Remuneration Information • Mar 27, 2020
Remuneration Information
Open in ViewerOpens in native device viewer
2020 REMUNERATION POLICY AND 2019 REMUNERATION REPORT

FINECO. SIMPLIFYING BANKING.

FinecoBank S.p.A.
Annex – I and II

as Chairman of the Remuneration Committee, I am pleased to present you the FinecoBank Group's Compensation Policy for 2020.
The document starts with: an "Executive Summary", which summarizes the features of the new Remuneration Policy and the main results achieved in 2019. Then two Sections follow ahead: the" 2020 remuneration policy" which describes the key principles of our approach to the remuneration and incentive systems for Employees and Financial Advisors, as well as Fineco's compensation practices; the "2019 Remuneration Report", which provides detailed information on the results of the implemented processes in the previous financial year.
This year like others, we propose a transparent and easily accessible Policy, oriented towards rewarding performance and merit thanks to promoting the value of equity, sustainability, diversity of human resources and development of people's strategic skills. Our approach is based on the concept of transparency, as an element able to protect and strengthen our reputation and to create value over long term, in the interest of all the stakeholders.
2019 closed for FinecoBank Group with the best results ever, an important element because it was obtained in a challenging and complex context for the financial markets and for Fineco, which faced the deconsolidation of the Unicredit Group (effective from May 10, 2019) and the definitive exit of Unicredit from the shareholding structure (effective from July 8, 2019). This testifies how our business model is able to face every stage of the market and to generate a well-diversified and balanced flow of revenues, thanks to a strategy oriented towards a path of long-term sustainable independent growth and capable of generating value for all our stakeholders through a process of transforming customer liquidity into more efficient forms of savings. Moreover, those results are the confirmation of a relational approach with customers guided and inspired by criteria of integrity, transparency, equity and cooperation.
In this context, our Bank is constantly engaged in combining values such as development, corporate social responsibility and business activity, which are fundamental for improving risk management and being highly competitive on the market. These elements are affirmed in the Fineco's first non-Financial Statement, are integrated into our annual incentive systems and corporate risk management processes and reflected in the Standard Ethics' Rating on sustainability topics.
The guiding principles of our way of doing business have always been at the base of our Compensation Policy, which - in turn - confirms that it is a key tool for guiding behaviors, both in the short and long term. In this context we have worked with a view to consolidation and continuous improvement, involving in the definition phase of the incentive plans - the main corporate Bodies and Functions, also to adapt our remuneration policies to the new corporate structure following the deconsolidation of the Unicredit Group.
Our model of remuneration governance is aimed at ensuring adequate control of all the Group's remuneration processes, ensuring that informed decisions are taken independently and promptly, in order to avoid conflicts of interest.
In order to better respond to its tasks, the Remuneration Committee took part in each phase of the remuneration processes, including in fact the project one, with the objective of guaranteeing an architecture suited to the Fineco's remuneration strategy, in line with the regulations and consistent with best market practices. We have maintained a solid continuity with the previous payout mechanisms despite of according to the assessed applicable proportionality the Group is no longer among significant institutions.
In light of the issuing of the new rules on remuneration for listed Companies resulting from the transposition of the European Directive 828 of 2017 (Shareholder Rights Directive II) implemented by Legislative Decree of May 10, 2019, n. 49, we generally aligned the remuneration policies with the new discipline. In particular, in relation to the provision for a consultative vote on the Remuneration Report, a better distinction was made regarding 2020 Remuneration Policy in respect to the second section to allow a separate vote.
In addition, the Remuneration Policy incorporates the updates of the "Provisions of transparency of financial banking transactions and services – fairness of relationships between intermediaries and clients" of March 19, 2019.
Having said that, in light of the favorable opinion of the shareholders collected by the 2019 Remuneration Policy and taking into account the market benchmark analyses, we considered appropriate to preserve overall the structure of the Remuneration Policy, keeping the main elements and the functioning mechanism of incentive systems adopted last year still considered to be already very effective for the achievement of the results defined in the strategic plan.
On behalf of the Remuneration Committee, I would like to thank you Shareholders for the constant willingness to compare and share each need and point of view, and for the time you will spend reading our 2020 Policy, trusting in your positive appreciation.
Sincerely,
GIANMARCO MONTANARI
Chairman of the Remuneration Commitee
The implementation of the principles set in FinecoBank Group's (hereinafter also "Fineco" or "Group")1 2020 Compensation Policy - 2020 remuneration policy and 2019 remuneration report provides the framework for the design of reward programs. Fineco's compensation approach, coherent with the regulations and the best market practices, guarantees the link to the performance and the market framework, and the alignment with the business strategy and the long-term shareholders' interest.
The key principles set forth in the 2020 remuneration policy (Section I) reflect the most recent regulations in terms of remuneration and incentive policies and practices, in order to build, year-by-year – in the interest of all stakeholders – remuneration systems aligned with long-term strategies and goals. The systems are linked with the company results and adequately adjusted in order to take into account all risks concerning capital and liquidity levels needed to support all the activities, and to avoid distorted incentives that could lead to a breach of law or to excessive risk taking.
Following the demerger from UniCredit Group in May 2019, ECB spoke on Fineco classification concerning its status as Supervised Entity. Based on the criteria included in art. 6(4) of 1024/2013 EU Regulation, ECB concluded that Fineco has to be classified as Less Significant Entity. Therefore, an assessment involving Human Resources, Compliance and Risk Management functions led to the qualification of Fineco as Intermediate Bank for the correct application of the proportionality criteria, with respect of the elements provided by Circular 285/2013 and by 2015 EBA Guidelines.
The Remuneration Committee's independent external consultant has endorsed the classification as Intermediate Bank and the application of the proportionality criteria.
1 Instead, the term "FinecoBank S.p.A." refers to the Italian legal entity (hereinafter also "FinecoBank" or the "Bank" or the "Company")
Update of the peer group for compensation benchmarking, performed by the independent advisor of the Remuneration Committee
Application of qualitative and quantitative criteria which are common at European level defined by EBA Regulatory Technical Standards
In compliance with the regulatory requirements, the 2:1 ratio represents the maximum limit to the ratio between variable and fixed components of the remuneration for all employees belonging to business functions, including Identified Staff
The Remuneration Committee, with particular reference to the population of FinecoBank Group's Identified Staff, through the support of an independent external consultant identifies the peer group, defined considering the main Italian and European peers on which specific comparative analysis on compensation are carried out (Benchmark). As a policy objective, the fixed component of the remuneration for Identified Staff takes as reference the market median, with individual positioning defined taking into account the specific performance, the potential and the strategic decisions on Fineco's people and performance over time.
As for 2020, the definition of the Identified Staff has been performed involving Compliance and Risk Management functions of FinecoBank S.p.A. The selfevaluation brought to a total number of Identified Staff for 2020 equal to 19 employees and 11 Financial Advisors.
2 i.e. Capital Requirement Directive IV (CRD IV); EBA Regulatory Technical Standards (RTS); Bank of Italy "Disposizioni di vigilanza per le Banche", 25th update to the Circular n. 285 of 26th October 2018; Shareholder Rights Directive II, implemented with amendments to art. 123-ter of TUF. 3 Meaning Risk Management, Compliance and Internal Audit.
Share ownership guidelines are confirmed for the Chief Executive Officer and the other Executives with strategic responsibility in order to align the managerial and the Shareholders' interests
Termination pay-outs take into consideration long-term performance, in terms of shareholder added-value, do not reward failures or abuses and shall not exceed in general 24 months of total compensation (including the indemnity in lieu of notice)
Each Risk Taker is provided with his/her own 2020 Scorecard, which balances economic-financial and non-economic indicators (namely, quantitative/strategic and qualitative/sustainable) Medium-long term sustainability is guaranteed for the Group and all its stakeholders, through setting performance goals linked to risk and compliance, as well as adherent to ESG values.
The Chief Executive Officer and the other Executives with strategic responsibility, should ensure appropriate levels of personal investment in FinecoBank shares (equal to 100% of fixed remuneration for the Chief Executive Officer and to 50% for the other Executives with strategic responsibility)
Termination Payments Policy – a specific formula for severance payments calculations is defined, while a maximum limit of 24 months of total remuneration is set, also comprehensive of the indemnity in lieu of notice. Total Remuneration is calculated taking into consideration the average bonus perceived in the three years prior the termination, after applying malus and claw-back conditions.
An annual process for performance measurements supports FinecoBank's 2020 Incentive System, granting coherence, consistency and clarity regarding performance goals and business strategy. The process encourages and awards expected behaviors and awareness of risks. In fact, it ensures that at the beginning of the year all Identified Staffs are provided with their own individual goals and it includes a strict monitoring of the achievements. Therefore, the short-term variable remuneration is determined on clear and measurable performance indicators through a considered and not discretional evaluation.
Identified Staff, the 2020 PFA4 Incentive System provides for a strong link between remuneration, risk and sustainable profitability
Such system provides for an overall performance assessment both at individual level and at Bank level
4 PFA – Personal Financial Advisors.
The results achieved by FinecoBank Group as of December 31, 2019 (2019 financial year) are of fundamental importance for its history. Numbers and facts confirm the sustainability and the quality of Fineco's business model.
In particular:

The greatest result ever has been achieved thanks to transparency and efficiency values, which are constantly part of Fineco identity, and to the ability of our Advisors to meet the customers' financial needs effectively, in combination with increasingly advanced investment solutions.
It is the evidence of a strong growth involving all business units.
The 2019 remuneration report (Section II) - issued pursuant to art. 123-ter of Legislative Decree 58/1998 (Consolidated Text of Finance" - "TUF"), as updated by Legislative Decree May 10, 2019, n. 49 - provides the description of our compensation practices and the implementation outcomes of FinecoBank Incentive Systems, as well as remuneration data, with a focus on Identified Staff, defined in line with regulatory requirements. Full disclosure on compensation payout amounts, deferrals and ratio between variable and fixed components of remuneration for Identified Staff is provided in Section II (paragraph 5.1), including data regarding Directors, General Managers and other Executives with strategic responsibility. Data pursuant sect. 84-quarter Consob Issuers Regulation Nr. 11971, as well as the information on incentive systems under 114-bis of legislative decree 58/1998 ("Consolidated Text of Finance" – "TUF") are included in this document as well as in the annexes of FinecoBank Group's 2020 Compensation Policy.
2019 performance evaluation of the Chief Executive Officer and General Manager's individual goals resulted excellent ("Exceeds Expectations"), on the basis of the elements reported in Section II – paragraph 4.1.1 and evaluated by the Remuneration Committee and the Board of Directors of February 7 and 11, 2020.
In 2019 – also considering the excellent business results – the incidence of the short and long term variable remuneration on the fixed remuneration of the CEO and General Manager has been equal to 200%: such percentage results adding up the short term variable remuneration (up to 100% of fixed remuneration) and the annual tranche of the long term variable remuneration (2018-2020 LTI; up to 100% of fixed remuneration) incidence on the fixed remuneration.
Here is detailed the remuneration structure of FinecoBank's CEO and General Manager for 20195 .

5 In January 2020, CEO and GM's fixed remuneration has been increased to € 1,000,000. This choice is explained by the great results achieved by the Bank in the past few years (see on pag. 10, 2019 FY main results), as well as by the need to align the fixed remuneration to the market benchmark and the increasing complexity due to the new business structure.
WEIGHT # GOAL NAME REFERENCE TARGET NOTE/CATEGORY (sustainability, value creation, risk, cost efficiency, etc.) QUANTITATIVE/ STRATEGIC 70% each goal has the same weight 1 ROAC vs. budget Value Creation 2 EVA vs. budget Value Creation 3 EL stock (%) vs. target Risk Based 4 OPEX vs. budget Operating costs as reported in reclassified P&I, i.e.: Staff expenses + Other Administrative Expenses (direct + indirect) - Expenses Recovery + Depreciations Cost Efficiency 5 Net New Clients vs. budget Value Creation 6Net stables of Guided Product vs. budget Value Creation QUALITATIVE/ SUSTAINABLE 30% the two goals have the same weight 7 Stakeholder Value vs. qualitative assessment based on: Broaden the range of ESG products (e.g. lending and investments products); Y/Y delta on Gender Pay Gap/Gender Balance; Expand our range of "Welfare" solutions; Improve Fineco's environmental performance (e.g. sustainable mobility, Environmental Statement, reduction of plastic waste and energy consumption). Sustainability 8 Tone from the top on conduct and compliance culture vs. qualitative assessment based on: Scope, kind and numbers of documented initiatives aimed at promoting staff integrity/customer protection/trustworthiness The overall status of findings or proceedings in place (internal or external) considering the trend, type, severity and the timely completion of the related remediation actions/enhance risk&control culture Sustainability
Looking forward, 2020 goals for the Chief Executive Officer and General Manager defined and approved by the Board of Directors are:
Targets/budgets for each goal will be disclosed in 2021 Compensation Policy. In fact, those are price sensitive information closely linked to Fineco business strategy.
