13 giant wealth management firms paid CEOs an average of $29M

The CEO pay of the largest publicly traded wealth management firms may not carry much weight for financial advisors, but it represents a barometer of the industry's bottom line.

Judging by the below rankings of CEO compensation across 13 of the biggest firms in the business, wealth management scored big for them last year. While the firms at the top of the list — JPMorgan Chase, Goldman Sachs, Bank of America and Citi — can point to any number of other business units adding to their bottom lines, each in the baker's dozen of companies garners at least some of its revenue from direct retail wealth management. Goldman's David Solomon joined JPMorgan's Jamie Dimon in a tie for the top spot — creating a slightly different makeup for the group from the prior year.

The megabanks tend to reward their CEOs more handsomely than the comparatively smaller wealth management giants, but their annual meetings attract more attention from shareholder groups raising objections to the companies' executive compensation packages. And advisors are more likely to notice the pay for specific wealth management leadership roles, such as Morgan Stanley's Andy Saperstein and Citi's Andy Sieg, than the amount provided to the overall CEO, according to Jason Diamond, an executive vice president and senior consultant with advisor recruiting firm Diamond Consultants.

"It is probably not something that advisors point to when leaving or joining a firm, but I think it contributes to what a lot of times advisors will describe as a cultural mismatch," Diamond said. The massive pay number for the C-suite and other high-level roles at publicly traded firms reflects whether the company has "stable, solid leadership that's done a good job with your stock price," he noted. In other words, the figures turn advisors' heads, but only sometimes.

"They care to the extent that they need to care. Some CEOs take a pretty hands-off approach to wealth management," Diamond said. "Advisors care about the people who impact their business and the people who have a voice in their business."

The questions of whether a company is providing "the tools they need to be an effective financial advisor to their clients" and paying them appropriately matter more to most advisors than the firm's CEO pay, according to Jodie Papike, the CEO of independent advisor and executive recruiting firm Cross-Search. The right infrastructure, technology and support loom larger than executive pay, she said.

"Sometimes those numbers will be so high that it catches their attention, but I think, for the most part, advisors don't care," Papike said. "Those are the things that really matter, but CEO pay is not going to move the needle for an advisor."

For a look at the CEO pay last year at 13 of the largest firms in wealth management, scroll down the slideshow. And follow these links to see previous CEO pay packages in 2023, 2022 and 2021.

Note: Each of the firms shared executive pay in their 2025 proxy statements or 2024 annual reports. Financial Planning used the most precise and highest available figures using the firms' summary compensation tables, news reports aggregating the companies' CEO pay or other figures from their annual filings.

LPL Financial

lpl-financial
CEO: Richard "Rich" Steinmeier
2024 total compensation: $12,031,805*
2023 total compensation: $16,937,790 (paid to former CEO Dan Arnold)
2024 vs. 2023: -$4,905,985 (decrease of 29%)

Other notable executive compensation: Matthew Enyedi, managing director of client success ($2,900,570); Greg Gates, managing director, chief technology and innovation officer ($3,864,169)

Median annual total compensation of all employees (other than CEO): $91,783
CEO to employee pay ratio: 131 to 1

Remark: "We believe that a competitive pay package is a critical tool in our efforts to attract and retain qualified executives," according to the firm's proxy statement. "The Compensation Committee's goal is to ensure that we continue to measure our compensation practices against organizations that compete with us for key executives, that are considered important benchmarks in our industry and that are comparable in size and scope to our business."

*Steinmeier took over as CEO in October. 

READ MORE: LPL pays CEO Steinmeier $12M as promised

UBS

UBS
CEO: Sergio Ermotti 
2024 total compensation: $17,006,235*
2023 total compensation: $14,125,000*
2024 vs. 2023: $2,881,235 (increase of 20%)

Remark: "The Board of Directors recognizes Mr. Ermotti's strong and effective leadership throughout 2024 and his continued excellent performance, in particular with progress on the integration of Credit Suisse, delivering a strong financial performance and positioning UBS for long-term growth," according to the firm's annual report. "We completed over 4,000 integration milestones in 2024, including delivering on key legal-entity integrations that unlocked benefits such as the successful migration of over 90% of client accounts outside of Switzerland onto UBS platforms and a more efficient capital utilization."

*As a foreign company, the wirehouse's parent doesn't file annual proxy statements with the SEC that include the same information available about other publicly traded firms.

Raymond James

Raymond James
CEO: Paul Reilly
2024 total compensation: $24,050,000
2023 total compensation: $34,912,956
2024 vs. 2023: -$10,862,956 (decrease of 31%)

Other notable executive compensation: Paul Shoukry, former president who took over as CEO in February ($8,500,000); Scott Curtis, chief operating officer ($5,600,000)

Median annual total compensation of all employees (other than CEO): $119,044
CEO to employee pay ratio: 202 to 1

Remark: "We compete for talent with other large financial services firms throughout the United States, Canada, the United Kingdom and Europe, and our ability to sustain or improve our position in this highly competitive environment depends substantially on our ability to continue to attract and retain the most qualified employees," according to the firm's proxy statement. "We thus strive to design compensation programs that enable us to attract, motivate and retain high-quality executive officers and ensure that their individual interests are aligned with those of our shareholders. Our pay-for-performance goal is to reward executive officers for the achievement of near-term and long-term strategic and operational goals, while at the same time avoiding excessive risk-taking. We therefore structure our incentive awards to include vesting, deferred payment, and cancellation and clawback provisions that protect the company." 

