responsible for consolidation;
      2. (2) a subsidiary of the undertaking responsible for consolidation; or
      3. (3) where the consolidation group contains a PRA designated institution, a subsidiary of the UK parent financial holding company or UK parent mixed financial holding company by which the PRA designated institution is controlled.

control functions

means a function that is independent from the business units it controls and that is responsible for providing an objective assessment of the firm's risks or to review or report on those and which includes (but is not limited to) the risk management function, the compliance function and the internal audit function.

core business line

means business lines and associated services which represent material sources of revenue, profit or franchise value for a firm or for its group.

CRR2

means Regulation (EU) 2019/876 of the European Parliament and of the Council of 20 May 2019.

group

has the meaning in section 421 FSMA.

high earner

means an employee (of a firm or of any consolidation group entity) whose total annual remuneration is €1 million or more per year or its equivalent in another currency determined by reference to the conversion rate applicable to the corresponding High Earners Report under Chapter 18.

High Earners Report

means the report by which a firm provides to the PRA the information required in Chapter 18.

higher paid material risk taker

means a material risk taker:

      1. (a) whose annual variable remuneration exceeds 33% of their total remuneration, or
      2. (b) whose total remuneration exceeds £500,000.

large institution

has the meaning provided in point 146 of Article 4 of the CRR.

managerial responsibility

means a situation in which an employee:

      1. (1) heads a business unit or a control function and is directly accountable to the management body as a whole or to a member of the management body or to the senior management;
      2. (2) heads one of the functions set out in 3.2A(1) or
      3. (3) heads a subordinated business unit or a subordinated control function in a large institution and reports to an employee that has the responsibilities referred to in (1).

material business unit

means a business unit that meets either of the following criteria:

      1. (a) it has allocated internal capital of at least 2% of the internal capital of the firm as set out in Internal Capital Adequacy Assessment Part 3.1(1) or is otherwise assessed by the firm as having a material impact on the firm’s internal capital; or
      2. (b) it is a core business line.

material risk taker

has the meaning given in 3.1.

private person

has the meaning given by regulation 3 of the Financial Services and Markets Act 2000 (Rights of Action) Regulations 2001.

reduction notice

means a notice provided to a firm by a previous firm in accordance with 15A.9(3).

Remuneration Benchmarking Information Report

means the report by which a firm provides to the PRA the information required in Chapter 17.

remuneration requirements

means the requirements in 6 to 15A.

remuneration statement

means a statement provided to an employee by a previous firm in accordance with 15A.7.

share

means the investment specified in Article 76 of the Regulated Activities Order (Shares etc).

significant firm

means a firm which is significant in terms of its size, internal organisation and the nature, scope and complexity of its activities.

small CRR firm

means a CRR firm that satisfies Condition 1 and, where the firm is part of a group containing any other firm subject to this Part on an individual basis, Condition 2, where:

    1. (1) Condition 1 is that the firm either:
      1. (a) has average total assets not exceeding £4 billion; or
      2. (b) satisfies the conditions in 2A.1 and has average total assets exceeding £4 billion but not exceeding £20 billion;
    2. and
    3. (2) Condition 2 is that where the firm is a member of a group, the criteria in (a) or (b) are satisfied in respect of any other firm in the group which is subject to this Part on an individual basis:
      1. (a)
        1. (i) the average total assets of each CRR firm in the group do not exceed £4 billion on an individual basis;
        2. (ii) the average total assets relating to the activities of the branch operation in the UK of each third country CRR firm in the group do not exceed £4 billion on an individual basis; and
        3. (iii) where any CRR firm or third country CRR firm in the group is a member of a consolidation group, the consolidation group has average total assets not exceeding £4 billion on a consolidated basis; or
      2. (b) 
        1. (i) the average total assets of each CRR firm in the group do not exceed £20 billion on an individual basis;
        2. (ii) the average total assets relating to the activities of the branch operation in the UK of each third country CRR firm in the group do not exceed £20 billion on an individual basis;
        3. (iii) where any CRR firm or third country CRR firm in the group is a member of a consolidation group, the consolidation group has average total assets not exceeding £20 billion on a consolidated basis 
        4. (iv) for each CRR firm in the group each of the conditions in 2A.1 are satisfied on an individual basis;
        5. (v) for each third country CRR firm in the group each of the conditions in 2B.1 are satisfied on an individual basis; and
        6. (vi) where any CRR firm or third country CRR firm in the group is a member of a consolidation group, each of the conditions (1), (2) and (3) in 2A.1 are satisfied in respect of the consolidation group on a consolidated basis,

provided that, if a firm has not yet been required to report its total assets, the calculations in respect of average total assets in Conditions 1 and 2 shall instead be done on the basis of the firm's reasonable forecast of its total assets as at the first occasion on which it will be required to report them.

small third country CRR firm

means a third country CRR firm that satisfies Condition 1 and, where the firm is part of a group containing any other firm subject to this Part on an individual basis, Condition 2, where 

    1. (1) Condition 1 is that the firm either:
      1. (a) has average total assets that relate to the activities of the branch operation of the firm in the UK not exceeding £4 billion; or;
      2. (b) satisfies the conditions in 2B.1 and has average total assets that relate to the activities of the branch operation of the firm in the UK exceeding £4 billion but not exceeding £20 billion;
    2. and
    3. (2) Condition 2 is that where the firm is a member of a group, the criteria in (a) or (b) are satisfied in respect of any other firm in the group which is subject to this Part on an individual basis:
      1. (a)
        1. (i) the average total assets of each CRR firm in the group do not exceed £4 billion on an individual basis;
        2. (ii) the average total assets relating to the activities of the branch operation in the UK of each third country CRR firm in the group do not exceed £4 billion on an individual basis; and
        3. (iii) where any CRR firm or third country CRR firm in the group is a member of a consolidation group, the consolidation group has average total assets not exceeding £4 billion on a consolidated basis; or
      2. (b) 
        1. (i) the average total assets of each CRR firm in the group do not exceed £20 billion on an individual basis;
        2. (ii) the average total assets relating to the activities of the branch operation in the UK of each third country CRR firm in the group do not exceed £20 billion on an individual basis;
        3. (iii) where any CRR firm or third country CRR firm in the group is a member of a consolidation group, the consolidation group has average total assets not exceeding £20 billion on a consolidated basis
        4. (iv) for each CRR firm in the group each of the conditions in 2A.1 are satisfied on an individual basis;
        5. (v) for each third country CRR firm in the group each of the conditions in 2B.1 are satisfied on an individual basis; and
        6. (vi) where any CRR firm or third country CRR firm in the group is a member of a consolidation group, each of the conditions (1), (2) and (3) in 2A.1 are satisfied in respect of the consolidation group on a consolidated basis

provided that, if a firm has not yet been required to report its total assets, the calculations in respect of average total assets in Conditions 1 and 2 shall instead be done on the basis of the firm’s reasonable forecast of its total assets as at the first occasion on which it will be required to report them.