FinecoBank Group·2020 Compensation Policy 13

FINECO. SIMPLIFYING BANKING
FinecoBank S.p.A.
5.3.1 Comprehensive Performance Measurement
Integrity is the basis of our values, as a condition to transform profit into value for our stakeholders.
By upholding the standards of sustainability behaviors and values which drive our mission, our compensation strategy represents a key instrument to enhance and protect our reputation and to create long-term value for all stakeholders.
Also through appropriate compensation mechanism, we aim to create a work environment which is comprehensive of any form of diversity and which foster and unlock individual potential, to attract, retain and motivate highly qualified employees, capable of creating a competitive advantage and to reward those who reflect our standards of consistently ethical behaviour in conducting sustainable business.
Relying on our governance model, our Compensation Policy sets the framework for a common and coherent design, implementation and monitoring of compensation practices across our Company that reinforce sound risk management policies and our long-term business strategy. In so doing, we most effectively meet the specific and evolving needs of our different businesses and populations, and ensure that business and people strategies are always appropriately aligned with our remuneration approach.
To ensure the competitiveness and effectiveness of remuneration as well as transparency and internal equity, the key principles of our Compensation Policy have been confirmed:
During 2019 and the first few months of 2020, we continue the outreach process for the engagement of international Investors and Proxy Advisors. Considering Italian and International standards, we received valuable advice on our remuneration approach and specific suggestions in order to achieve an effective public disclosure, which we took into account to draft this document.
Our compensation governance model aims to assure clearness and reliability in the governance processes related to remuneration through a right control of Group's remuneration practices by ensuring that decisions are made in an independent, informed and timely manner at appropriate levels, avoiding conflicts of interest and guaranteeing appropriate disclosure in full respect of the general principles defined by Regulators.
The Board of Directors established a Delegation of Powers system to regulate appropriately effective decision-making processes throughout the organization.
In particular, the Remuneration Committee is vested with the role of providing advice and opinions to the Board of Directors with regard to Fineco Remuneration strategy. It also involves Risk and Compliance functions, and it receives the support of an independent external advisor, if required and needed, in order to make the incentives underlying the remuneration system consistent with the management of risk, capital and liquidity profiles. The main topics discussed by the Committee are also brought to the attention of the Board of Statutory Auditors, prior to their submission to the Board of Directors. The Remuneration Committee consists of 3 non-executive members6 .
With specific reference to Identified Staff, an independent external advisor supports the Remuneration Committee on the definition of a list of selected competitors that represent our peer group with regards to whom compensation benchmarking analysis is performed. The peer group takes into consideration our main national and European competitors in terms of market capitalization, total assets, business scope and dimension, to assure a competitive alignment with the market of reference.
The results of this analysis will be at FinecoBank Remuneration Committee's disposal, in order to support the formulation of opinions to the Bodies of the Bank responsible for taking such decisions.
Through benchmarking, we aim at adopting a competitive compensation structure for effective retention and motivation of our critical resources, as well as payments consistent with long-term value for stakeholders.
FinecoBank salary and compensation structures, which are defined in relation to business or market-specific benchmarking, must in any case be fully aligned with the values of the Group, with particular reference to compliance and sustainability.
Key highlights of the Compensation Policy defined this year include:
The peer group used to benchmark compensation policy and practice with particular reference to employees Identified Staff has been defined by the Remuneration Committee upon proposal of the independent external advisor according to criteria which include: comparability of size, complexity and business model, presence in customer, talent and capital markets, risk and legal-social-economic environment.
The main peer group is subject to annual review to assure its continuing relevance. For 2020, the peer group includes:
In addition to what mentioned above, a role benchmark has been realized for the Chief Executive Officer and General Manager, with respect to an international panel (5 banks belonging to STOXX600 index).
6 For details on composition and activities of the Remuneration Committee, please refer to the specific paragraph in Section II – Annual report on the remuneration awarded in 2019 financial year
The Compensation Policy of FinecoBank Group, as drawn up by the Human Resources function, with the involvement of Risk Management, Finance and Network Controls, Monitoring and Service Department functions for all related aspects, is validated by the Compliance and Risk Management functions for all compliance-related aspects, before being submitted to the Remuneration Committee. Yearly, the Remuneration Committee proposes and submits the Compensation Policy to the Board of Directors for approval. As last step, the document is presented to the Shareholders' Meeting for approval, in line with the regulatory requirements.
The principles of Fineco Compensation Policy are applicable to the entire organization with regard to:
Compliance function operates in close co-ordination with the Human Resources function, in order to support the design and the definition of compensation policy and processes and to evaluate them for the profiles in scope.
In this framework, Compliance function verifies the consistency with "the goal of complying with regulations, articles of association and any other code of ethics or other standards of conduct applicable to the bank, so that legal and reputational risks mostly embedded in the relationship with customers are duly contained" (ref. Bank of Italy, 285 Circular).
In particular, Compliance function evaluates, for all related aspects, Fineco Compensation Policy and – according to the applicable regulations – the incentive systems for Bank staff as drawn up by Human Resources function for the employees, and by PFA Network & Private Banking Department/Network Controls, Monitoring and Service Department for the Financial Advisors. It provides suggestions – as far as it is concerned – for the design of compliant incentive systems. Furthermore, Compliance function is involved in the process for the identification of Group's risk takers, for all aspects that fall within its perimeter.
In accordance with the regulatory framework and our governance, the guidelines for the definition of the incentive systems for non-Identified Staff population are arranged, in collaboration with Compliance function:
Fineco ensures consistency between remuneration and accountable and sustainable risk assumption. This policy is guaranteed through rigorous governance processes based on informed decisions taken by Corporate Bodies. Compensation plans include the risk adjustment appetite defined through the evaluation of the consistency with the results achieved and the Fineco Risk Appetite Framework.
Risk Management function is constantly involved in the definition of the remuneration policy, the incentive systems and the compensation processes as well as in the definition of targets, in the performance appraisal and in the identification of Group's Identified Staff. This involvement implies explicit link between the Bank incentive mechanisms, selected metrics of the Risk Appetite Framework, the validation of performance and pay, so that the incentives are consistent with the risk assumption identified and approved by the Board of Directors.
Within the remuneration governance process, Internal Audit function7 yearly asses the implementation of policies and practices, and carries out controls on data and processes. The function provides a final judgement on remuneration practices, providing recommendations aimed at improving the processes and informing the competent Bodies on the possible findings, in order to adopt the corrective measures.
7 Insourcing of the function in FinecoBank S.p.A. during 2019
| Ratio between variable and fixed compensation | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Employees | Business functions | 2:1 | ||
| Identified staff of company control functions | 1:3 | |||
| Other employees | 1:1 | |||
| Head of Human Resources and Manager in charge of preparing financial statements |
Fix>Var with respect of total compensation |
|||
| PFA Identified Staff |
2:1 |
8 For Fineco Asset Management DAC (FAM) Employees not identified as Group's risk takers - taking into account the current regulatory framework - the sectorial regulation applies, which does not provide a pre-determined maximum cap to the variable remuneration. 9
As approved by the Fineco Shareholders Meeting on June 5, 2014. The rationales of the original request did not change, thus no further maximum ratio approval is requested. 10 Meaning Risk Management, Compliance and Internal Audit
11 As provided by the CRDIV art 94, 1 a). Financial criteria includes performance indicators reported in the annual financial report and in particular linked with the profit and loss report, the balance sheet and relevant components or indicators.
12 Where CRO roles cover both Underwriting and Risk Management functions, goals assigned must not represent a source of conflict of interest between Risk Management and Underwriting activities
Fineco reserves the right to activate malus and claw-back mechanisms, meaning respectively the reduction/cancelation and the return of any form of variable compensation.
The malus mechanisms, (i.e. the reduction/cancelation of all or part of the variable remuneration) can be activated with reference to the variable remuneration to be paid or awarded but not already paid, related to the performance period which the compliance "violation" is referred to. In case the variable pay affected is not enough to ensure an adequate malus application, the reduction can be referred also to other components of variable remuneration.
The claw-back mechanisms, (i.e. the restitution of all or part of the variable remuneration) can be activated with reference to the overall variable remuneration already paid, awarded for the performance period which the "violation" is referred to, without prejudice to more restrictive local laws or provisions.
The claw-back mechanisms can be activated for a period up to 5 years after each tranche (upfront or deferred) has become available to the beneficiary disposal (that means, after holding periods, deferrals and/or retention periods applicable), also after the termination of the employment relationship and/or of the role and take into account of the legal, pension and tax aspects and the time limits provided by law and practices locally applicable.
13 For instance: Common Equity Tier 1 Ratio dropping under the minimum regulatory limit, in a persistent "recession" scenario.
Malus and claw-back mechanisms can be activated upon the assessment of certain behaviors within the referred period, which starts with the performance period and ends with the tranche becoming available to the beneficiary disposal (that means, after holding periods, deferrals and/or retention periods applicable), in case the staff14:
Moreover, the malus mechanisms are activated to take into account the performance adjusted for the risks actually taken and the liquidity and capital conditions.
In the year 2018 the Compliance Breaches Committee was established15, composed of the Chief Executive Officer and General Manager, the Head of Human Resources and the Head of Compliance16. With reference to Fineco's Identified Staff, the Committee has the function of assessing the severity of any anomalous behavior/violations due to non-compliance by the parties involved, following notification by Bank or Internal Audit structures.
On the basis of the analyzes carried out and in relation to the seriousness of the violation, the Committee proposes to the Remuneration Committee and to the Board of Directors - on the basis of the established governance - the consequent measures to be adopted with reference to the variable remuneration of the Identified Staff (reduction/cancellation - malus - or return - clawback).
In compliance with the regulatory provisions contained in Circular no. 285 of the Bank of Italy, a specific remuneration policy in the event of early termination of the employment relationship ("Severance Payments Policy" - so-called "Severance") has been approved by the Shareholders' Meeting in 2017, updating the document original approved in 2015.
On October 23, 2018, the Bank of Italy published the 25th update of Circular 285 which establishes, among other things, that the amounts agreed in sight or upon the early termination of the relationship - with the exception of the notice required by law and Severance Payments constitute variable remuneration and should therefore be included in the calculation of the variable remuneration limit for Identified Staff, with the exception of:
As a consequence, a further update of Severance Payments Policy pay was approved by the Shareholders' Meeting on April 10, 2019. Without changing the main criteria and limits, it incorporates the new regulations, providing - among other things - a predefined formula for the calculation of severances that, if used, allows not to compute them within the maximum limit set for variable remuneration.
Reference is made to the aforementioned Policy regarding criteria, limits and authorization processes in relation to termination payments.
14Employees and all personnel, including Personal Financial Advisors.
15 For the PFA Identified Staff, the functions of Compliance Breaches Committee are covered by the competent Disciplinary Committee
16 The Head of Internal Audit is permanent guest of the Committee, without any voting rights.
17 In any case, the amount of payments in addition to the indemnity in lieu of notice does not exceed eighteen months of total compensation
Share ownership guidelines set minimum levels for company share ownership by covered Executives, aiming to align managerial interests to those of shareholders by assuring appropriate levels of personal investment in FinecoBank shares over time. As part of our total compensation approach, we offer equity incentives that provide for opportunities of share ownership, in compliance with the applicable laws.
The ownership of shares by our Company leaders is a meaningful and visible way to show our investors, clients and employees that we believe in our Company.
FinecoBank Board of Directors and Shareholders Meeting approved in 2017 specific share ownership guidelines, as shown in the following table, for the Chief Executive Officer and General Manager and for the other Executives with strategic responsibility, in order to reinforce the alignment between managerial and shareholders' interests in the achievement of goals.
| Population | Shares Ownership | |
|---|---|---|
| CEO and General Manager | 1 x annual fixed remuneration | |
| Executives with strategic responsibilities | 0.5 x annual fixed remuneration |
As a rule, the established levels described in the above table should be reached within 5 years from the first appointment in the covered role and they should be maintained for the entire duration of the role covered.
