Lucrative Bonuses for Wall Street CEOs Take Shape on Trump Win

Donald Trump’s return to the White House is already starting to tee up a deluge of bonuses in Wall Street’s corridors of power.

At Goldman Sachs Group Inc., the prospect that investment banks and buyout shops will again be among the top beneficiaries of Trump’s regulatory and tax agenda has sent its stock price soaring. If the gains hold over coming weeks, it will trigger a key threshold for David Solomon to eventually collect a special payout, which at current performance levels would be worth at least $50 million.

At buyout shop Carlyle Group Inc., shares jumped 10% on Wednesday to their highest level under Chief Executive Officer Harvey Schwartz. If they stay near the current level for another month, it will unlock another $50 million of his signing bonus. At JPMorgan Chase & Co., Wednesday’s rally boosted the running value of Jamie Dimon’s retention package by almost $40 million, alongside roughly $190 million of gains on the stock he already holds.

Financial stocks led gains in the hours after Trump’s victory, with investors betting the industry will benefit from less government resistance to corporate takeovers, lighter banking regulation and more corporate tax cuts. Dealmaking had been in a slump this year as Biden’s antitrust department challenged acquisitions that might hurt consumers.

david solomon

CEOs at all of the firms made significant progress toward targets in the years before Trump’s victory. At TPG Inc., the stock was up 41% in 2024 before votes were tallied. The next day’s 11% jump then helped push the price above the level that would unlock another $65 million of a long-term stock award for the private equity firm’s CEO, Jon Winkelried.

Indeed, some payouts began lining up in the days before the election, with stocks tipping over the top just as investors began shifting bets.