small trading book

means the size of the firm’s (or for the purposes of a small third country CRR firm, the size relating to the activities of the branch operations in the UK of the firm) on- and off-balance-sheet trading-book business is equal to or less than both:

    1. (a) 5% of the firm’s total assets; and
    2. (b) €50 million

on the basis of the assessment provided in Article 94 of the CRR, as amended by point (48) of Article 1 of CRR2.

total assets

means:

  1. (1) in relation to a CRR firm, its total assets as set out in its balance sheet on the relevant accounting reference date; and
  2. (2) in relation to a third country CRR firm, the total assets of the third country CRR firm as set out in its balance sheet on the relevant accounting reference date that cover the activities of the branch operation in the UK;

except that, for the purpose of identifying whether a firm is a small CRR firm and calculating the average total assets for that purpose, it means:

  1. (3) for a firm that is required to submit data item template F 01.01 of Annex III Part 1 of Reporting (CRR) Part, the sum of the firm’s assets as required to be recorded at row 380 of that data item; or
  2. (4) for a firm that is required to submit data item template F 01.01 of Annex IV Part 1 of Reporting (CRR) Part, the sum of the firm’s assets as required to be recorded at row 380 of that data item.

    undertaking responsible for consolidation

     

means a PRA approved parent holding company, a PRA designated parent holding company, a PRA approved intermediate holding company, a PRA designated intermediate holding company, or a PRA designated institution.

(2) In this Chapter, references to rules in 15 in relation to a firm shall be read on the basis that references to employment with or the provision of services to the firm, include references to employment with or the provision of services to a previous firm to which the buy-out relates.

[Note: CRD]

1.4

Unless otherwise defined, any italicised expression used in this Part and in the CRD or CRR has the same meaning as in the CRD or CRR.

[Note: CRD and CRR]

2

Application Dates and Transitional Provisions

2.1

Subject to 2.2 to 2.4, a firm must apply the remuneration requirements in relation to:

  1. (1) remuneration awarded, whether pursuant to a contract or otherwise, on or after 1 January 2011;
  2. (2) remuneration due on the basis of contracts concluded before 1 January 2011 which is awarded or paid on or after 1 January 2011; and
  3. (3) remuneration awarded, but not yet paid, before 1 January 2011, for services provided in 2010.

2.3

A firm must apply 15.17(1)(b) and (c), 15.20(2), (3) and (4), 15.23 and 16.1(3) in relation to remuneration awarded in relation to a performance year starting on or after 1 January 2016.

2.4

A firm must apply 15A.2 to 15A.11 in relation to any buy-out agreed into on or after 1 January 2017.

2.5

Subject to 2.7 and 2.8 a firm must apply this Part to remuneration awarded in respect of a performance year starting on or after 29 December 2020.

2.6

A firm must apply this Part in accordance with 2.1 to 2.4 as it applied under those rules as of 28 December 2020 to remuneration awarded in respect of a performance year starting before 29 December 2020.

2.7

Subject to 2.8, for remuneration awarded in respect of a performance year starting on or after 29 December 2020 a firm must apply this Part in accordance with the definition of higher paid material risk taker in 1.3.

2.8

For remuneration awarded in respect of the first performance year starting on or after 29 December 2020, and where:

  1. (1) the remuneration has been paid or vested before 23 July 2021, or
  2. (2) the firm has before 23 July 2021 created an obligation to pay or vest the remuneration before 23 July 2021

a firm may instead apply this Part to that remuneration on the basis of the definition of higher paid material risk taker which was set out in 1.3 on the earlier of:

  1. (a) the date the remuneration was paid or vested; or
  2. (b) the date the firm has created the obligation to pay the remuneration or for the remuneration to vest.

2.9

A firm must apply this Part as it applied on 7 December 2023 to remuneration awarded in respect of a performance year starting before 8 December 2023.

2A

Small CRR Firm Conditions

2A.1

The conditions referred to in (1)(b) and (2)(b) of the definition of small CRR firm and in (2)(b) of the definition of small third country CRR firm are the following:

  1. (1) Subject to 2A.2, the size of the firm’s on- and off- balance-sheet trading book business was less than or equal to both £44 million and 5% of the firm’s total assets, on the basis of the assessment set out in Article 94(3) of Chapter 3 of Trading Book (CRR) Part:
    1. (a) on the last day of at least one of the preceding three months, and 
    2. (b) on the last day of at least six of the preceding twelve months;
  2. (2) The firm’s overall net foreign-exchange position, calculated using the method set out in Article 352 of CRR, does not exceed 3.5% of its own funds and, subject to 2A.2, did not on average exceed 2% of its own funds:
    1. (a) in one or more of the preceding three months, and
    2. (b) in six or more of the preceding twelve months,
    3. as determined in accordance with 2A.3;
  1. (3) The firm does not hold positions in commodities or commodity derivatives;
  2. (4) The firm does not provide clearing, transaction settlement, custody or correspondent banking services to a UK bank, a building society, or a non-UK credit institution, including by acting as an intermediary for a UK bank, a building society, or a non-UK credit institution to access the facilities or services of:
    1. (a) a payment system, CSD, third-country CSD, SSS or central counterparty in which the firm is a direct or indirect participant or member, or
    2. (b) an exchange, other trading facility, clearing house or any other financial market utility or infrastructure, either directly or indirectly,
    3. except that the firm may provide clearing, transaction settlement, custody or correspondent banking services in sterling to a UK bank, building society or non-UK credit institution that is a member of the firm’s immediate group; and
  1. (5) The firm is not an operator of a payment system.

2A.2

The criteria in 2A.1(1)(a) and 2A.1(2)(a) do not apply in respect of a CRR firm that was not a firm on the last day of the preceding month and the criteria in 2A.1(1)(b) and 2A.1(2)(b) do not apply in respect of a CRR firm that was not a firm on the last day of each of the preceding six months.

2A.3

For the purpose of 2A.1(2), a firm’s overall net foreign-exchange position does not on average exceed 2% of its own funds in a given month if the arithmetic mean of the firm’s daily overall net foreign-exchange positions over the course of the month is less than or equal to 2% of the firm’s own funds on the last day of the month.