The established levels should be reached through a linear pro-rata approach during the 5-year period, providing for a minimum portion every year.
Involved Executives are also expected to refrain from entering into schemes or arrangements that specifically protect the unvested value of equity granted under incentive plans ("hedging").
Any violation of the share ownership guidelines and any form of hedging shall be considered in breach of compliance rules with such consequences as provided for under enforceable rules, provisions and procedures.
TO SUPPORT THE DESIGN OF REMUNERATION AND INCENTIVE SYSTEMS, THE FOLLOWING "COMPLIANCE DRIVERS" HAVE BEEN DEFINED:
| | |
|---|---|
| maintenance of an adequate ratio between economic and non | qualitative measures must be accompanied by an ex-ante indication |
| economic goals, depending on the role (in general, at least one goal | of objective parameters to be considered in the evaluation, the descriptions |
| should be non-economic) | of expected performance and the person in charge for the evaluation |
| non-economic quantitative measures should be related to an area for which the employee perceives a direct link between her/his performance and the trend of the indicator |
among the non-financial goals (quantitative and qualitative), include, where relevant, goals related to Risk as well as to Compliance (e.g. credit quality, operational risks, application of MIFID principles, products sale quality, respect of the customer, Anti Money Laundering requirements fulfilment) |
| | |
| set and communicate ex-ante clear and pre-defined parameters | avoidance of incentives with excessively short timeframes (e.g. less |
| as drivers of individual performance | than three months) |
| | |
| promotion of a customer-centric approach which places customer | take into account, even in remuneration systems of the external |
| needs and satisfaction at the forefront and which will not constitute an incentive to sell unsuitable products to clients |
networks (Financial Advisors), the principles of fairness in relation with customers, management of legal and reputational risks, protection and loyalty of customers, compliance with the provisions of law, regulatory requirements, and applicable self-regulations |
|---|---|
| create incentives that are appropriate in avoiding potential conflicts of interest with customers, considering fairness in dealing with customers and the endorsement of appropriate business conduct |
to promote responsible risk management for personnel assigned to the evaluation of credit rating, and to take into account the results of complaints management and customer care quality for personnel who handles complaints |
| to define – for personnel providing investment services and activities – incentives that are not only based on financial parameters, but also take into account the qualitative aspects of the performance; this in order to avoid potential conflicts of interest in the relationship with customers18 |
for Control Functions19, HR and Manager in charge for preparing financial statements, economic goals must be avoided and individual goals set for employees in these functions shall reflect primarily the performance of their own function and be independent of results of monitored areas, in order to avoid conflict of interests |
| avoidance of incentives on a single product / financial instrument or specific categories of financial instruments, as well as single banking product |
the approach for Company Control Functions is also recommended where possible conflicts may arise due to function's activities. This is the case in particular of functions of the Company (if any) performing control activities pursuant to internal/external regulations20 |
| Commercial Network Roles, goals shall be defined including drivers on quality/riskiness/sustainability of the products sold, in line with client risk profiles. Particular attention shall be paid to the provision of non-economics goals for customer facing roles selling products covered by MiFID Directive; for those roles, incentives must be set in order to avoid potential conflict of interest with customers |
for the purpose of granting incentive, take also into account any disciplinary sanctions and/or sanctions by regulatory authorities imposed on the resource. In the presence of these measures, the possible allocation of the incentive will require a written explanation, which will make possible a case-by-case verification of the managerial decisions |
| maintenance of adequate balance of fixed and variable compensation elements also with due regard to the role and the nature of the business performed. The fix portion is maintained sufficiently high in order to allow the variable part to decrease, and in |
rewarding system communication and reporting phases shall clearly indicate that the final evaluation of the employee achievements will also rely, according to local requirements on qualitative criteria such as: - compliance to external (i.e. laws/regulations) and internal rules |
| some extreme cases to drop down to zero | (i.e.policies) and company values - mandatory training completion |
| - existence of disciplinary procedures officially activated and/or disciplinary sanctions actually applied |
|
| in case of individual performance evaluation systems are fully or partially focused on a managerial discretional approach, the evaluation parameters should be defined ex-ante, should be clear and documented to the manager at the beginning of the evaluation period. Such parameters should reflect all applicable regulation requirements21. The results of managerial discretional evaluation should be formalized for the adequate and predefined monitoring process by the proper functions |
the entire evaluation process must be conveniently put in writing and documented |
| in case of a multiple contracts offer aside of a credit contract, if the side contract is optional, even through third parties, in order to avoid the offer of unsuitable, incoherent and not appropriate product to the customer's interests and objectives, remuneration and appraisal of sale staff (employees and third personnel) don't incentive the combined sale of the wo contracts more than a separate sale of the same products. |
FinecoBank Group adopts and applies remuneration policies and practices for the subjects relevant to the scope of the regulation and credit intermediaries that take into account consumers' rights and interests, in relation to the products offer. To this extent, Fineco ensures that: a) their remuneration does not provide an incentive to pursue their own interests or the Company's, with a harm for its customers; b) any risk that could harm the customers should be taken into account, therefore it adopts proper measures; c) the variable remuneration for relevant subjects and intermediaries: i. it is linked to qualitative and quantitative assessment criteria; ii. it does not provide an incentive to offer a specific product or a |
18 For instance:
– ESMA Guidelines on remuneration policies and practices – MiFID;
– ESMA Technical Advise on MiFID II (Final Report 2014/1569); – MiFiD II Directive provisions for remuneration/incentives of relevant subjects.
19 Company Control Functions meaning Risk Management, Compliance and Internal Audit (insourcing in FinecoBank S.p.A. during 2019). Where CRO covers both Underwriting and Risk Management activities, the goals
assigned shall not be source of conflict of interests between Underwriting and Risk Management.
20 For instance, functions covering accounting and tax functions
| specific category of products or a combination of products (i.e. | |
|---|---|
| because those are particularly convenient for the Company or | |
| the relevant subjects or the intermediaries), if doing so would | |
| harm the customer in terms of unsuitability of the product for its | |
| financial needs, or because it is more expensive than another | |
| equivalent and suitable product, | |
| iii. | it is adequately balanced with respect of the fixed remuneration; |
| iv. | it is subject to adjustment mechanisms that can reduce it or |
| eliminate it, for instance in case of behaviors that directly or | |
| indirectly damaged the costumers, as well as in case of a | |
| violation of the relevant regulation (Title VI T.U.) or the related | |
| provisions that protect the customers' interests. |
Within network roles incentive systems, particular attention is addressed on all commercial initiatives that involve the Personal Financial Advisor network22 .
Such initiatives may be organized after the evaluation and authorization of the competent Bank's Bodies. They represent business actions aimed at providing guidance to the sales network towards the achievement of the period's commercial targets (also intermediate) and with a direct impact on the budget and related incentive systems.
Among the distinctive features of the initiatives, there is the expectation of an award - in cash or non-monetary reward. The initiatives can also have the function to accelerate the achievement of certain objectives of the incentive system. The grant of awards related to the initiatives will be subordinated to behaviors compliant with the external and internal regulations.
Under no circumstances may the system of remuneration and evaluation of the sales network employees constitute an incentive to sell products unsuitable to the financial needs of the clients.
In particular the following "compliance drivers" have been defined:
22 See paragraph 4.2.2 for details.
Within the framework provided by its Compensation Policy, Fineco is committed to ensure fair treatment in terms of compensation and benefits regardless of age, race, culture, gender, disability, sexual orientation, religion, political belief and marital status.
Our total compensation approach provides for a balanced package of fix and variable, monetary and non-monetary elements, each designed to impact in a specific manner the motivation and retention of employees.
In line with the applicable regulations, particular attention is paid to avoid incentive elements in variable compensation that may induce to behaviors not aligned with the company's sustainable business results and risk appetite.
As policy target, fix compensation for Identified Staff considers as a reference the market median, with individual positioning being defined on the basis of specific performance, potential and people strategy decisions.
With particular reference to Identified Staff – within the governance defined according to the applicable laws and regulations - the Board of Directors, upon proposal of the Remuneration Committee, establishes the compensation structure for top positions, defining the mix of fix and variable compensation elements, consistently with market trends and internal analyses performed.
Moreover, the Board of Directors annually approves the criteria and features of Identified Staff incentive plans, ensuring the appropriate balance of variable reward opportunities within the pay-mix structure.
| TYPE OF REMUNERATION | PURPOSES | FEATURES |
|---|---|---|
| 4.1.1. FIXED COMPENSATION | ||
| The fixed salary remunerates the role covered and the scope of responsibilities, reflecting the experience and skills required for each position, as well as the level of excellence demonstrated and the overall quality of the contribution to business results. |
Fixed salary is appropriately defined for the specific business in which an individual works and for the talent, skills and competencies that the individual brings to the Bank. The relevance of fixed compensation weight is sufficient to reward the activity rendered even if the variable part of the remuneration package is not paid due to non-achievement of performance goals such as to reduce the risk of excessively risk-oriented behaviours, to discourage initiatives focused on short-term results and to allow a flexible bonus approach. |
Specific pay-mix guidelines for the weight of fix versus variable compensation are defined with respect to each target of employee population. With particular reference to Identified Staff, the Remuneration Committee proposes to the Board of Directors: the criteria and guidelines to perform market benchmarking analysis for each position in terms of compensation levels and pay-mix structure, including the definition of a specific peer group and the identification of an external consultant to provide "executive compensation" services the positioning in terms of compensation, in line with relevant market's competitive levels, defining operational guidelines to perform individual compensation reviews as necessary. For the Identified Staff in Control Functions, it is foreseen the introduction of specific Role Based Allowance (or RBA ) in cash, defined ex ante on the basis of the "band"23 and Function. In case of changes in the banding, the RBAs can be increased, decreased or zeroed. RBAs are not linked to performance and consequently cannot be discretionally reduced, suspended or cancelled as far as the employee covers a specific role providing the allowance. According to regulation, RBA are to be considered fixed remuneration. RBA were firstly introduced in 2019 and individually assigned to employees when appointed to a control function role. |
| 4.1.2. VARIABLE COMPENSATION | ||
| The variable compensation includes payments depending on performance, independently from how it is measured (profitability goals, volumes, etc.), or on other parameters (e.g. length of service), discretionary pension benefits |
Variable compensation aims to remunerate achievements by directly linking pay to performance outcomes in the short, medium and long-term, and risk adjusted. To strengthen the alignment of shareholders' interest and the |
Adequate range and managerial flexibility in performance-based pay-outs are an inherent characteristic of well-managed, accountable and sustainable variable compensation, which may be awarded via mechanisms differing by time horizon and typology of reward. Incentives remunerate the achievement of performance objectives, both quantitative and qualitative, by providing for a variable bonus payment. |
23 Pursuant to the Global Job Model: an advanced organizational system that describes, standardizes and calibrates all the roles within the Group. The "Banding" system (Global Banding Structure) is one of the elements of the Global Job Model and it is constituted by 9 bands.
