Depfa chiefs paid over €44m

The top managers and directors of Depfa Bank, the Dublin-based but Frankfurt-listed bank, were paid more than €44 million last…

Depfa bank chief executive, Gerhard Bruckerman. Top managers and directors at the firm, which is based in Dublin but is Frankfurt listed, were paid over 144 million last year.

The top managers and directors of Depfa Bank, the Dublin-based but Frankfurt-listed bank, were paid more than €44 million last year, according to its latest annual report.

The remuneration package, heavily-weighted in favour of the six members of Depfa's executive committee, exceeds that of the largest Irish banks and that of Germany's biggest bank, Deutsche Bank, whose management board shared €28.72 million last year.

AIB, the biggest domestic retail bank by market capitalisation, said this week that its executive directors' received €7.96 million in pay and benefit last year.

Depfa's 2005 report shows that "key management compensation" rose to €44.23 million last year from €34.84 million in 2004. Included in that sum was remuneration of €40.26 million, shared between the executive committee. The members are: chairman and chief executive Gerhard Bruckermann; deputy chief executive Matthias Mosler; chief financial officer Reinhard Grzesik; managing directors Bo Heide-Ottosen and Andrew Readinger; and Rolf Hengsteler.

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Depfa spokesman Hanno Strube attributed the rise in pay to the increase in the bank's share price, which traded at around €4 in 2004 and was trading yesterday at €14.65. Shares allocated to top managers under trust plans in 2003 and 2004 matured last year, he said.

Eight non-executive directors and three executive members of Depfa's board received significantly less than their counterparts on the executive committee, sharing €3.96 million.

This was heavily weighted in favour of Mr Bruckerman, Mr Grzesik and former AIB executive Dermot Cahillane. Non-executive directors include former Central Bank head Maurice O'Connell.

Arthur Beesley

Arthur Beesley

Arthur Beesley is Current Affairs Editor of The Irish Times