2B

Small Third Country CRR Firm Conditions

2B.1

The conditions referred to in (1)(b) and (2)(b) of the definition of small third country CRR firm and in (2)(b) of the definition of small CRR firm are the following:

  1. (1) Subject to 2B.2, the size of the on- and off- balance-sheet trading book business of the firm’s branch operation in the UK was less than or equal to both £44 million and 5% of the total assets of the firm, on the basis of the assessment set out in Article 94(3) of Chapter 3 of Trading Book (CRR) Part:
    1. (a) on the last day of at least one of the preceding three months, and
    2. (b) on the last day of at least six of the preceding twelve months;
  2. (2) The overall net foreign-exchange position of the firm’s branch operation in the UK, calculated using the method set out in Article 352 of CRR, does not exceed 3.5% of the firm’s own funds and, subject to 2B.2, did not on average exceed 2% of the firm’s own funds:
    1. (a) in one or more of the preceding three months, and
    2. (b) in six or more of the preceding twelve months,
    3. as determined in accordance with 2B.3;
  1. (3) The firm’s branch operation in the UK does not hold positions in commodities or commodity derivatives;
  2. (4) The firm’s branch operation in the UK does not provide clearing, transaction settlement, custody or correspondent banking services to a UK bank, a building society, or a non-UK credit institution, including by acting as an intermediary for a UK bank, a building society, or a non-UK credit institution to access the facilities or services of:
    1. (a) a payment system, CSD, third-country CSD, SSS or central counterparty in which the firm is a direct or indirect participant or member, or
    2. (b) an exchange, other trading facility, clearing house or any other financial market utility or infrastructure, either directly or indirectly,
  3. except that the firm’s branch operation in the UK may provide clearing, transaction settlement, custody or correspondent banking services in sterling to a UK bank, building society or non-UK credit institution that is a member of the firm’s immediate group; and
  4. (5) The firm’s branch operation in the UK is not an operator of a payment system.

2B.2

The criteria in 2B.1(1)(a) and 2B.1(2)(a) do not apply in respect of a third country CRR firm that was not a firm on the last day of the preceding month and the criteria in 2B.1(1)(b) and 2B.1(2)(b) do not apply in respect of a third country CRR firm that was not a firm on the last day of each of the preceding six months.

2B.3

For the purpose of 2B.1(2), the overall net foreign-exchange position of a firm’s branch operation in the UK does not on average exceed 2% of the firm’s own funds in a given month if the arithmetic mean of the daily overall net foreign-exchange positions of the firm’s branch operation in the UK over the course of the month is less than or equal to 2% of the firm’s own funds on the last day of the month.

3

Material Risk Takers

3.1

A firm must, save where otherwise stated, apply the requirements of this Part in relation to a person (a “material risk taker”) who is:

  1. (1) an employee of a CRR firm whose professional activities have a material impact on the firm’s risk profile, including:
    1. (a) all members of the management body and senior management;
    2. (b) employees with managerial responsibility over the firm’s control functions or material business units;
    3. (c) employees entitled to significant total remuneration in the preceding financial year, where:
      1. (i) that total remuneration was equal to or greater than £440,000 and equal to or greater than the average remuneration awarded to the members of the firm’s management body and senior management referred to in (a); and
      2. (ii) the employee performs the professional activity within a material business unit and the activity is of a kind that has a significant impact on the risk profile of a material business unit;
    4. (d) employees whose professional activities are deemed to have a material impact on the firm’s risk profile under 3.2A and 3.3A; or
  2. (2) an employee of a third country CRR firm who would fall within 3.1(1) if it had applied in relation to him or her.

[Note: Article 92 of the CRD]

3.1A

For the purposes of 3.1(1)(c) and (d), a firm must calculate all amounts of variable and fixed remuneration on a gross and full-time equivalent basis.

3.1B

For the purposes of 3.1(1)(c)(i):

  1. (1) a firm must calculate the average total remuneration of all members of the firm’s management body and senior management by taking into account the total of the fixed and variable remuneration of all members of the firm’s management body in its management function and supervisory function as well as all members of senior management; and
  2. (2) a firm must value variable remuneration that has been awarded but has not yet been paid as at the date of the award without taking into account reductions in pay-outs through clawback, malus or otherwise.

3.1C

For the purposes of 3.1(1)(c)(ii), in determining whether the professional activity of an employee has a significant impact on the risk profile of a material business unit a firm must apply all of the following criteria within its remuneration policies, practices and procedures:

  1. (1) the risk profile of the material business unit;
  2. (2) the distribution of internal capital to cover the nature and level of the risks, as referred to in Internal Capital Adequacy Assessment 3.1(1);
  3. (3) the risk limits of the material business unit;
  4. (4) the risk and performance indicators used by the firm to identify, manage and monitor risks of the material business unit in accordance with General Organisational Requirements 2.1;
  5. (5) the relevant performance criteria set by the firm in accordance with 15.4 and 15.6; and
  6. (6) the duties and authorities of employees or categories of employee in the material business unit concerned.

3.2A

In addition to employees identified under the criteria set out in 3.1(1)(a) to (c), a firm must deem an employee to have a material impact on a firm's risk profile where one or more of the following qualitative criteria are met:

  1. (1) the employee has managerial responsibility for any of the following:
    1. (a) legal affairs;
    2. (b) the soundness of accounting policies and procedures;
    3. (c) finance, including taxation and budgeting;
    4. (d) performing economic analysis;
    5. (e) the prevention of money laundering and terrorist financing;
    6. (f) human resources;
    7. (g) the development or implementation of the remuneration policy;
    8. (h) information technology;
    9. (i) information security; or
    10. (j) managing outsourcing arrangements of a function, where a defect or failure in the performance of that function would materially impair the continuing compliance of the firm with the conditions and obligations of its authorisation, financial performance, or the soundness or continuity of its services and activities;
  2. (2) the employee has managerial responsibility for any of the risk categories set out in Internal Capital Adequacy Assessment Part 3.1(2) (a) to (g), (i) and (j) or is a voting member of a committee responsible for the management of such a risk category;
  3. (3) with regard to credit risk exposures of a nominal amount per transaction, representing 0.5% of the firm's common equity tier 1 capital and which is at least £4.5 million, the employee member meets either of the following criteria:
    1. (a) the employee has the authority to take, approve or veto decisions on such credit risk exposures; or
    2. (b) the employee is a voting member of a committee which has the authority to take the decisions as referred to in (a);
  4. (4) in relation to a firm for which the derogation for small trading book businesses set out in Article 94 of the CRR does not apply, the employee meets either of the following criteria:
    1. (a) the employee has the authority to take, approve or veto decisions on transactions on the trading book that in aggregate represent one of the following thresholds:
      1. (i) where the standardised approach is used, an own funds requirement for market risk that represents 0.5 % or more of the firm's common equity tier 1 capital;
      2. (ii) where an internal model based approach is approved for regulatory purposes, 5% or more of the firm's internal value-at-risk limit for trading book exposures at a 99th percentile (one-tailed confidence interval level); or
    2. (b) the employee is a voting member of a committee that has the authority to take the decisions referred to in (a);
  5. (5) the employee heads a group of employees who have individual authorities to commit the firm to transactions and either of the following conditions is met:
    1. (a) the sum of those authorities equals or exceeds the threshold referred to in 3.2A(3)(a) or 3.2A(4)(a)(i); or
    2. (b) where an internal model based approach is approved for regulatory purposes, those authorities amount to 5% or more of the firm's internal value-at-risk limit for trading book exposures at a 99th percentile (one-tailed confidence interval level): where the firm does not calculate a value-at-risk at the level of that employee, the value-at-risk limits of employees under the management of that employee must be aggregated; or
  6. (6) the employee meets either of the following criteria with regard to decisions on approving or vetoing the introduction of new products:
    1. (a) the employee has authority to take such decisions; or
    2. (b) the employee is a voting member of a committee that has authority to take such decisions.