| and amounts agreed between the bank and personnel in view or upon the early termination of the employment or office (excluding termination benefits and indemnity in lieu of notice), carried interests and more generally any other form of remuneration that is not uniquely qualify as fixed remuneration. |
interests of management and employees, performance measurement reflects the actual results of the Company overall, the business unit of reference and the individual. As such, variable compensation constitutes a mechanism of meritocratic differentiation and selectivity. |
|
An appropriately balanced performance-based compensation element is encouraged for all employee categories as a key driver of motivation and alignment with organizational goals, and is set as a policy requirement for all business roles. The systems features, including performance measures and pay mechanisms, must avoid an excessive short-term focus by reflecting the principles of this policy, focusing on parameters linked to profitability and sound risk management, in order to guarantee sustainable performance in the medium and long term. The Identified Staff contracts provide only the "eligibility" to the variable compensation. The amounts related to the variable compensation and all the technical details of the pay-out (instruments, pay-out structure, timing) are included in a specific communication not included in the Identified Staff contract and are managed in strict coherence with the governance and the rules of the delegation of authorities. More details on the design of remuneration and incentive systems, with particular reference to Control Functions, are reported in the section "Compliance Drivers". |
|---|---|---|---|
| Incentive Systems linked to |
Aim to attract, motivate and | | Pay-out is based on a "bonus pool" approach providing for a |
| yearly performance (Short Term | retain strategic resources and | comprehensive performance measurement at individual and at | |
| Incentives or STI) | maintain full alignment with national and international |
| Group level. Reward is directly linked to performance, which is evaluated on |
| regulatory requirements and with | the basis of results achieved and on the alignment with our | ||
| best market's practices. | leadership model and values. | ||
| | The Executive Development Plan (EDP) as the framework for | ||
| Identified Staff performance management is a cornerstone of fair | |||
| and coherent appraisal across the organization. | |||
| | For the remaining employees – within the bonus pool logic as described above - annual incentives are determined on a |
||
| discretionary basis according to the individual performance | |||
| appraisal (e.g. Performance Management) that foresees a | |||
| yearly, written, and documented process for the goals setting, | |||
| self-assessment, managerial assessment and the definition of an | |||
| | individual development plan. | ||
| Where foreseen by regulations, the pay-out is phased to coincide with an appropriate risk time horizon. The design |
|||
| features of incentive plans for Identified Staff are aligned with | |||
| shareholder interests and long-term, firm-wide profitability, | |||
| providing for an appropriate allocation of a performance related | |||
| | incentive in cash and in shares, upfront and deferred Each year, detailed information about our compensation |
||
| governance, key figures and the features of our incentive | |||
| systems, is fully disclosed in the remuneration policy. | |||
| | The individuals' behaviours (compliance with internal and | ||
| external rules and regulations, absence of disciplinary actions and completion of mandatory training) are also elements on |
|||
| which individual incentives award is based. | |||
| Long-term Incentive plans (Long | The aim of these plans is to | | For 2018-2020 three years performance period, a share based |
| Term Incentive or LTI) | strengthen the link between |
Long Term Incentive Plan for selected Employees considered | |
| variable pay and long term results and to further align the |
"key roles", has been approved. | ||
| interests of Management to those | | The plan is based on Group's goals with targets set at 2020, in terms of value creation, business sustainability and risk, |
|
| of Shareholders | coherently with the long term Fineco goals. |
These include welfare benefits supplementary to social security plans, and are intended to provide substantial guarantees for the well-being of staff and their families during the active career as well as the retirement. In addition, special terms and conditions of access to various FinecoBank Banking products and other services may be offered to employees in order to support them during different stages of their lives
Benefits aim to reflect internal equity and overall coherence of our remuneration systems, catering to the needs of different categories as appropriate and relevant..
In coherence with Fineco Bank Group governance framework and Global Job Model , benefits are aligned against general common criteria for each employee category, while benefits plans are established on the basis of FinecoBank practices.
Financial Advisors are tied to the Company by an agency agreement, under which the Advisor is engaged on a permanent basis (without representation) to provide independent services, exclusively for the Bank, for the promotion and placement of financial instruments and Banking/financial services in Italy, as well as insurance and welfare products or any other products indicated in the contract. Advisors are also responsible for diligently monitoring the assistance to the existing and/or allocated customers in order to fulfil the Company's objectives.
In accordance with existing regulations, contractual relationships with customers acquired by the Financial Advisor, and any other that is subsequently allocated, are conducted exclusively between the customer and the Bank.
FinecoBank's Network of Financial Advisors is composed by:
The Group Managers and the Area Managers are Financial Advisors with the accessory assignment to coordinate other Financial Advisors.
In particular, Area Managers are responsible for coordinating Advisors in their geographic area, for growing the business and for reaching the targets set by Commercial Department, and are supported - for the purposes of coordination activity - by Group Managers.
The Commercial Department uses Company's internal structures, to provide support to the network. Their tasks are to control the local activities and provide support for commercial activity.
As mentioned in the preamble, the provisions of this Compensation Policy also apply to the members of the Financial Advisors' Network, in line with the Advisors' specific remuneration.
Financial Advisors are freelancers and their remuneration is entirely variable. The regulatory requirements, in order to adapt the same employees' rules on compensation structure, based on a fixed and on a variable component, established for Financial Advisors a distinction between a "recurring" and a "non-recurring" pay component.
| TYPE OF REMUNERATION | PURPOSES | FEATURES | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 4.2.1. RECURRING REMUNERATION | ||||
| This is the most stable and ordinary part of the total remuneration, equivalent to the fixed salary of employees |
Recurring remuneration is sufficient to reward the activity rendered even if the variable part of the remuneration package is not paid due to non-achievement of performance goals such as to reduce the risk of excessively risk-oriented behaviours, to discourage initiatives focused on short-term results and to allow a flexible bonus approach. |
Sales commission, in other words the payment to the Financial Advisor of a percentage of the sales charge, paid by the customer at the time of purchase of investment instruments. It is paid on an individual basis or as a supplement if the Advisor has been given coordination tasks. Management and maintenance commission, in other words the Financial Advisor monthly remuneration for assistance provided to customers during the contract, commensurate with the average value of the investments and the type of product, paid on an individual basis or as a supplement if the Advisor has coordination tasks. |
||
| 4.2.2. NON RECURRING REMUNERATION | ||||
| Incentive Systems linked to short term performance. This is the incentive element, in other words it is tied to reach certain goals, equivalent to the variable compensation of employees |
Aims at motivating, retaining and rewarding Financial Advisors and Managers of the Network, in full alignment with the regulatory requirements. |
Pay-out is based on a "bonus pool" approach providing for a comprehensive performance measurement at individual and at Group level. Reward is directly linked to performance, which is evaluated on the basis of results achieved. For the Financial Advisors belonging to Identified Staff, a dedicated incentive system ("PFA Incentive System") was defined, whose pay-out, as foreseen by regulations, is phased to coincide with an appropriate risk time horizon. The design features of the plan is aligned with shareholder interests and long-term, firm-wide profitability of the Bank, providing for an appropriate allocation of a performance related incentive in cash and in shares, upfront and deferred. For all the Financial Advisors not belonging to Identified Staff, specific incentive systems were defined, as, for example, "Incentive Plans for PFA-Area Managers-Group Managers", and specific retention initiatives such as the "Additional Future Program". This plan, in particular, is dedicated to selected PFA and network Managers not Identified Staff and provides the accrual of annual awards (subject to the achievement of specific performance conditions and the compliance of individual |
| |
behaviours) in specific insurance policies. The release of those awards is provided at the reach of the retirement age. All the incentive systems provide for ex-ante ("entry conditions") and ex-post (malus on any deferred components) adjustment mechanisms and claw-back clauses. The individual behaviours (compliance with internal and external rules and regulations and absence of disciplinary actions) are also evaluation elements to assign individual incentives. Within a wider long-term incentive and retention program for the |
||
|---|---|---|---|
| Long Term Incentive Plans (Long Term Incentive or LTI) |
The long term Incentive Plans aim at retaining and rewarding selected Financial Advisors and Network Managers towards commercial Network goals for the 2018-2020 performance period. |
Financial Advisors network in 2018-2020 three years performance period, the following Plans have been approved by the Board of Directors: 1) A long term Incentive Plan with bonuses in cash and FinecoBank shares for Financial Advisors that will be qualified as Identified Staff in the performance year 2020. The Plan is based on commercial goals with cumulated target in the three years 2018-2020, coherently with the long-term goals of FinecoBank Network. The Plan provides specific entry conditions at individual and Group level, a claw-back condition and a risk adjustment mechanism. At last, the Plan provides the payment of a bonus in cash and FinecoBank shares, in a multi-year period, as provided by law. The Plan details are described in the specific section of the remuneration report. 2) A Long Term cash-based Incentive plan for selected Financial advisors not belonging to Identified Staff population. The Plan is based on the same logics of the LTI Plan described above, including – for the purpose of bonus provision – a further permanence duty after the payment of at least 36 months. |
The updates to the provisions on Bank Transparency (for reference, "Disposizioni in materia di trasparenza delle operazioni e dei servizi bancari finanziari – Correttezza delle relazioni tra intermediari e clienti") of March 19, 2019, appoint two categories of staff (relevant subjects and credit intermediaries)24 which remuneration has to follow further principles, in addition to the ones provided in paragraph 3, Section I (2020 remuneration policy; 3. Fundamentals).
In particular, these subjects' remuneration has to be:
The total number of relevant subjects is 2,542, with 203 of them in a managerial position; these subjects, Financial Advisors allowed to off-site sales, are also entitled to present and offer loan contracts and to other activities pursuant the conclusion of loan contracts.25 .
Regarding the personnel who has to evaluate the credit rating, remuneration ensures the adequate risk management by the Bank. Personnel who are assigned to handle complaints, remuneration takes into consideration, among other things, the results of the complaints management and the costumer care quality.
For non-executives members of Board of Directors and for the members of the Board of Statutory Auditors, in line with the regulatory provisions, stock option based or, more in general, instrument based incentives are avoided. The remuneration of said subjects is fixed, and determined on the basis of the relevance of the role, of possible additional duties, and of the requested efforts for carrying out the assigned tasks and is not linked to economic results.
As provided by Bank of Italy provisions on remuneration policies and practices, the Board of Directors' Chairman remuneration is not higher than the fixed one provided for the Chief Executive Officer.
24 Relevant subjects: personnel who offers product to costumers as well as their underling;
Credit intermediaries: financial agents, loan mediator and subjects other than the Bank who, in the exercise of their professional/commercial activity, concludes loan contracts on the Bank's behalf as well as presents and offers loan contracts or carries out other related activities in exchange of a monetary compensation or other economic advantage in respect with applicable regulation.
25According to art. 31(2) of legislative Decree n. 58, February 24, 1998, "L'attività di consulente finanziario abilitato all'offerta fuori sede è svolta esclusivamente nell'interesse di un solo soggetto. Il consulente finanziario abilitato all'offerta fuori sede promuove e colloca i servizi d'investimento e/o i servizi accessori presso clienti o potenziali clienti, riceve e trasmette le istruzioni o gli ordini dei clienti riguardanti servizi d'investimento o prodotti finanziari, promuove e colloca prodotti finanziari, presta consulenza in materia di investimenti ai clienti o potenziali clienti rispetto a detti prodotti o servizi finanziari. Il consulente finanziario abilitato all'offerta fuori sede può promuovere e collocare contratti relativi alla concessione di finanziamenti o alla prestazione di servizi di pagamento per conto del soggetto nell'interesse del quale esercita l'attività di offerta fuori sede." The Bank contracted an agreement for the promotion and sale of banking and insurance products aimed at distributing mortgage loans.
Fineco, starting from 2014 conducted, in alignment with specific regulation, the annual self-evaluation process to define Identified Staff population, both employees and Financial Advisors, to whom, according to regulators, specific remuneration rules apply.
The definition of 2020 Identified Staff, pursuant to the European criteria foreseen in the European Banking Authority Regulatory Technical Standard (RTS)26, followed a structured and formalized assessment process based on the guidelines provided by the functions Human Resources with the contribution of Risk Management and Compliance, to guarantee a unique and common approach In FinecoBank Group.
In line with the regulatory provisions, the criteria used to define the Identified Staff are those defined by the aforementioned European standards, and incorporated into the national legislation (Circular 285 of the Bank of Italy). In line with the defined guidelines, Fineco - for the purposes of identifying the Identified Staff - adopts the additional criterion for the "band" for Employees, including all Employees with band 5 (Senior Vice President)27 or higher, in the risk takers category.
The recognition of subjects with significant impact on risk is aimed at the definition of Bank and FinecoBank Group's Identified Staff. This is valid, in any case, for both Employees of FinecoBank Group and FinecoBank S.p.A. PFAs.
As every year, the assessment performed took into account the role, the decision-making power, the effective responsibilities of the employees and of the Financial Advisors and, in addition, the total compensation level.

The result of the assessment process, submitted to Internal Audit scrutiny and documented into Fineco Compensation Policy, brought to the identification of a total number of 19 employees and 11 Financial Advisors28 for 202029 .
Compliance functions
Risk Management and
Regarding the employees, as a result of the analysis and as approved by the Board of Directors upon Remuneration Committee proposal, the following categories of employees have been defined for 2020 as Identified Staff: Chief Executive Officer and General Manager, Executives with strategic responsibility, executive positions in Company Control Functions (Compliance, Risk Management) and other positions that are responsible for strategic decisions which may have a relevant impact on the Group's risk profile30 .
Regarding the Financial Advisors, Fineco has applied a qualitative criteria to select those belonging to Identified Staff, on the basis of their impact on business risk (represented by the risk that the Bank's profitability decreases consequently to the exit of Advisors from the Network and the related loss of customers and assets), the only type of risk that the Bank considers attributable to PFA, due to the absence of power of attorney they have to assume any other kind of risks.
