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BofA to Pay Special Bonuses for Second Year After Tax, Job Cuts

Special bonuses are one way banks have been reacting to a Republican tax overhaul that was particularly generous to their industry

BofA to Pay Special Bonuses for Second Year After Tax, Job Cuts
Bank of America Corp. signage is displayed outside the company’s headquarters in Charlotte, North Carolina, U.S. (Photographer: Chris Keane/Bloomberg)

(Bloomberg) -- Bank of America Corp. plans to reward staff with special bonuses for a second straight year after seeing profits soar on tax cuts and a focus on expenses that’s eliminated thousands of jobs in recent months.

The lender will give $1,000 cash bonuses in December to eligible employees making less than $100,000 annually, Chief Executive Officer Brian Moynihan said in an internal memo Monday. Many higher-paid employees will receive a stock award early next year. He cited the company’s record quarterly profit as a reason for the payouts.

“Last year, approximately 90 percent of our teammates received such an award; this year, that figure will increase to approximately 95 percent,” Moynihan wrote of the bonuses.

Special bonuses are one way banks have been reacting to a Republican tax overhaul that was particularly generous to their industry. Collectively, large U.S. banks have been ramping up payouts to investors and staff, while often continuing to pare their workforces. Bank of America had almost 204,700 employees at the end of September, or about 4,700 fewer than at the end of 2017 -- one of the industry’s most dramatic reductions.

The bank’s long focus on expenses reached a milestone last quarter, as headcount fell below the level it was at in the second quarter of 2008, before its crisis-era acquisitions of subprime lender Countrywide Financial Corp. and investment bank Merrill Lynch & Co.

The special stock awards -- between 200 and 500 restricted shares per worker -- will be given to employees earning between $100,000 and $350,000 in annual compensation, delivered over four years, according to the memo.

Last year, a number of U.S. companies including Wells Fargo & Co., Fifth Third Bancorp, AT&T Inc. and Comcast Corp. also handed out bonuses tied to the tax plan.

To contact the reporter on this story: Lananh Nguyen in New York at lnguyen35@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Michael J. Moore at mmoore55@bloomberg.net, David Scheer, Dan Reichl

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