3.3A

In addition to employees identified under the criteria set out in 3.1(1)(a) and (b), a firm must deem an employee to have a material impact on a firm's risk profile where either of the following quantitative criteria are met:

  1. (1) the employee, including an employee referred to in 3.1(1)(c), has been awarded in or for the preceding performance year a total remuneration that is equal to or greater than £660,000; or
  2. (2) where the firm has over 1,000 employees, the employee is within the 0.3% of employees within the firm (which is to be calculated on an individual entity basis only and rounded to the next higher integral figure) who have been awarded the highest total remuneration in or for the preceding performance year.

3.4

A firm must maintain a record of its material risk takers in accordance with the Record Keeping Part.

[Note: Material Risk Takers Regulation]

3.5

A firm must take reasonable steps to ensure that its material risk takers understand the implications of their status as such, including the potential for remuneration which does not comply with certain requirements of this Part to be rendered void and recoverable by the firm.

[Note: Material Risk Takers Regulation]

4

Groups

4.2

A firm that is a member of a group must:

  1. (1A) comply with this Part on an individual basis;
  2. (1B) comply, and ensure that the other members of the group comply, with the obligations set out in this Part on a consolidated basis or sub-consolidated basis including those members of the group established in a country or territory which is not in the UK;
  3. (1) ensure that the risk management processes and internal control mechanisms of the other members of the group of which it is a member comply with the obligations set out in this Part on a consolidated basis or sub-consolidated basis including those members of the group established in a country or territory which is not in the UK; and
  4. (2) ensure that compliance with (1A), (1B) and (1) enables the members of the group of which it is a member to have arrangements, processes and mechanisms that are consistent and well integrated and that any data relevant to the purpose of supervision can be produced.

[Note: Arts. 92(1) and 109 of the CRD]

[Note: CRD]

4.4

For the purposes of the application of 4.2(1B), (1) and (2) in respect of the obligation to comply, and ensure other members of the group comply, with Chapter 16 on a consolidated basis, firm does not include a PRA approved parent holding company, a PRA designated parent holding company, a PRA approved intermediate holding company, or a PRA designated intermediate holding company.

[Note: Art. 109 of the CRD]

5

Proportionality

5.1

A firm must comply with this Part in a way that is appropriate to its size, internal organisation and the nature, the scope and the complexity of its activities, when establishing and applying the total remuneration policies for material risk takers.

5.2

5.1 does not apply to the requirement in 7.4 for significant firms to have a remuneration committee.

[Note: Art. 92(1) of the CRD]

[Note: CRD]

6

Remuneration Policies

6.1

In this Chapter, 6.2, 6.5 and 6.6 apply to firms in relation to firms’ remuneration policies, practices and procedures generally, not only in relation to material risk takers.

6.2

A firm must establish implement and maintain a remuneration policy, practices and procedures which are consistent with and promote sound and effective risk management and do not encourage risk-taking that exceeds the level of tolerated risk of the firm.

[Note: Arts. 74(1) and 92(2)(a) of the CRD]

[Note: CRD]

6.3

A firm must ensure that its remuneration policy is in line with the business strategy, objectives, values and long-term interests of the firm.

[Note: Art. 92(2)(b) of the CRD]

[Note: CRD]

6.4

A firm must ensure that its remuneration policy includes measures to avoid conflicts of interest.

[Note: Art. 92(2)(b) of the CRD]

[Note: CRD]

6.5

A firm must ensure that its remuneration policies, practices and procedures, including performance appraisal processes and decisions, are clear and documented.

6.6

A firm must ensure that its remuneration policy sets out the reference year for the variable remuneration that it takes into account when calculating total remuneration and that reference year must be either:

  1. (1) the year preceding the financial year in which the variable remuneration is awarded; or
  2. (2) the year preceding the financial year for which the variable remuneration is awarded.

7

Governance

7.1

In this Chapter, 7.4 applies generally, not only in relation to material risk takers.

7.2

A firm must ensure that its management body in its supervisory function adopts and periodically reviews the general principles of the remuneration policy and is responsible for overseeing its implementation.

[Note: Art. 92(2)(c) of the CRD and Standard 1 of the FSB Compensation Standards]

[Note: CRD]

7.3

A firm must ensure that the implementation of the remuneration policy is, at least annually, subject to central and independent internal review for compliance with policies and procedures for remuneration adopted by the management body in its supervisory function.

[Note: Art. 92(2)(d) of the CRD and Standard 1 of the FSB Compensation Standards]

[Note: CRD]

7.4

A firm that is significant in terms of its size, internal organisation and the nature, scope and complexity of its activities must establish a remuneration committee, and ensure that the committee:

  1. (1) is constituted in a way that enables it to exercise competent and independent judgment on remuneration policies and practices and the incentives created for managing risk, capital and liquidity;
  2. (2) comprises a chair and members who are members of the management body who do not perform any executive function in the firm;
  3. (3) is responsible for the preparation of decisions regarding remuneration, including those which have implications for the risk and risk management of the firm and which are to be taken by the management body; and
  4. (4) takes into account, when preparing such decisions, the long-term interests of shareholders, investors and other stakeholders in the firm as well as the public interest.

[Note: Art. 95 of the CRD and Standard 1 of the FSB Compensation Standards]

[Note: CRD]

7.5

A firm that maintains a website must explain on the website how the firm complies with this Part.

[Note: Art. 96 of the CRD]

[Note: CRD]

8

Control Functions

8.1

A firm must ensure that employees engaged in control functions:

  1. (1) are independent from the business units they oversee;
  2. (2) have appropriate authority; and
  3. (3) are remunerated:
    1. (a) adequately to attract qualified and experienced employees; and
    2. (b) in accordance with the achievement of the objectives linked to their functions, independent of the performance of the business areas they control.

[Note: Art. 92(2)(e) of the CRD and Standard 2 of the FSB Compensation Standards]

[Note: CRD]

8.2

A firm must ensure that the remuneration of the senior officers in risk management and compliance functions is directly overseen by the remuneration committee referred to in 7.4, or, if such a committee has not been established, by the governing body in its supervisory function.

[Note: Art. 92(2)(f) of the CRD]

[Note: CRD]

9

Remuneration and Capital

9.1

A firm must ensure that total variable remuneration does not limit the firm's ability to strengthen its capital base.