Compensation data and vehicles used for the target population in 2019 are disclosed in Section II – chapters 4 and 5 and in the Annexes.
27 According to Global Job Model
26European Banking Authority (EBA) Regulatory Technical Standards on criteria to identify categories of staff whose professional activities have a material impact on an institution's risk profile under Article 94 (2) of Directive 2013/36/EU.
28 Vs 14 Employees and 8 Financial Advisors identified in 2019 29Identified Staff data refers to the population at the date of February 2020, providing for an ex-ante definition, in line with regulatory requirements. The assessment included as Identified Staff also the Non Executive Directors member of the Board (8 people), identified by the regulatory provisions applicable; however, the identification does not have any impact on remuneration.
30The list of Fineco Identified Staff includes also the Fineco Asset Management DAC CEO
As a result of the analysis and as approved by the Board of Directors upon Remuneration Committee proposal as shown above, and prior the control carried out by Risk and Related Parties Committee, the following categories of Financial Advisors have been identified for 2020 as Identified Staff:
Pursuant to the regulatory requirement and the process defined at European level31 the exclusion from Identified Staff of 19 PFA whose total remuneration in 2019 is equal or exceeds Euro 500,000 is submitted to the Regulatory Authority.
As in the past years, the 2020 Incentive System, as approved by the Board of Directors of FinecoBank on January 15, 2020, is based on a "bonus pool" approach that takes into consideration the national and international regulatory requirements and directly links bonuses with Fineco results, ensuring the link between profitability, risk and reward.
In particular, the system provides for:
The bonus pool process includes the following steps

31 ECB Decision (EU) 2015/2218 dated November 20, 2015; EBA RTS chapter 4, art. 4
32 In compliance with sector regulations, the Chief Executive Officer of Fineco Asset Management DAC - Identified Staff of the Group - is the beneficiary of the FAM Incentive System 2020, for which the use UCITS compliant instruments is envisaged.
Bonus pool process starts with the definition of the "funding rate" during budgeting phase. The funding rate for FinecoBank is a percentage of the Net Operating Profit (net of Provisions for Risk and Charges, corresponding to Profit Before Tax) considering: historical data analysis, expected profitability, business strategy and previous year pool. The bonus pool is submitted for approval to the Board of Directors of FinecoBank S.p.A.
The Entry Conditions are the mechanism that determines the possible application of Zero Factor based on performance indicators in terms of profitability, capital and liquidity. The entry conditions defined for 2020 – working also as malus conditions for the previous incentive systems deferrals – are reported in the following table.
| Fineco Entry Conditions | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Net Operating Profit adjusted ≥0 and | |||
| Net Profit ≥0 and | |||
| CET1 Ratio > 9.77% (2020 RAF Trigger) and | |||
| Liquidity Coverage Ratio >101% (2020 RAF Limit) | |||
| Net Stable Funding Ratio >101% (2020 RAF Limit) |
Compared to the 2019 system, the Capital indicator changes moving from the CET1 Ratio RAF limit to the CET1 Ratio, with reference to the RAF trigger value instead of limit.
The on/off mechanism of the access conditions and the related effects on the Fineco Bonus Pool work as shown below:

The CRO dashboard assessment is confirmed to activate the "multiplier", pursuant to the defined methodology.
The CRO dashboard (defined in coherence with Fineco Risk Appetite Framework) includes KPIs taken from the Risk Appetite Framework, measured with reference to the respective relevant thresholds (limit, trigger and target). Here below a sample of the content of the dashboard.
| DIMENSION | 2020 | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| AREA | KPIs | Target | Trigger | Limit | ||
| Capital | CET1 Ratio (%) | --% | --% | --% | ||
| Pillar 1 KPIs | Liquidity | LCR (%) | --% | --% | ||
| NSFR (%) | --% | --% | ||||
| Risk & Return | ROAC (%) | --% | --% | --% | ||
| Managerial KPIs |
Credit | EL stock (%) | --% | --% | --% | |
| Coverage on Impaired (%) |
--% | --% | --% | |||
| Specific Risk KPIs |
Interest Rate Risk on Banking Book |
EV Sensitivity (%) | --% | --% | ||
| Operational | Operational Risk Losses/Revenues |
--% | --% | --% |
The "multiplier" effect deriving from the evaluation of overall CRO Dashboard outcome made by the FinecoBank CRO – and verified by the Remuneration Committee and the Board – applies to the bonus pool in case all the Entry Conditions are met. The dashboard evaluation is carried out pursuant to a methodology defined by the Risk Management function and approved by the Board of Directors.
The bonus pool corrections ranges deriving from the CRO Dashboard assessment are not modified compared to the 2019 Incentive System, as follows.
| CRO Assessment | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| + | ++ | |||||
| 50% | 75% | 100% | 110% | 120% |
The fully positive "++" rating can only be granted in the case of positive EVA at the end of the financial year (or EVA> 0 if the budget is equal to 0). As provided in the 2019 System, a further range of discretion up to +20% is in the faculty of the Remuneration Committee and Board of Directors, while no limit is set in case the bonus pool is lowered with respect to theoretical value.
In any case, as requested by regulations as per Bank of Italy provisions, the final evaluation of sustainable performance parameters and the alignment between risk and remuneration will be assessed by Remuneration Committee and defined under the governance and accountability of the Board of Directors.
The Board of Directors does not take into account, when deciding bonus, balance sheet extraordinary items that do not affect operational performance, regulatory capital and liquidity (e.g. goodwill impairment, extraordinary contributions to deposit guarantee schemes, etc.).
Moreover, following potential changes in current regulations and/or in relation to potential extraordinary and/or unpredictable contingencies that can impact the Group, the Bank or the market in which they operate, the Board of Directors, having heard the opinion of the Remuneration Committee and upon competent functions proposition, maintains the right to amend the system and relevant rules.
Further details in chapter 5.2.1.
the goals appraisal system is based on a 5 values scale with a descriptive outcome (from "Below Expectations" to "Greatly Exceeds Expectations").
| WEIGHT | GOAL NAME | REFERENCE TARGET |
NOTE/CATEGORY (sustainability, value creation, risk, cost efficiency, etc.) |
||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| GOAL 1 | vs. budget | Value Creation | |||||
| QUANTITATIVE/ | 70% | GOAL 2 | vs. budget | Value Creation | |||
| STRATEGIC | each goal | GOAL 3 | vs. target | Risk-based | |||
| has the | GOAL 4 | vs. budget | Cost efficiency | Sample of 2020 evaluation | |||
| same weight | GOAL 5 | vs. budget | Value Creation | ||||
| GOAL 6 | vs. budget | Value Creation | |||||
| QUALITATIVE/ SUSTAINABLE |
30% the two goals have |
GOAL 7 | vs. qualitative assessment |
Sustainability | |||
| the same weight |
GOAL 8 | vs. qualitative assessment |
Sustainability |
Sample of 2020 Scorecard
With the purpose of the individual allocation of bonuses, 2020 Incentive System requires that beneficiaries carry out the mandatory training according to Compliance (at least 90% at September 30).
33 Considering also the seriousness of possible internal/external inspections (i.e. Internal Audit, Bank of Italy, Consob and/or similar authorities), and in general, according to the paragraph "Focus on violation for noncompliance, individual Malus and Claw- back "
For CEO and GM and other roles provided by law34 with "significant amount" of total variable pay in the performance year (>430,000 €)35 a 5 years payout scheme applies with an overall payout structure of 6 years, with 60% of bonus deferred, in coherence with 2019 payout scheme.
| 2021 | 2022 | 2023 | 2024 | 2025 | 2026 | Total | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| PAYOUT | Cash | 20% upfront |
12% deferred |
12% deferred |
44% | |||
| Shares | 20% upfront |
12% deferred |
12% deferred |
12% deferred |
56% |
For the other roles provided by law36 with non-significant amount of total variable remuneration (≤430,000 €) a 4 years payout scheme applies with an overall payout structure of 5 years, with 50% of bonus deferred.
| 2021 | 2022 | 2023 | 2024 | 2025 | Total | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| PAYOUT | Cash | 25% upfront |
15% deferred |
10% deferred |
50% | ||
| Shares | 25% upfront |
15% deferred |
10% deferred |
50% |
At last, for other identified staff with non-significant amount of total variable remuneration a 3 years payout scheme applies with an overall payout structure of 4 years, with 40% of bonus deferred.
| 2021 | 2022 | 2023 | 2024 | Total | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| PAYOUT | Cash | 30% upfront |
20% deferred |
50% | ||
| Shares | 30% upfront |
10% deferred |
10% deferred |
50% |
Every tranche will be subject to the Zero Factor related to the year of competence and to the verification of the compliance of individual behaviors:
An annual performance measurement framework supports the 2020 Incentive System described in the chapter 5.2. The measurement assures coherence, consistency and clarity of performance objectives with business strategy, and encourages and rewards desired behaviours and risk orientation. Our performance management process ensures that to all Identified Staff receive their own individuals goals at the beginning of the year and includes a rigorous review of their goals achievements. Short-term variable remuneration, for instance, is determined based on specific, clear and measurable performance indicators, through a balanced and not discretional assessment.
35 Equal to 25% of the total remuneration of the Italian High Earners according to the EBA report (Benchmarking and High Eaners Report). The threshold includes both the short-term variable remuneration and the annual tranche of the long-term variable remuneration, and it is equal to less than 10x the overall average remuneration of the Bank's employees. As required by the regulatory provisions (Circular 285/2013), the threshold has been defined for the three-year period 2019-2021. 36 See note 34
34 For instance the first reporting line of Management Body (CEO) and responsible of main business areas.
37 Equal to Euro 75.000 that will be paid in cash.
For each Risk Taker, the 2020 Scorecard adequately balances economic-financial and non-economic factors (that means, quantitative/strategic and qualitative/sustainable), also considering performance goals linked to Risks and Compliance, to the respect of values and to ESG parameters. In this way, it ensures medium-term sustainability for the Bank and all its stakeholders.
For Company Control Functions, Human Resources department and the Manager in charge for the financial statement, all goals linked to economic results must be excluded, in order to minimize potential conflicts of interest and be independent from the results of the respective areas.
With the aim to align all goals coherently, the individual scorecards for the Deputy General Managers exactly replicate the CEO and GM's scorecard, also considering their role. The goal setting for the remaining Identified Staff, instead, has been carried out through the cascading of their superiors' goals, taking into account both the strategic factors and the business objectives of the Bank, as well as the specificities of each role.
2020 goals defined and approved by FinecoBank S.p.A. Board of Directors as the core drivers of performance for the Chief Executive Officer and General Manager include goals related to the Group profitability, with particular focus on risk, consistency with Risk Appetite Framework and sustainability.
| WEIGHT | # | GOAL NAME | REFERENCE TARGET | NOTE/CATEGORY (sustainability, value creation, risk, cost efficiency, etc.) |
|
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | ROAC | vs. budget | Value Creation | ||
| 2 | EVA | vs. budget | Value Creation | ||
| 70% | 3 | EL stock (%) | vs. target | Risk Based | |
| QUANTITATIVE/ STRAT EGIC |
each goal has the same weight |
4 | OPEX | vs. budget Operating costs as reported in reclassified P&I, i.e.: Staff expenses + Other Administrative Expenses (direct + indiricet) - Expenses Recovery + Depreciations |
Cost Efficiency |
| 5 | Net New Clients | vs. budget | Value Creation | ||
| 6 | Net stables of Guided Product |
vs. budget | Value Creation | ||
| QUALITATIVE/ SUSTAINABLE |
30% the two goals have the same |
7 | Stakeholder Value | vs. qualitative assessment based on: Broaden the range of ESG products (e.g. lending and investments products); Y/Y delta on Gender Pay Gap/Gender Balance; Expand our range of "Welfare" solutions; Improve Fineco's environmental performance (e.g. sustainable mobility, Environmental Statement, reduction of plastic waste and energy consumption). |
Sustainability |
| weight | 8 | Tone from the top on conduct and compliance culture |
vs. qualitative assessment based on: Scope, kind and numbers of documented initiatives aimed at promoting staff integrity/customer protection/trustworthiness The overall status of findings or proceedings in place (internal or external) considering the trend, type, severity and the timely completion of the related remediation actions/enhance risk&control culture |
Sustainability |
For the other Identified Staff of Fineco, indicators that include profitability and risk management are reflected also in their scorecards, with differences given by the relevant activities. It is understood in any case the rule pursuant to which no economic goals must be provided for the Company Control Functions, the Head of Human Resources and the Manager in charge for preparing financial statements.