READ MORE: Raymond James delivers big CEO payday

Charles Schwab

Charles-Schwab-window-Bloomberg-News
CEO: Walter "Walt" Bettinger II
2024 total compensation: $26,388,559
2023 total compensation: $23,871,744
2024 vs. 2023: $2,516,815 (increase of 11%)

Other notable executive compensation: Richard "Rick" Wurster, former president of Schwab who took over as CEO on Jan. 1 ($12,549,487); Charles Schwab, co-chairman ($8,566,408)

Median annual total compensation of all employees (other than CEO): $125,038
CEO to employee pay ratio: 211 to 1

Remark: "Mr. Bettinger's longstanding leadership and dedication has made a positive and lasting impact on the company and the clients we serve," according to the firm's proxy statement. "His legacy of growth and transformation has made the company what it is today and has positioned the company for success for many years to come." 

READ MORE: Schwab gives Bettinger big CEO comp send-off

Ameriprise

Ameriprise financial bloomberg
CEO: James "Jim" Cracchiolo
2024 total compensation: $28,750,000
2023 total compensation: $25,625,000
2024 vs. 2023: $3,125,000 (increase of 12%)

Other notable executive compensation: Joseph Sweeney, president of advice and wealth management products and service delivery ($6,024,233)

Median annual total compensation of all employees (other than CEO): $134,226
CEO to employee pay ratio: 210 to 1

Remark: "Mr. Cracchiolo provided exemplary and essential leadership and continued to grow and evolve the business and deliver strong results again in 2024," according to the firm's proxy statement. "Through his vision and oversight of the company's strategy and execution, Ameriprise continued to generate superior shareholder value with significant financial and strong metric results, while expertly navigating a fluid operating environment. Under Mr. Cracchiolo's leadership, the company remained focused on its strategy, made significant investments for future growth, served clients extremely well, and continued to improve organizational efficiency and effectiveness. In addition, he continued to reinforce the company's culture and values, maintain strong employee engagement and organizational effectiveness while ensuring effective risk management." 

READ MORE: Ameriprise CEO James Cracchiolo sees a bump in compensation

Edward Jones

Edward Jones
CEO: Penny Pennington 
2024 total compensation: $29,061,944
2023 total compensation: $25,123,962
2024 vs. 2023: $3,937,982 (increase of 16%)

Other notable executive compensation: Kenneth Cella Jr., head of external affairs ($22,273,644)

Median annual total compensation of all employees (other than CEO): $115,474
CEO to employee pay ratio: 252 to 1

Remark: "The partnership's compensation program allocates profits to general partners, including members of its [executive leadership team], primarily based upon their ownership interests in the partnership," according to the annual report of Edward Jones' parent firm. "As general partners, ELT members benefit annually from the profits of the Partnership through current cash payments from short-term results and from having an opportunity to continue to share in the long-term profitability of the organization. By owning general partnership interests, ELT members are encouraged to balance short-term and long-term results of the partnership as they have a significant amount of capital at risk. Also, by sharing in any annual operating loss of the partnership, all general partners, including ELT members, have a direct incentive to manage risk and focus on the short- and long-term financial results of the partnership."

READ MORE: As Edward Jones targets ultrarich, its CEO sees payday boost

BNY

The logo of BNY
CEO: Robin Vince
2024 total compensation: $29,350,000
2023 total compensation: $23,000,000
2024 vs. 2023: $6,350,000 (increase of 28%)

Other notable executive compensation: Catherine Keating, senior executive vice president and global head of BNY Wealth ($7,295,600)

Median annual total compensation of all employees (other than CEO): $80,839
CEO to employee pay ratio: 363 to 1

Remark: Vince "delivered top-line revenue growth, outperformed on operating leverage and achieved double digit EPS growth," while he also "embedded enterprise strategic pillars ('Be More for Our Clients, Run Our Company Better, and Power Our Culture') into the lexicon of the company as 'the what' we are focused on for our transformation," according to the firm's proxy statement.

Wells Fargo

Wells Fargo
CEO: Charles "Charlie" Scharf 
2024 total compensation: $30,313,559
2023 total compensation: $25,966,198
2024 vs. 2023: $4,347,361 (increase of 17%)

Median annual total compensation of all employees (other than CEO): $80,296
CEO to employee pay ratio: 378 to 1

Remark: In 2024, Scharf "led significant progress for the company across multiple areas; resulting in increased growth and improvements in how we serve our customers and communities," continued to "strengthen the leadership team and attract and develop top talent across the Company, including succession readiness, with three of the 16 Operating Committee members new to their roles in 2024" and maintained programs aimed at the evolution of Wells Fargo's culture to make it "a better and simpler place to work; and introduced new career development and mobility resources," according to the firm's proxy statement.