[Note: Art. 94(1)(c) of the CRD and Standard 3 of the FSB Compensation Standards]

[Note: CRD]

10

Exceptional Government Intervention

10.1

A firm that benefits from exceptional government intervention must ensure that:

  1. (1) variable remuneration is strictly limited as a percentage of net revenues when it is inconsistent with the maintenance of a sound capital base and timely exit from government support;
  2. (2) it restructures remuneration in a manner aligned with sound risk management and long-term growth, including when appropriate establishing limits to the remuneration of members of its management body; and
  3. (3) no variable or discretionary remuneration of any kind is paid to members of its management body unless this is justified.

[Note: Art. 93 of the CRD and Standard 10 of the FSB Compensation Standards]

[Note: CRD]

11

Risk Adjustment

11.1

  1. (1) A firm must ensure that any measurement of performance used to calculate variable remuneration components or pools of variable remuneration components:
    1. (a) includes adjustments for all types of current and future risks and takes into account the cost and quantity of the capital and the liquidity required; and
    2. (b) takes into account the need for consistency with the timing and likelihood of the firm receiving potential future revenues incorporated into current earnings.
  2. (2) A firm must ensure that the allocation of variable remuneration components within the firm also takes into account all types of current and future risks.

[Note: Arts. 94(1)(j) and (k) of the CRD and Standard 4 of the FSB Compensation Standards]

[Note: CRD]

11.2

A firm must have a clear and verifiable mechanism for measuring performance, with risk adjustment applied thereafter in a clear and transparent manner.

11.3

A firm must base assessments of financial performance used to calculate variable remuneration components or pools of variable remuneration components principally on profits. To determine profits for this purpose, a firm (other than a branch) must adjust its fair valuation accounting model profit figure by the incremental change in its regulatory prudent valuation adjustment figure across the relevant performance period.

11.4

A firm’s risk-adjustment approach must reflect both ex-ante adjustment (which adjusts remuneration for intrinsic risks that are inherent in its business activities) and ex-post adjustment (which adjusts remuneration for crystallisation of specific risk events).

11.5

A firm must not base the ex-ante risk adjustments referred to in 11.4 on revenue-based measures, except as part of a balanced, risk-adjusted scorecard.

11.6

A firm must ensure that its total variable remuneration is generally considerably contracted where subdued or negative financial performance of the firm occurs, taking into account both current remuneration and reductions in payouts of amounts previously earned, including through malus or clawback arrangements.

[Note: Art. 94(1)(n) of the CRD and Standard 5 of the FSB Compensation Standards]

[Note: CRD]

12

Pension Policy

12.1

A firm must ensure that its pension policy is in line with its business strategy, objectives, values and long-term interests.

[Note: Art. 94(1)(o) of the CRD]

[Note: CRD]

12.2

A firm that is not a small CRR firm or a small third country CRR firm must ensure that:

  1. (1) when an employee leaves the firm before retirement, any discretionary pension benefits are held by the firm for a period of five years in the form of instruments referred to in 15.15;
  2. and
  3. (2) when an employee reaches retirement, discretionary pension benefits are paid to the employee in the form of instruments referred to in 15.15 and subject to a five-year retention period.
  4. unless the annual variable remuneration of the employee:
    1. (A) does not exceed £44,000; and
    2. (B) does not represent more than one third of the employee's total annual remuneration.

13

Personal Investment Strategies

13.1

  1. (1) A firm must ensure that its employees undertake not to use personal hedging strategies to undermine the risk alignment effects embedded in their remuneration arrangements.
  2. (2) A firm must ensure that its employees undertake not to use remuneration-related or liability-related contracts of insurance to undermine the risk alignment effects embedded in their remuneration arrangements.
  3. (3) A firm must maintain effective arrangements designed to ensure that employees comply with their undertaking.

[Note: Art. 94(1)(p) of the CRD and Standard 14 of the FSB Compensation Standards]

[Note: CRD]

14

Non-Compliance

14.1

A firm must ensure that variable remuneration is not paid through vehicles or methods that facilitate non-compliance with obligations arising from CRR or this Part.

[Note: Art. 94(1)(q) of the CRD]

[Note: CRD and CRR]

15

Remuneration Structures

General Requirement

15.A1

In this Chapter:

  1. (1) All the requirements of this Chapter apply to a firm that is neither a small CRR firm nor a small third country CRR firm.
  2. (2) 15.1 to 15.14 and 15.20(1) apply to a small CRR firm or a small third country CRR firm.
  3. (3) A firm is not required to comply with 15.15 to 15.19 in respect of an employee whose annual variable remuneration:
    1. (a) does not exceed £44,000; and
    2. (b) does not represent more than one third of the employee's total annual remuneration.

15.1

A firm must ensure that the structure of an employee's remuneration is consistent with and promotes effective risk management.

15.2

A firm must ensure that its remuneration policy makes a clear distinction between criteria for setting:

  1. (1) basic fixed remuneration that primarily reflects an employee's professional experience and organisational responsibility as set out in the employee's job description and terms of employment; and
  2. (2) variable remuneration that reflects performance in excess of that required to fulfil the employee's job description and terms of employment and that is subject to performance adjustment in accordance with this Part.

[Note: Art. 92(2)(g) of the CRD]

[Note: CRD]

15.3

A firm must not award variable remuneration to a non-executive director in relation to his or her role as such.

Assessment of performance

15.4

A firm must ensure that where remuneration is performance-related:

  1. (1) the total amount of remuneration is based on a combination of the assessment of the performance of:
    1. (a) the individual;
    2. (b) the business unit concerned; and
    3. (c) the overall results of the firm; and
  2. (2) when assessing individual performance, financial as well as non-financial criteria are taken into account.

[Note: Art. 94(1)(a) of the CRD and Standard 6 of the FSB Compensation Standards]

[Note: CRD]

15.5

A firm must clearly explain the performance assessment process referred to in 15.4 to relevant employees.

15.6

A firm must ensure that the assessment of performance is set in a multi-year framework in order to ensure that the assessment process is based on longer-term performance and that the actual payment of performance-based components of remuneration is spread over a period which takes account of the underlying business cycle of the firm and its business risks.

[Note: Art. 94(1)(b) of the CRD]

[Note: CRD]

Specific award structures: guaranteed variable remuneration and buy-outs

15.7

A firm must ensure that guaranteed variable remuneration is not part of prospective remuneration plans. A firm must not award, pay or provide guaranteed variable remuneration unless:

  1. (1) it is exceptional;
  2. (2) it occurs in the context of hiring a new employee;
  3. (3) the firm has a sound and strong capital base; and
  4. (4) it is limited to the first year of service.

