Ex-Investec traders lose $10m London bonus battle
By Kirstin Ridley
The latest bank bonus battle comes as governments and regulators attempt to rein in lofty levels of compensation blamed for creating a culture of excessive risk in an industry that sowed the seeds of the 2007-08 financial crisis.
He noted that both men struck him as decent and highly talented individuals, who genuinely believed they had developed a retail structured product business which generated economic value for the bank to which they were entitled to a share.
But he said the court could only judge what was fair in terms of contract.
"It is unfortunate that these claims were ever issued, but we move on from here vindicated in our approach."
But Judge Leggatt said on Wednesday that although he did not think Brogden and Reid's evidence was invented or dishonest, he had been persuaded that no oral accord had been made during their pre-contractural discussions with Van Der Walt.
"Not only did they seem to me to be sincere and straightforward individuals, but the account they gave does not have the hallmarks of deliberate concoction. It much more likely has its origin in something actually said, however great the distortion in the claimants' recollections," he said.
Lawyers for Brogden and Reid were not immediately available for comment.
(1 US dollar = 0.5939 British pound)