READ MORE: Pay soared for the CEOs of Wells Fargo, other big banks

Morgan Stanley

Morgan Stanley
CEO: Edward "Ted" Pick
2024 total compensation: $34,000,000
2023 total compensation: $37,000,000 (paid to former CEO James Gorman)
2024 vs. 2023: -$3,000,000 (decrease of 8%)

Other notable executive compensation: Andrew "Andy" Saperstein, co-president, head of investment management and head of wealth management ($27,000,000); James Gorman, executive chairman ($27,000,000)

Median annual total compensation of all employees (other than CEO): $138,509
CEO to employee pay ratio: 245 to 1

Remark: "This determination was based on an evaluation of 2024 firm and CEO performance against predetermined performance priorities and strategic objectives as exceptional, including Mr. Pick's successful completion of the leadership transition and reporting strong financial results that reflect execution of a clear and consistent long-term strategy focused on driving revenue, strong capital, liquidity and earnings, maintaining expense discipline, investing in risk and controls across the firm and delivering the full, integrated firm to clients," according to Morgan Stanley's proxy statement. 

READ MORE: Morgan Stanley pays CEO $34M in first year leading bank

Citi

Citigroup Citi
CEO: Jane Fraser
2024 total compensation: $34,500,000
2023 total compensation: $25,458,313
2024 vs. 2023: $9,041,687 (increase of 36%)

Other notable executive compensation: Andy Sieg, head of wealth ($16,167,945)

Median annual total compensation of all employees (other than CEO): $70,138
CEO to employee pay ratio: 492 to 1

Remark: "As Citi's CEO since early 2021, Ms. Fraser has taken bold steps to improve Citi — fixing a complicated risk-taking organization with a truly global presence and running the organization differently than it has been run in the past," according to the firm's proxy statement. "Her leadership is strong, stable and transparent as the firm addresses many challenges and adjusts to significant changes in an intensely competitive environment. The full Board of Directors recognizes the high degree of difficulty of the task and the specific and tangible positive change in multiple aspects of the organization that have resulted from Ms. Fraser's efforts, and the Compensation Committee reflected this view in its pay decision." 

READ MORE: Citi lifts CEO Fraser's pay by a third to $34.5 million

Bank of America

Bank of America sign
CEO: Brian Moynihan
2024 total compensation: $35,000,000
2023 total compensation: $29,000,000
2024 vs. 2023: $6,000,000 (increase of 21%)

Median annual total compensation of all employees (other than CEO): $117,234
CEO to employee pay ratio: 299 to 1

Remark: In 2024, Bank of America displayed "organic growth across all businesses and key market share gains, positioning the company for strong performance in 2025," so the compensation is a "recognition of Mr. Moynihan's industry leadership and unwavering focus on responsible growth," considering the total shareholder return of 34% last year, as well as the "peer benchmark data and trends" such as the "relative size, scope and complexity" of the firm, according to the megabank's annual proxy statement.

Goldman Sachs

Jim McNamara joined Goldman Sachs in 1998, became managing director in 2000 and made partner in 2006.
CEO: David Solomon
2024 total compensation: $39,000,000
2023 total compensation: $31,000,000
2024 vs. 2023: $8,000,000 (increase of 26%)

Median annual total compensation of all employees (other than CEO): $162,703
CEO to employee pay ratio: 240 to 1

Remark: "Mr. Solomon displayed steadfast and effective leadership of our firm during 2024, demonstrating an unwavering focus on the execution of our long-term strategy, including making the necessary investments to enhance our capabilities across all lines of defense," according to the company's annual proxy statement. "He served as a skilled ambassador with our clients, shareholders and broader stakeholders and embodied an authentic commitment to our people and culture."

READ MORE: Goldman gives CEO Solomon $80M in stock to stay put, raises pay 26%

JPMorgan Chase

Signage stands on display outside the JPMorgan & Chase Tower in downtown Chicago, Illinois, U.S., on Saturday, Oct. 7, 2017. AKA J.P. Morgan.
CEO: James "Jamie" Dimon
2024 total compensation: $39,000,000
2023 total compensation: $36,000,000
2024 vs. 2023: $3,000,000 (increase of 8%)

Other notable executive compensation: Mary Callahan Erdoes, CEO of asset and wealth management ($28,500,000) 

Median annual total compensation of all employees (other than CEO): $108,218
CEO to employee pay ratio: 360 to 1

Remark: "In determining Mr. Dimon's compensation, independent members of the board considered his exemplary leadership and achievements across the firm's four broad performance dimensions," according to the firm's proxy statement.

READ MORE: JPMorgan boosts Dimon's pay to $39M after record profit
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