[Note: Arts. 94(1)(d) and (e) of the CRD and Standard 11 of the FSB Compensation Standards]

[Note: CRD]

Ratio between fixed and variable components of total remuneration

15.9

A firm must set an appropriate ratio between the fixed and variable components of total remuneration and ensure that:

  1. (1) fixed and variable components of total remuneration are appropriately balanced; and
  2. (2) the level of the fixed component represents a sufficiently high proportion of the total remuneration to allow the operation of a fully flexible policy on variable remuneration components, including the possibility to pay no variable remuneration component.
  3. (3) [Deleted]

[Note: Art. 94(1)(f) of the CRD]

[Note: CRD]

 

Payments related to early termination

15.14

A firm must ensure that payments relating to the early termination of a contract reflect performance achieved over time and are designed in a way that does not reward failure or misconduct.

[Note: Art. 94(1)(h) of the CRD and Standard 12 of the FSB Compensation Standards]

[Note: CRD]

Retained shares or other instruments

15.15

A firm must ensure that:

  1. (1) a substantial portion, which is at least 50%, of any variable remuneration consists of an appropriate balance of:
    1. (a) shares or, subject to the legal structure of the firm concerned, equivalent ownership interests; or, subject to the legal structure of the firm concerned, share-linked instruments or equivalent non-cash instruments; and
    2. (b) where possible other instruments which are eligible as Additional Tier 1 instruments or are eligible as Tier 2 instruments or other instruments that can be fully converted to Common Equity Tier 1 instruments or written down, that in each case adequately reflect the credit quality of the firm as a going concern and are appropriate for use as variable remuneration; and
  2. (2) the instruments referred to in paragraph (1) are subject to an appropriate retention policy designed to align incentives with the longer-term interests of the firm.

15.16

A firm must apply 15.15 to both the portion of the variable remuneration component deferred in accordance with 15.17 and 15.18 and the portion not deferred.

[Note: Art. 94(1)(l) of the CRD and Standard 8 of the FSB Compensation Standards]

[Note: CRD]

Deferral

15.17

  1. (1) Unless a longer deferral period is required under (2), a firm must not award, pay or provide a variable remuneration component unless a substantial portion of it, which is at least 40%, is deferred over a period which is not less than:
    1. (a) in the case of a material risk taker who is not subject to (b), four years, vesting no faster than on a pro-rata basis;
    2. (b) in the case of a material risk taker who is a member of the management body or senior management of a significant firm, five years, vesting no faster than on a pro-rata basis.
  2. (2) A firm must not award, pay or provide a variable remuneration component to a higher paid material risk taker unless a substantial portion of it, which is at least 40%, is deferred over a period which is not less than:
    1. (a) in the case of a higher paid material risk taker who does not perform a PRA senior management function, but:
      1. (i) who meets the criteria in 3.1(1)(a) or (b); or
      2. (ii) whose professional activities meet the qualitative criteria set out in 3.2A(1), 3.2A(2) or 3.2A(5)
    2. five years vesting no faster than on a pro-rata basis; or
    3. (b) in the case of a higher paid material risk taker who performs a PRA senior management function, seven years, with no vesting to take place until three years after award, and vesting no faster than on a pro-rata basis thereafter.

15.18

In the case of a variable remuneration component:

  1. (1) of £500,000 or more; or
  2. (2) payable to a director of a firm that is significant in terms of its size, internal organisation and the nature, scope and complexity of its activities;

at least 60% of the amount must be deferred on the basis set out in 15.17.

15.19

Subject to 15.17, the length of the deferral period must be established in accordance with the business cycle, the nature of the business, its risks and the activities of the employee in question.

[Note: Art. 94(1)(m) of the CRD and Standards 6 and 7 of the FSB Compensation Standards]

[Note: CRD]

Performance adjustment

15.20

A firm must ensure that:

  1. (1) any variable remuneration, including a deferred portion, is paid or vests only if it is sustainable according to the financial situation of the firm as a whole, and justified on the basis of the performance of the firm, the business unit and the individual concerned; but in the case of a small CRR firm or a small third country CRR firm, this does not require a firm to impose malus or clawback;
  2. (2) any variable remuneration is subject to clawback, such that it is only awarded if an amount corresponding to it can be recovered from the individual by the firm if the recovery is justified on the basis of the circumstances described in 15.21(2) or in respect of a higher paid material risk taker, 15.23; and
  3. (3A) unless 15.20A applies, any variable remuneration is subject to a clawback period from the date on which the variable remuneration is awarded, in the case of:
    1. (a) the deferred portion of variable remuneration of a material risk taker who is a member of the management body or senior management of a significant firm, of at least six years.
    2. (b) the deferred portion of variable remuneration of a material risk taker who is not subject to (a), of at least five years.
    3. (c) an undeferred portion of variable remuneration, of at least one year.

[Note: Art. 94(1)(n) of the CRD and Standards 6 and 9 of the FSB Compensation Standards]

[Note: CRD]

15.20A

In respect of a higher paid material risk taker, a firm must ensure that:

  1. (1) any variable remuneration is subject to a clawback period from the date on which the variable remuneration is awarded of at least 7 years from the date on which the variable remuneration is awarded;
  2. (2) in the case of a higher paid material risk taker who performs a PRA senior management function, the firm can, by notice to the employee to be given no later than 7 years after the variable remuneration was awarded, extend the period during which variable remuneration is subject to clawback to at least 10 years from the date on which the variable remuneration is awarded, where:
    1. (a) the firm has commenced an investigation into facts or events which it considers could potentially lead to the application of clawback were it not for the expiry of the clawback period; or
    2. (b) the firm has been notified by a regulatory authority (including an overseas regulatory authority) that an investigation has been commenced into facts or events which the firm considers could potentially lead to the application of clawback by the firm were it not for the expiry of the clawback period; and
  3. (3) it considers on an ongoing basis whether to use the power in (2).

15.21

A firm must:

  1. (1) set specific criteria for the application of malus and clawback; and
  2. (2) ensure that the criteria for the application of malus and clawback in particular cover situations where the employee:
    1. (a) participated in or was responsible for conduct which resulted in significant losses to the firm; or
    2. (b) failed to meet appropriate standards of fitness and propriety.

[Note: Art. 94(1)(n) of the CRD]

[Note: CRD]

15.22

In respect of a higher paid material risk taker:

  1. (1) a firm should reduce unvested deferred variable remuneration when, as a minimum:
    1. (a) there is reasonable evidence of employee misbehaviour or material error;
    2. (b) the firm or the relevant business unit suffers a material downturn in its financial performance; or
    3. (c) the firm or the relevant business unit suffers a material failure of risk management.
  2. (2) For performance adjustment purposes, awards of deferred variable remuneration made in shares or other non-cash instruments should provide the ability for a firm to reduce the number of shares or other non-cash instruments.
  3. (3) Contravention of any of (1) or (2) may be relied on as tending to establish contravention of 15.20(1). Contravention of (1) or (2) does not give rise to any of the consequences provided for by provisions of FSMA other than section 138C.