The target/budget of each goal will be disclosed ex-post with the 2021 Compensation Policy. In fact, those are price sensitive information linked to Fineco strategies.
Fineco is aware that a strategy oriented towards a stable and comprehensive growth needs to be progressively supported by the integration of environmental and social sustainability, and sustainable governance principles in its business choices and managerial operations.
For instance, the CEO and General Manager's 2020 Scorecard and the Identified Staff's, with reference to the short-term incentive system and in line with 2019, contain sustainable goals, related to the capacity of generating medium-long term value for all the stakeholders. In particular, the goal "Stakeholder Value" declines ESG targets that are included in the 2020-2023 Group's Strategic Plan, and that can be pursued and measured objectively also in a one-year period.
In continuity with 2019, 2020 scorecards also provide a specific goal related to the "Tone from the top", therefore related to behavior integrity and spread of compliance culture within the organization.
Given the differences in the forms of remuneration and in the modalities of its generation (see paragraph 4.2, Section I), also for the PFA population Identified Staff in Fineco a specific Incentive System is provided. Mirroring what is designed for the Employees, the system is based on a bonus pool approach, it takes into account the national and international regulatory requirements, and it directly links bonuses with Group results, ensuring the link between profitability, risk and reward.
In particular, the 2020 Incentive System for PFA Identified Staff – as approved by the Board on January 15, 2020 - provides for:
In coherence with what previously described for the Employees, also for the PFA the process of bonus pool definition includes the following steps:

Bonus pool process starts with the definition of the "funding rate" during budgeting phase. The funding rate is a percentage of the Net Operating Profit (net of Provisions for Risk and Charges, corresponding to Profit Before Tax) considering: historical data analysis, expected profitability, business strategy and previous year pool. The bonus pool is submitted for approval to the Board of Directors of FinecoBank S.p.A.
38 Unlike what happens in the Incentive System for Employees, the FinecoBank shares used for the purposes of payments to the PFA, are not generated by a free capital increase but are purchased directly on the market, pursuant to section 2357 of Italian Civil Code.
The Entry Conditions are the mechanism that determines the possible application of the Zero Factor based on performance indicators in terms of capital, liquidity and profitability. The entry conditions provided for 2020 – working also as malus conditions for the deferrals of previous years incentive systems – are reported in the following table.
| Fineco Entry Conditions |
|---|
| Net Operating Profit adjusted ≥0 and |
| Net Profit ≥0 and |
| CET1 Ratio > 9.77% (2020 RAF Trigger) and |
| Liquidity Coverage Ratio >101% (2020 RAF Limit) |
| Net Stable Funding Ratio >101% (2020 RAF Limit) |
Compared to the 2019 system, the Capital indicator changes moving from the CET1 Ratio RAF limit to the CET1 Ratio, with reference to the RAF trigger value instead of limit.
The on/off mechanism of the access conditions and the related effects on the Fineco Bonus Pool work as shown below:

To activate the "multiplier" the CRO dashboard assessment is confirmed, pursuant to the defined methodology.
The CRO dashboard (defined in coherence with the Fineco Risk Appetite Framework) includes indicators taken from FinecoBank Risk Appetite Framework, measured with reference to the respective relevant thresholds (limit, trigger and target) 39 .
The "multiplier" effect deriving from the evaluation of overall CRO dashboard outcome made by the FinecoBank S.p.A. CRO – and verified by the Remuneration Committee and the Board of Directors – applies to the bonus pool in case the entry conditions are all met.
The dashboard evaluation is carried out pursuant to a methodology defined by the Risk Management, as for the Employees System.
The bonus pool corrections ranges deriving from the CRO Dashboard assessment are not modified compared to the 2019 Incentive System, as follows:
| CRO Assessment | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| + ++ |
||||||
| 50% | 75% | 100% | 110% | 125% |
The fully positive "++" rating can only be granted in the case of positive EVA at the end of the financial year (or EVA> 0 if the budget is equal to 0). As provided in the 2019 System, a further range of discretion up to +20% is in the faculty of the Remuneration Committee and Board of Directors, while no limit is set in case the bonus pool is lowered with respect to theoretical value.
In any case, as requested by regulations as per Bank of Italy provisions, the final evaluation of sustainable performance parameters and the alignment between risk and remuneration will be assessed by Remuneration Committee and defined under the governance and accountability of the Board of Directors.
39 See paragraph 5.2.
The Board of Directors does not take into account, when deciding bonus, balance sheet extraordinary items that do not affect operational performance, regulatory capital and liquidity (e.g. goodwill impairment, extraordinary contributions to deposit guarantee schemes, etc.).
Moreover, following potential changes in current regulations and/or in relation to potential extraordinary and/or unpredictable contingencies that can impact the Group, the Bank or the market in which they operate, the Board of Directors, having heard the opinion of the Remuneration Committee and upon competent functions proposition, maintains the right to amend the system and relevant rules.
| 2021 | 2022 | 2023 | 2024 | Total | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| PAYOUT | Cash | 20% upfront |
5% deferred |
5% deferred |
20% deferred |
50% |
| Shares | 20% upfront |
15% deferred |
15% deferred |
50% |
For roles with non-significant amount of total variable remuneration, a 3 years payout scheme applies with an overall payout structure of 4 years, with 40% of bonus deferred.
| 2021 | 2022 | 2023 | 2024 | Total | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| PAYOUT | Cash | 30% upfront |
20% deferred |
50% | ||
| Shares | 30% upfront |
10% deferred |
10% deferred |
50% |
The beneficiaries cannot activate programs or agreements that specifically protect the value of unavailable financial instruments assigned within the incentive plans. Any form of coverage will be considered a violation of compliance rules and imply the consequences set out in the regulations, rules and procedures.
41 The definition of the overall variable remuneration threshold (>€ 430,000) follows the same logic described in the 2020 Incentive System for Employees Identified Staff 42 Equal to Euro 75,000 that will be paid in cash.
40 Considering also the seriousness of possible internal/external inspections (i.e. Internal Audit, Bank of Italy, Consob and/or similar local authorities).
Taking into account the specificities of the PFA business, and in continuity with the previous years' Incentive Plans in terms of business objectives, for the purposes of the 2020 Incentive System for PFA43 the performance assessment of Financial Advisors included in the Identified Staff will be based on the following indicators:
For the purpose of evaluating individual performance, the Scorecard provides a specific indicator to reflect the quality of the work of the Financial Advisor.
Finally, the payment of the bonus is subject to the preliminary verification of compliance with anti-money laundering regulation.
43 Always taking into account the individual compliance condition, as described above
44 Guided products refer to high added value products and developed services, considering the different customers risk profiles
45 For the Financial Advisors in managerial positions with more than 5 PFA coordinated
46 For PFAs and Financial Advisors in managerial position and less than 5 PFA coordinated
With the aim of rewarding, motivating and retaining selected Bank Employees, in line with the 2020 objectives of FinecoBank Group in terms of value creation, sustainability and risk, a long-term equity plan has been defined in 2018, also in order to align the long-term interests of the Bank's Management with the long-term value creation for shareholders.
The beneficiaries of the Plan are selected Employees with "key roles" within the organization (about 65 resources, including Executives with strategic responsibility).
The Heads of the Company Control Functions (CRO, Head of Compliance) and the Head of Human Resources are excluded from the Beneficiaries of the Plan.
The structure of the Plan, described below in detail, provides for:
The performance targets, as defined above, will be assessed in relation to specific targets and will have a specific percentage weight on the total bonus. Their valuation (with the exception of the Cost of Risk for which an "on-off" threshold is envisaged) will be based on progressive thresholds, which will correspond to increasing percentages of bonuses from 0 to 100% with a linear progression47, as shown below.

* Calculated on commercial credits.
In order to comply with current regulations, Fineco defined
In full compliance with the regulations in force, and for the purposes set out above, specific Fineco indicators have been identified to measure profitability, capital strength and liquidity.
47 For example, with EVA at 12/31/2020 equal to 190 million, the payment of the corresponding bonus portion would be equal to 50% of what is expected in case of EVA equal to 200 million.
The indicators of capital and liquidity (Common Equity Tier 1 Ratio Fully Loaded48, Liquidity Coverage Ratio and Net Stable Funding Ratio) will be calculated annually, while a "cumulative" assessment of profitability indicators is envisaged. In 2020 - in line with the provisions for the short-term Incentive System and in accordance with the provisions of the Plan Regulations - the Capital Condition CET1 Ratio (limit) has been changed for the year of performance in CET1 Ratio (trigger).
| Performance Entry Conditions |
|
|---|---|
| INDICATORS | VALUES |
| Σ 2018-2020 Net Operating Profit Adjusted |
>0 |
| Σ 2018-2020 Net Profit | >0 |
| CET1 Ratio (RAF Trigger)* |
>9 77% |
| Liquidity Coverage Ratio (RAF Limit)* |
>101% |
| Net Stable Funding Ratio (RAF Limit)* |
>101% |
| 1) In case cumulated entry conditions are not met, bonus will be zeroed. 2) In case annual entry conditions are not met, bonus will be |
* In case more restrictive amendments are provided by law in the Plan performance years, the thresholds will be modified accordingly.
Each payment related to the Plan is subject to the preliminary compliance check of individual behaviors. The bonus payment is subject to claw-back49 .
For the purposes of the appropriate Plan correction for the Bank's Risk, the results of the annual CRO Dashboard assessments for the purposes of short-term incentive systems will be taken into consideration for each year of the Plan's performance. The presence of several 'neutral' annual assessments or negative assessments will result in a proportional reduction of individual bonuses, as shown below:
| % BONUS | 100% | 75% | 50% | 25% | 0% |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
CRO DB ASSESSMENT |
1 'neutral' assessment and 2 positive assessments (or 3 positive assessments) |
22 'neutral" assessments |
negative assessment |
2 negative assessments |
3 negative assessments |
Maximum bonuses have been defined on the basis of the categories of beneficiaries of the Plan. The amounts were established in line with the applicable regulatory provisions and the FinecoBank Group Compensation Policy.
Individual bonuses - in particular - confirm compliance with the maximum limits for the variable remuneration envisaged for the Plan Beneficiaries, also taking into account the short-term variable remuneration attributable in each year of performance.
Within the aforementioned limits, it is planned, in detail:
For the other Beneficiaries the target bonus is defined individually, always in compliance with the maximum limits set by the regulations and FinecoBank Group Compensation Policy.
48 It's the Class 1 Capital of the Institution expressed in percentage of the overall amount of the risk exposure. It's the CET1 requirement recommended by ECB in its communication on variable remuneration. 49 See par. 3.2, section I
| 2018-2020 | 2021 | 2022 | 2023 | 2024 | 2025 | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| CEO/GM | PERFORMANCE | 40% UPFRONT SHARES |
60% DEFERRED SHARES |
|||
| IDENTIFIED STAFF |
40% UPFRONT SHARES |
20% DEFERRED SHARES |
||||
| PERFORMANCE | 20% DEFERRED SHARES |
DEFERRED SHARES |
||||
| OTHER BENEFICIARIES |
PERFORMANCE | 40% UPFRONT SHARES |
20% DEFERRED SHARES |
20% DEFERRED SHARES |
20% DEFERRED SHARES |
As mentioned, the bonuses will be paid entirely in FinecoBank free ordinary shares50, according to the payment schemes shown below.
For the Beneficiaries of the Plan included in Identified Staff holding periods on the shares are provided, equal to two years for the upfront shares, assigned after the end of the performance period, and one year for deferred shares.
For the other Beneficiaries the assignments of the shares and their availability are concomitant during the deferral period.
The evaluation of the results and the conditions for the individual assignment of the shares will be carried out by the Board of Directors, upon the proposal of the Remuneration Committee, according to the established governance.
It is provided the possibility for the Remuneration Committee and the Board of Directors to increase bonuses up to 20% (within the maximum bonuses provided by the Plan, as well as reduce them without limits, considering indicators as the Total Shareholders Return (absolute and relative) or other indicators, such as market context and trends on remuneration, or events with reputational impacts. The correction "in positive" does not apply in case of non-achievement of the entry conditions, as described in this paragraph.
When deciding the bonus, the Board of Directors does not take into account balance sheet extraordinary items, which do not affect operational performance, regulatory capital and liquidity (e.g. goodwill impairment, extraordinary contributions to deposit guarantee schemes, etc.).
The maximum number of shares to be allocated in the respective instalments – at the conditions stated above – has been defined in 2018, based on the arithmetic mean of the official closing market price of FinecoBank ordinary shares during the month preceding the Board resolution that executed the Shareholders Meeting resolution related to the Plan.
The Plan provides for an impact on FinecoBank S.p.A. share capital of approximately 0.1%, assuming that all free shares for employees have been distributed. The current overall dilution for all other outstanding equity-based plans for both Employees and Financial Advisors equals to 0.7% ca.
The beneficiaries cannot activate programs or agreements that specifically protect the value of unavailable financial instruments assigned within the incentive plans. Any form of coverage will be considered a violation of compliance rules and imply the consequences set out in the regulations, rules and procedures.
Moreover, following potential changes in current regulations and/or in relation to potential extraordinary and/or unpredictable contingencies that can affect FinecoBank Group, the Bank or the market in which it operates, the Board of Directors, having heard the opinion of the Remuneration Committee and upon competent Company Functions' proposal, maintains the right to amend the Plan and relevant rules.
50 The Bank reserves the possibility to assign different instruments from the FinecoBank ordinary shares, where requested by law.
With the aim of rewarding, motivating and retaining selected Financial Advisors and Network Managers51, in line with the commercial goals of the three-year period 2018-2020 and with the aim of creating value for Shareholders, a long-term plan has been defined in cash and FinecoBank shares. The Plan is dedicated to Financial Advisors who will be qualified as Identified Staff in the year 2020. At the moment, 11 beneficiaries are estimated52 . The Plan - whose characteristics are described below in detail - provides:
Performance goals are defined on the basis of increasing targets as a percentage of the cumulative budget for the three-year period of the Plan, in terms of Total Net Sales (NS) and Net Sales of Guided Products (NSGP). Through the evaluation system, as described below, the Plan aims at rewarding the extra performance towards the defined goals.
Performance indicators work in a general "matrix" logic with different specificities, depending on the target population (PFA / Group Manager and Area Manager) as shown below.
For Group Manager and PFA population, increasing bonuses are expected up to a theoretical maximum when 250% of the cumulated budgets in terms of Total Net Sales and Net Sales of Guided Products are reached53 .
| NS | PFA & GROUP MANAGERS | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 250% | 70% | 80% | 100% | |
| 200% | 60% | 70% | 80% | Theoretical Bonus |
| 150% | 50% | 60% | 70% | |
| VS 2018-2020 BUDGETS |
150% | 200% | 250% | NSCP |
For the purposes of determining the final maximum bonus a "multiplier" is also provided based on the ratio between Guided Products and Total Financial Asset, as shown below:
| GP/TFA | Final Bonus | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| ≥65% | 1.5x | ||
| <65% ≥60% | 1.25x | ||
| <60% | 1× |
51 Group Managers and Area Managers (Financial Advisors with accessory assignment of other PFAs coordination)
52 Identified pursuant to the regulation in place at the time 53 Group Manager that at December 31, 2020 have reached the personal targets as described in the matrix, in order to access the bonus shall have also achieved the goal of 100% of Total Net Sales and Net Sales of Guide Products in the period of the coordinated PFAs.
For the Area Managers the performance evaluation follows the same logics with targets "vs budget" measured in a different way, as shown below. Differently from Group Manager and PFAs, in facts, the further multiplier is not provided54 .
| NS | AREA MANAGERS | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 250% | 70% | 80% | 100% | |
| 200% | 60% | 70% | 80% | |
| 150% | 50% | 60% | 70% | |
| VS 2018-2020 BUDGETS |
150% | 200% | 250% |
For the purposes of the Plan, specific entry conditions are defined at individual and Group level as detailed below.
In order to access the bonus, is provided at individual level the achievement of specific thresholds in terms of Net Sales of Asset under Management55, namely:
In addition to the above individual conditions, in order to access the bonus, it is provided the achievement of a EVA threshold equal or higher than € 180 Mio.
In order to comply with regulatory provisions, the following are defined:
For these purposes, specific capital, profitability and liquidity indicators have been defined.
Capital and liquidity indicators (Common Equity Tier 1 Ratio Fully Loaded, Liquidity Coverage Ratio and Net Stable Funding Ratio) will be assessed yearly, while is provided a "cumulated" assessment of the profitability indicators (Net Operating Profit Adjusted and Net Profit). In 2020 in line with the provisions for the short-term Incentive System and in accordance with the provisions of the Plan Regulations - the Capital Condition CET1 Ratio (limit) has been changed for the year of performance in CET1 Ratio (trigger). Below is shown the functioning mechanism of entry and malus conditions provided by the Plan:
| 1) In case cumulated entry conditions are not met, bonus will be | ||
|---|---|---|
zeroed.
1) In case both cumulated and annual entry conditions are not met, deferred installments will be zeroed
2) In case annual entry conditions are not met, bonus will be reduced pro-quota.
* In case of more restrictive amendments provided by law in the Plan performance years, the thresholds will be modified accordingly.
The conditions must all be met for the purpose of awarding the maximum bonus (including deferrals). The verification - in every year of performance of the Plan and in each year of bonus assignment - of the persistence of the agency relationship remains valid.
Each payment related to the Plan is subject to prior verification of the compliance of the behavior at individual level.
54 The multiplier is not provided for Area Manager in consideration of the scope of the role and considering challenging the achievement of the over-performance in terms of Total Net Sales and Net Sales of Guided Products. 55 Measured at 31/12/2020 as "cumulated" within the Plan performance years
The bonus payment is subject to claw-back56 .
For the purposes of the appropriate Plan correction for the Bank's Risk, the results of the annual CRO Dashboard assessments for the purposes of short-term incentive systems will be taken into consideration for each year of the Plan's performance. The presence of several 'neutral' annual assessments or negative assessments will result in a proportional reduction of individual bonuses, as shown below:
| % BONUS | 100% | 75% | 50% | 25% | 0% |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
CRO DB ASSESSMENT |
1 'neutral" assessment and 2 positive assessments (or 3 positive assessments) |
22 'neutral" assessments |
negative assessment |
2 negative assessments |
3 negative assessments |
A maximum bonus target of equal amount has been defined for all the participants of the plan, in line with the provisions of the applicable regulatory provisions and the FinecoBank Group Compensation Policy.
Individual bonuses - in particular - confirm compliance with the maximum limits for the variable remuneration envisaged for the Plan Beneficiaries, also taking into account the short-term variable remuneration attributable to each year of performance.
The bonuses will be paid 40% in cash and 60% in Fineco shares, according to the payment scheme shown below:
| 2018-2020 | 2021 | 2022 | 2023 | 2024 | 2025 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| PERFORMANCE | 20% UPFRONT CASHI |
20% DEFERRED CASH |
20% UPFRONT SHARES |
20% DEFERRED SHARES |
20% DEFERRED SHARES |
As per regulations, there are periods of unavailability on the shares assigned equal to two years for the shares allocated upfront and one year for deferred shares.
The evaluation of the results and the conditions for the individual awarding of bonuses will be carried out by the Board of Directors, upon the proposal of the Remuneration Committee, according to the established governance57 .
The Board of Directors does not take into account, when deciding bonus, balance sheet extraordinary items which do not impact operational performance, regulatory capital and liquidity (e.g. goodwill impairment, extraordinary contributions to deposit guarantee schemes, etc.).
The maximum number of shares to be assigned with the third, fourth and fifth tranches of the bonus shall be defined in 2021, on the basis of the arithmetic mean of the official closing market price of Fineco ordinary shares during the month after the Board resolution that verifies the performance achievements in 2020.
The Plan provides for an expected impact on FinecoBank share capital of approximately 0,08%, assuming that all free shares for Financial Advisors have been assigned. The current overall dilution for all other outstanding FinecoBank equity-based plans both for Employees and Financial Advisors equals 0,7% ca. However, the Plan does not have a proper dilution impact as the FinecoBank shares awarded are purchased on the market and are not generated through a free capital increase.
The beneficiaries cannot activate programs or agreements that specifically protect the value of unavailable financial instruments assigned within the incentive plans. Any form of coverage will be considered a violation of compliance rules and imply the consequences set out in the regulations, rules and procedures.
Moreover, following potential changes in current regulations and/or in relation to potential extraordinary and/or unpredictable contingencies that can impact FinecoBank Group, the Bank or the market in which it operates, the Board of Directors, having heard the opinion of Remuneration Committee and upon competent functions' proposal, maintains the right to amend the system and relevant rules.
56 See paragraph 3.2 Section I
57 It is possible for the Remuneration Committee and the Board of Directors to increase bonuses up to 20% (within the maximum bonus provided by the Plan) or to correct them in negative without limits, in the presence of extraordinary conditions and taking into account elements such as for example behaviors with significant reputational impact. The 'positive' correction does not apply if entry conditions are not met, as described in this paragraph.
48 FinecoBank Group·2020 Compensation Policy

FINECO. SIMPLIFYING BANKING
FinecoBank S.p.A.
4.1 2019 Incentive Systems implementation and outcomes, and previous years' payments
The remuneration report discloses all relevant FinecoBank compensation-related information and methodologies with the aim to increasing Stakeholders' awareness of our compensation policies, practices and outcomes, demonstrating their coherence with business strategy and performance, responsible remuneration and sound risk management.
The report provides ex-post information on 2019 outcomes, covering our Identified Staff population (both employees and Financial Advisors) and Corporate Bodies' members.
Remuneration solutions implemented in 2019 provided for:
Over the years we constantly kept abreast of ongoing changes in national and international regulations (see, for instance, EBA Guidelines on remuneration policies and practices).
The most recent changes in the regulatory framework include the European Directive 828/2017 (Shareholder Rights Directive II), implemented in Italy with the Legislative Decree n. 49 of May 10, 2019 that amends the Legislative Decree n. 58/1998 (TUF). The new provisions have been fully implemented within the scope of the present Compensation Policy. For instance, an advisory non-binding vote will be hold on the Section II of the document by the 2020 Shareholders' Meeting, in relation to a separate and different resolution from the one required to approve the Section I.
2019 remuneration report, the section that provides complete and comprehensive information on compensation, includes details referring to Members of Administrative and Auditing bodies, General Manager and Executives with strategic responsibility.
Data pursuant section 84-quater approved with resolution of the Italian National Commission for Listed Companies (Consob) no.11971, dated May 14th 1999 (as subsequently modified), providing the rules for Issuers (so called "Issuers Regulation"), as well as the information on incentive systems pursuant to section 114-bis of the Legislative Decree issued on February 24, 1998 n. 58 (the Consolidated Text on Finance –"TUF"), and to the provisions of the Issuers Regulation on information that have to be communicated to the market on compensation plans based on financial instruments, are included in this document, further to be included in the Annexes to the 2019 FinecoBank Compensation Policy.
To this regard, it is highlighted that the aforementioned information are provided also pursuant to the Report on Corporate Governance and Ownership Structures, issued pursuant to art. 123-bis of TUF.
The Remuneration Committee, established by the Board of Directors' resolution on April 11, 2017, performs a strategic role in supporting Board of Directors' oversight of FinecoBank Group Compensation Policy and plans design.
According to the internal provisions approved by the Board of Directors, ruling the functioning and competencies of corporate bodies and related information flows (hereinafter the "Corporate Governance Rules"), this Committee is composed by 3 non-executive members, Mr. Gianmarco Montanari, Ms. Elena Biffi and Mr. Enrico Cotta Ramusino
As provided by law, at least a Committee Member has adequate knowledge and experience in finance or accounting topics, and in remuneration policies.
The FinecoBank Board of Directors verified the Directors independence requirements pursuant to art. 148 TUF and art. 3 of Corporate Governance Code. Pursuant to this, with reference to the Remuneration Committee members:
The Committee meetings held in 2019 have been coordinated by the Chairman Mr Gianmarco Montanari.
In performing its duties and if important and suitable, the Remuneration Committee, also with the support of an external consultant:
In 2019 the Remuneration Committee met 11 times. The meetings had an average duration of one hour and half. From the beginning of 2020 and until the approval of the present 2020 Compensation Policy, 4 meetings of the Committee have been held. The Secretary designated by the Committee takes minutes of each meeting and places them on record. From the approval of "Corporate Governance Rules", the Chairman of the Committee provided time by time the information on the Committee meetings to the subsequent Board meeting.