15.23

In respect of a higher paid material risk taker, a firm must make all reasonable efforts to recover an appropriate amount corresponding to some or all vested variable remuneration where either of the following circumstances arise during the period in which clawback applies (including any part of such period occurring after the relevant employment has ceased):

  1. (1) there is reasonable evidence of employee misbehaviour or material error; or
  2. (2) the firm or the relevant business unit suffers a material failure of risk management.

A firm must take into account all relevant factors (including, where the circumstances described in (2) arise, the proximity of the employee to the failure of risk management in question and the employee’s level of responsibility) in deciding whether and to what extent it is reasonable to seek recovery of any or all of their vested variable remuneration.

15A

Buy-Outs

Application

15A.1

This Chapter applies where:

  1. (1) a firm agrees with an employee to pay or provide a buy-out;
  2. (2) the buy-out relates to employment with, or provision of services to, a previous firm that was subject to the remuneration requirements; and
  3. (3) the employee was a material risk taker in that previous firm.

Obligations applicable to a new firm

15A.2

A firm may only award, pay or provide a buy-out to an employee if it enters into a contract with the employee which enables the firm, following receipt of a reduction notice, to:

  1. (1) reduce all or part of the buy-out in accordance with 15.22(1)(a) and (c), (2) and (3); and
  2. (2) recover all or part of the buy-out in accordance with 15.23.

15A.3

  1. (1) A firm must ensure a buy-out aligns with the long term interests of the firm including appropriate retention, deferral, performance and clawback arrangements.
  2. (2) The duration of retention, deferral, performance and clawback arrangements applied to a buy-out, or part of a buy-out, must be no shorter than such duration as was applied and remained outstanding in relation to unvested variable remuneration awarded by a previous firm to the person as an employee of that previous firm.

[Note: Art. 94(1)(i) of the CRD]

15A.4

  1. (1) A firm must obtain remuneration statements from the employee before agreeing to provide the employee with a buy-out.
  2. (2) The amount of a buy-out may be no greater than the aggregate amount of unvested variable remuneration referred to in the remuneration statements provided to the firm by the employee.

15A.5

  1. (1) A firm must, in writing, inform a previous firm (“buy-out notice”):
    1. (a) that it has entered into a contract which includes the terms required by 15A.2;
    2. (b) of the amount attributable to unvested variable remuneration paid to the employee by that previous firm; and
    3. (c) of the duration of retention, deferral, performance and clawback arrangements that would apply to the amount or part of the amount identified in (b).
  2. (2) Where the buy-out does not include an amount attributable to unvested variable remuneration paid to the employee by a previous firm, (1) does not apply.

15A.6

On receipt of a reduction notice from a previous firm, the firm must reduce, or make all reasonable efforts to recover an amount corresponding to, the buy-out, in the amounts notified to it by the previous firm, before the vesting of the next relevant deferred payment, or in a case where clawback is applicable, within a reasonable period, and in any event, no later than the end of the applicable clawback periods in 15.20(3) and 15.20(4).

Obligations applicable to a previous firm

15A.7

  1. (1) A previous firm must provide its employee or former employee with a statement (“remuneration statement”) containing the following information:
    1. (a) all periods during which the employee was a material risk taker;
    2. (b) the amount of unvested variable remuneration available to be bought out applicable to the periods during which the employee was a material risk taker; and
    3. (c) the duration of retention, deferral, performance and clawback arrangements that the previous firm would apply to each amount or part of an amount identified in (b).
  2. (2) The information in (1) must be provided to the employee or former employee within 14 working days of a request by that employee or former employee.

15A.8

  1. (1) A previous firm which has received a buy-out notice must, in relation to that former employee, consider whether it would have reduced unvested variable remuneration or required the repayment of an amount corresponding to vested variable remuneration in accordance with the criteria it has set under 15.21 until the end of the last period contained in the remuneration statement it provided to that employee.
  2. (2) Consideration of any reduction of unvested variable remuneration must only cover reductions for reasons contained in 15.22(1)(a) and (c).

15A.9

  1. (1) The previous firm must determine the amounts by which it would have:
    1. (a) reduced unvested variable remuneration; or
    2. (b) required the repayment of an amount corresponding to vested variable remuneration
    3. had the former employee remained in its employment or been providing services and the duration of retention, deferral, performance and clawback arrangements were as notified under 15A.5(c).
  2. (2) The previous firm must make such determinations fairly and reasonably, including by:
    1. (a) providing the former employee with details and reasons for the proposed determination;
    2. (b) enabling the former employee to make representations as to why the proposed determination in (a) should not be made; and
    3. (c) taking account of those representations in making the determination.
  3. (3) The previous firm must, in writing, notify the firm and the employee of any amounts determined under (1) no later than 14 working days after it makes its final determination (“a reduction notice”).

General

15A.10

A firm must not:

  1. (a) structure any element of an employee’s remuneration in a way that could result in remuneration which otherwise would be characterised as part of a buy-out, not being characterised as such; or
  2. (b) act or fail to act in a way which would otherwise seek to avoid the requirements of this chapter.

15A.11

A contravention of 15A.9(2) by a firm is actionable at the suit of a private person who suffers loss as a result of the contravention, subject to the defences and other incidents applying to such actions for breach of statutory duty.

16

Breach of the Remuneration Rules

16.1

Subject to 16.2 to 16.7, the voiding provisions in 16.9 to 16.13 apply in relation to the prohibitions on material risk takers being remunerated in the ways specified in:

  1. (1) 15.7 (guaranteed variable remuneration);
  2. (2) 15.17 to 15.19 (deferred variable remuneration);
  3. (3) 15.20(2) (performance adjustment – clawback);
  4. (3A) 15A.2 (buy-out contract);and
  5. (4) 16.16 (replacing payments recovered or property transferred).

16.2

16.1 applies only to those prohibitions as they apply in relation to a firm that satisfies either Condition 1 or Condition 2, as set out in 16.3 and 16.4.

16.3

Condition 1 is that the firm is a CRR firm that has relevant total assets exceeding £50 billion.

16.4

Condition 2 is that the firm:

  1. (1) is a credit institution or a UK designated investment firm; and
  2. (2) is part of a group containing a firm that has relevant total assets exceeding £50 billion and that is a CRR firm.

16.5

For the purposes of 16.3 and 16.4 “relevant total assets” means the arithmetic mean of the firm’s total assets as set out in its balance sheet on its last three accounting reference dates.

16.6

The voiding provisions in 16.9 to 16.13 do not apply in relation to the prohibition on material risk takers being remunerated in the way specified in 15.7 (guaranteed variable remuneration) if both the conditions in paragraphs (2) and (3) of that rule are met.

16.7

The voiding provisions in 16.9 to 16.13 do not apply in relation to a material risk taker (X) in respect of whom both the following conditions are satisfied:

  1. (1) Condition 1 is that X’s variable remuneration is no more than 33% of total remuneration; and
  2. (2) Condition 2 is that X’s total remuneration is no more than £500,000.

16.8

In relation to 16.7:

  1. (1) references to remuneration are to remuneration awarded or paid in respect of the relevant performance year;
  2. (2) the amount of any remuneration is:
    1. (a) if it is money, its amount when awarded;
    2. (b) otherwise, whichever of the following is greatest: its value to the recipient when awarded; its market value when awarded; or the cost of providing it at the time of the award;
  3. (3) where remuneration is, when awarded, subject to any condition, restriction or other similar provision which causes the amount of the remuneration to be less than it otherwise would be, that condition, restriction or provision is to be ignored in arriving at its value; and
  4. (4) it is to be assumed that the material risk taker will remain so for the duration of the relevant performance year.

Voiding provisions

16.9

Any provision of an agreement that contravenes a prohibition on persons being remunerated in a way specified in a rule to which this rule applies (a “contravening provision”) is void.

16.10

A contravening provision does not cease to be void because:

  1. (1) the firm concerned ceases to satisfy any of the conditions set out in 16.3 to 16.4; or
  2. (2) the material risk taker concerned starts to satisfy both of the conditions set out in 16.7 (1) and (2).

16.11

A contravening provision that, at the time a rule to which this rule applies was first made (including any corresponding rules specified in SYSC 19A.3.54R of the PRA Handbook), is contained in an agreement made before that time is not rendered void by 16.9 unless it is subsequently amended so as to contravene such a rule.

16.12

  1. (1) A pre-existing provision is not rendered void by 16.9.
  2. (2) In this Chapter, a pre-existing provision is any provision of an agreement that would (but for this rule) be rendered void by 16.9 that was agreed at a time when either:
    1. (a) the firm concerned did not satisfy any of the conditions set out in 16.3 to 16.4; or
    2. (b) the material risk taker concerned satisfied both of the conditions set out in 16.7(1) and (2).
  3. (3) But an amendment to, or in relation to, a pre-existing provision is not to be treated as a pre-existing provision where the amendment is agreed at a time when both:
    1. (a) the firm concerned satisfies at least one of the conditions set out in 16.3 to 16.4; and
    2. (b) the material risk taker concerned does not satisfy both of the conditions set out in 16.7(1) and (2).

16.13

For the purposes of this Chapter, it is immaterial whether the law which (apart from 16.9 to 16.16) governs a contravening provision is the law of the UK, or of a part of the UK.

Recovery of payments made or property transferred pursuant to a void contravening provision

16.14

In relation to any payment made or other property transferred in pursuance of a contravening provision other than a pre-existing provision, a firm must take reasonable steps to:

  1. (1) recover any such payment made or other property transferred by the firm; and
  2. (2) ensure that any other person recovers any such payment made or other property transferred by that person.

16.15

16.14 continues to apply in one or both of the following cases:

  1. (1) the firm concerned ceases to satisfy any of the conditions set out in 16.3 to 16.4;
  2. (2) the material risk taker concerned starts to satisfy both of the conditions set out in 16.7 (1) and (2).

Replacing payments recovered or property transferred

16.16

  1. (1) A firm must not award, pay or provide variable remuneration to a person who has received remuneration in pursuance of a contravening provision other than a pre-existing provision (the "contravening remuneration") unless the firm has obtained a legal opinion stating that the award, payment or provision of the remuneration complies with this Part.
  2. (2) This rule applies:
    1. (a) in the case of a contravention of 15A.4, only to remuneration relating to the commencement of employment with or provision of services for the firm; and
    2. (b) in any other case, only to variable remuneration relating to a performance year to which the contravening remuneration related.
  3. (3) The legal opinion in (1) must be properly reasoned and be provided by an appropriately qualified independent individual.
  4. (4) Paragraph (1) continues to apply in one or both of the following cases:
    1. (a) the firm concerned ceases to satisfy any of the conditions set out in 16.3 to 16.4;
    2. (b) the material risk taker concerned starts to satisfy both of the conditions set out in 16.7(1) and (2).

17

Remuneration Benchmarking Reporting Requirement

17.1

This Chapter applies to a firm to which this Part applies, which had total assets equal to or greater than £50 billion on an unconsolidated basis on the accounting reference date immediately prior to the firm’s last complete financial year.

17.3

The firm must provide to the PRA, by way of its Remuneration Benchmarking Information Report, the information disclosed in accordance with the criteria for disclosure established in points (g), (h) and (i) of Article 450(1) of the CRR.

[Note: Art. 75(1) of the CRD]

[Note: CRD and CRR]

17.5

A firm that is not, and does not have in its consolidation group, an undertaking responsible for consolidation must complete that report on an unconsolidated basis in respect of remuneration awarded to employees of the firm in the last completed financial year.

17.6

An undertaking responsible for consolidation must complete that report on a consolidated basis in respect of remuneration awarded to all employees of all consolidation group entities in its consolidation group in the last completed financial year.

17.7

The firm must ensure that the information in the Remuneration Benchmarking Information Report is denominated in euro, determined by reference to the exchange rate used by the European Commission for financial programming and the budget for December of the reported year.

[Note: EBA/GL/2014/08]

18

High Earners Reporting Requirement

18.1

The Chapter applies in relation to high earners and not only in relation to material risk takers.

18.2

A firm must submit a High Earners Report to the PRA annually.

18.3

The firm must submit that report to the PRA within four months of the end of the firm’s accounting reference date.

18.4

A firm that is not, and does not have in its consolidation group, an undertaking responsible for consolidation must complete that report on an unconsolidated basis in respect of remuneration awarded in the last completed financial year to all high earners of the firm who mainly undertook their professional activities within the UK.

18.5

An undertaking responsible for consolidation must complete that report on a consolidated basis in respect of remuneration awarded in the last completed financial year to all high earners of the consolidation group entities who mainly undertook their professional activities within the UK at:

  1. (1) the PRA approved parent holding company, PRA designated parent holding company, PRA approved intermediate holding company, a PRA designated intermediate holding company or a PRA designated institution of the consolidation group;
  2. (2) each consolidation group entity that has its registered office (or if it has no registered office, its head office) in the UK; and
  3. (3) each branch of any other consolidation group entity that is established or operating in the UK.

18.6

The firm’s High Earners Report must report, in pay brackets of €1m, the number of high earners, including their job responsibilities, the business area involved and the main elements of salary, bonus, long-term award and pension contribution. The number of high earners must be reported as the number of natural persons, independent of the number of working hours on which their contract is based.

[Note: Art. 75(3) of the CRD]

[Note: CRD]

18.7

The firm must ensure that the information in the High Earners Report is denominated in euro, determined by reference to the exchange rate used by the European Commission for financial programming and the budget for December of the reported year.

[Note: EBA/GL/2014/07]