From December 2014 on, the Committee, by means of the budget assigned for the year (amounting to Euro 35,000 for 2019), has started a collaboration with an external advisor - whose independence has been previously verified - who is invited to the Committee's meeting when required.
The Committee may, when it deems it appropriate, invite other individuals from within the Company to attend the meetings, in relation to the corporate functions and organizations concerned by the issues at hand, including members of other committees within the Board of Directors, or external parties. The Committee shall meet when convened by its Chairman, whenever he/she deems necessary, or upon the request of one of its members. In any case, the Committee has always been able to access the information and the Company Functions necessary to perform its activities.
In 2019, the Head of Human Resources has been always invited to Committee's meetings. The Chairman has also invited the Head of Legal & Corporate Affairs for the matters within the competence, and the Head of Network Controls, Monitoring and Service Department for topics related to PFA network (see for instance the Incentive Systems and related rules for the PFA population). In addition to the aforementioned Functions, the Chairman invited - to specific Committee's meetings and for topics in the respective competence perimeters – the CRO, CFO and Compliance Officer of FinecoBank. In particular, the CRO and CFO participated in the meetings regarding the 2019 Incentive Systems evaluation, while the Compliance Officer was invited, among others, to participate in the discussions related to the Identified Staff definition.
The Chairman has also invited the Internal Audit58 function to the meeting related to the annual audit performed on FinecoBank remuneration policies and practices.
During 2019, the key activities of the Remuneration Committee included:
| MAIN COMMITTEE'S ACTIVITIES IN 2019 | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| January | 2019 Employees Identified Staff definition and related 2019 Incentive System 2019 Incentive System for PFA Identified Staff |
||||||
| February | "2014-2017 Multi-year Plan Top Management" implementation and guidelines amendments Bonus Pool 2018 and 2018 and previous years Incentive Systems implementation 2019 Performance goals of Employees Identified Staff 2018-2020 LTI Plan guidelines amendments 2019 PFAs Identified Staff definition 2018 Bonus Pool and 2018 and previous years Incentive Systems implementation for PFAs Identified Staff 2018 Incentive Plans and Additional Future Program for PFAs implementation 2019 Incentive Plans for PFAs Information on amendments to the PFA Disciplinary Committee guidelines |
||||||
| March | 2019 Compensation Policy Severance Policy 2019 Incentive System guidelines for Employees Identified Staff Salary review for Identified Staff 2019 Incentive System guidelines for PFAs Identified Staff 2018-2020 LTI Plan for PFAs guidelines amendments Report on Corporate Governance and Ownership Structures - for the section related to the Committee itself Information on 2019 FAM Incentive System |
||||||
| May | Salary review for Identified Staff – Role Based Allowance Role Based Allowance guidelines 2019 Identified Staff update |
||||||
| July | Exit from UniCredit Group: amendments to employees' short and long term incentive systems guidelines Exit from UniCredit Group: amendments to PFAs' short and long term incentive systems guidelines Report to the Board of Committee's activities in the first semester of 2019 |
||||||
| October | Exit from UniCredit Group: update to the Severance Policy 2019 "Pay for Performance" analysis FinecoBank S.p.A. Corporate Bodies Guidelines update Banding and Salary review proposals 2019 Gender Pay Gap: new methodology |
||||||
| December | 2020 Guidelines for PFAs Incentive System Information on the proportionality criteria application and on the payout schemes for 2020 Incentive Systems for Identified Staff Selection of the Independent Advisor of the Committee in 2020 Report to the Board of Committee's activities in the second semester of 2019 |
58 Insourcing of Internal Audit function in FinecoBank S.p.A. during 2019
The main topics discussed by the Committee are also submitted to the attention of the Board of Statutory Auditors, in advance over their submission to the Board of Directors. Moreover, at least a member of the Board of Statutory Auditors attended to the meetings of the Committee in 2019. We highlight that the Directors do not participate in the Committee meetings in which the proposals to the Board concerning their remuneration are made.
The following table summarizes the composition of the Committee in 2019 and, in addition to the information on the independency of the members, provides details regarding their attendance to the meetings that have been called during the year.
| Name | Executive | Non executive |
Indip. Code | Indip. TUF | % (*) | (**) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Gianmarco Montanari | X | X | X | 100% | P | |
| Elena Biffi | X | X | X | 100% | M | |
| Enrico Cotta Ramusino | X | X | 100% | M | ||
| N. Comittee meetings: 11 |
(*) in this column is indicated the percentage of participation of the directors in the Committee's meetings (n. of presences/n. of meetings held during the actual period in which the director was in charge, in the Exercise).
(**) In this column is reported the qualification of the director in the Committee ("C" Chairman; "M" member)
Key contributions in 2019 of FinecoBank S.p.A. Compliance function, for all aspects that fall within its perimeter, included:
In 2020, the Compliance function will continue to operate in close co-ordination with the Human Resources function to support not only in the validation but also in the design and definition of compensation policy and processes.
The link between compensation and risk has been maintained in 2019 with the involvement of the Risk Management function in compensation design and the definition of an explicit framework to base remuneration within an overarching FinecoBank Risk Appetite Framework, so that incentives to take risk are appropriately constrained by incentives to manage risk. In particular, the Board of Directors and Remuneration Committee draw upon the input of involved functions to define the link between profitability, risk and reward within FinecoBank incentive systems.
The external company in charge for the statutory audit verifies that the Board actually drafted the Section II concerning the 2019 remuneration report, according to art. 123-ter letter 8-bis of TUF.
The Internal Audit Function has examined the remuneration and incentive system adopted by FinecoBank and by the Group for the determination and disbursement of compensation to representatives of corporate bodies and variable remuneration to employees and the Personal Financial Advisors ("PFA"), in order to verify compliance with the supervisory regulations issued by the Bank of Italy and the Remuneration Policy defined for 2019 and approved by the Shareholders' Meeting.
The "good" evaluation was based on the overall correct application of the remuneration and incentive system.
The checks carried out have ascertained in the governance area the correct fulfillment of the obligations envisaged by the regulations the general compliance of the remuneration policies with the current regulatory and the sustainability with regard to the Bank's capital and income conditions, the dissemination of the Group Policies to the subsidiary Fineco Asset Management DAC and the correct functioning of the relevant bodies, including the Remuneration Committee and the Board of Directors; furthermore, compliance with external regulations was ascertained in the process of identifying resources belonging to the category of most relevant personnel (Identified Staff), both for employees and PFAs.
The incentives awarded to employees and Financial Advisors ("PFA") were determined in accordance with the defined policies, ensuring the correct balance of the fixed and variable components, consistency with the qualitative/quantitative assessments of the performance objectives, as well as an adequate information to the Remuneration Committee and Control Bodies.
The remuneration paid to company representatives, the payment and deferral of the incentive system of the previous year and the application of the employee termination policy, aligned with the corporate risk management strategy, were also correctly determined.
The Company control functions, in particular Compliance and Risk Management, were correctly involved in the definition and validation steps of the remuneration policy, the incentive systems and the related remuneration processes as well as in the process of evaluating the annual performance.
The Bank has planned for the current year the controls provided by the Bank of Italy Circular 285/2013 aimed at verifying the prohibition on activating programs or agreements that specifically protect the value of unavailable financial instruments assigned within the incentive plans (so-called hedging).
During 2019-2020, the updating of the remuneration policy continued, aimed both at the transposition of the latest regulatory changes and at the alignment with the new operating context arising from the deconsolidation from the UniCredit Group, while all subsequent changes (including the Shareholders Rights Directive II and Prov. 81/2019 on "Banking Transparency") will be disclosed in the 2020 Compensation Policy, being defined at the date of the audit.
The main results of the audit were presented to the Remuneration Committee on March 9, 2020.
.
The remuneration for members of the administrative and auditing Bodies of FinecoBank S.p.A. is represented only by a fix component, determined on the importance of the position and the time required for the performance of the tasks assigned.
This policy applies to non-Executive Directors and to the Supervisory Body members that are not employees of FinecoBank or other Legal Entities of the Group, as well as to Statutory Auditors.
The compensation paid to non-Executive Directors, to the Supervisory Body members and to the Statutory Auditors is not linked to the economic results achieved by FinecoBank and none of them takes part in any incentive plans based on stock options or, generally, based on financial instruments.
| BENEFICIARIES | REMUNERATION COMPONENT |
APPROVED BY | AMOUNT (€)59 | NOTES | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Non Executive Directors |
Fixed only | Shareholders' Meeting and Board of Directors of April 11, 2017 |
Yearly amount: € 330,000 for the Board of Directors60 € 50,000 for participating to Board's Committees € 20,000 e € 15,000 for the Chairman and the Members of the Supervisory Body61 € 300 attendance fee for62: - BoD - BoD's Committees |
Compensation is determined on the role relevance and the effort required for carrying out all the assigned activities. |
|
| Board of Directors of April 11, 2017, according to art. 2389 par. 3 of Civil Code and heard the favourable opinion of the Statutory Auditors |
€ 200,000 yearly, divided between: - BoD Chairman - BoD Deputy Chairman |
||||
| Statutory Auditors | Fixed only | Shareholders' Meeting on April 11, 2017 |
Yearly63: € 50,000 for the Chairman of Statutory Auditors € 40,000 for each effective member € 300 as attendance fee for BoD and Statutory Audit meetings63 |
||
| Executives with strategic responsibility64 |
Fixed and variable | Board of Directors | Total amounts assigned, related to 2019 performance: € 850,000 fixed + € 850,000 variable for the CEO and General Manager € 1,416,053 fixed + € 1,813,166 variable for the other 4 Executives with strategic responsibility |
Fixed and variable components of the CEO/GM and others Executive with strategic responsibility remuneration are balanced through the prior definition of the maximum ration between the two |
592018-2020 LTI Plan is not included because it is related to long-term performance that have not been assessed yet.
60 Total amount for the whole Board of Directors (including the Executive Director) approved by the Shareholders' Meeting is equal to Euro 370,000.
61 On April 11, 2017, the Board of the Bank named as external members the Chairman and Member of the Supervisory Body according to the guidelines provided by the former parent company UniCredit, in relation to the update of the Organization, management and control Model ex legislative Decree 231/2001.
62 Cumulative, if participating in more than one meeting on the same day.
63 Alternate Statutory Auditors don't receive any compensation, except if they permanently substitute one of the Auditors.
64 CEO and General Manager, Deputy General Manager and Head of Global Banking Services, Deputy General Manager and Head of Global Business, Head of PFA Sale Network & Private Banking, as well as Chief Financial Officer.
For 2019, according to our Compensation Policy, in line with regulatory provisions, it has been defined ex-ante the maximum ratio between variable and fix component of the compensation both for the Chief Executive Officer and General Manager (the sole executive director sitting on the Board of Directors and employee of the Company) and for the other Executives with strategic responsibility.
The balance between variable and fixed components has been defined considering also the Company's strategic goals, risk management policies and other elements influencing firm's business.
With reference to the above table, for Executives with strategic responsibility it is specified that:
In particular, ex-ante defined specific metrics that reflect categories of our Fineco Risk Appetite Framework align the remuneration of the Chief Executive Officer and General Manager and of the others Executives with strategic responsibility to sustainable performance and value creation for the shareholders in a medium/long term perspective. Specific individual goals are set out taking into consideration the market practices and the role assigned within the Group, through the systematic use of specific indicators aimed at strengthening the sustainability of business, such as, for example, risk and financial sustainability indicators and profitability measures65 .
More information regarding our short-term performance management and evaluation are provided in chapter 5.2.1 – Section I
It is also foreseen the deferral in cash and shares of minimum 50% of the incentive. All the instalments are subject to the application of malus and/or claw-back conditions, if legally enforceable. 2019 Incentive System provides for 50% of the annual incentive to be deferred and paid in the five following years through the granting of FinecoBank shares. The number of such shares is set at the beginning of the deferral period, thus creating a link between the evolution of the share price and the actual value of the incentive.
More information regarding the 2019 incentive plan implementation and outcomes are provided in chapter 4.1.1.
The Chief Executive Officer and General Manager, on top of 2019 Incentive System, benefits also from:
"2014 Incentive System" (hereinafter also "Group Incentive System 2014") "2015 Incentive System" (hereinafter also "Group Incentive System 2015") "2016 Incentive System" (hereinafter also "Group Incentive System 2015") "2017 Incentive System" (hereinafter also "Group Incentive System 2017") "2018 Incentive System" (hereinafter also "Group Incentive System 2018") "2014-2017 Multi-year Plan Top Management" "Long Term Incentive Plan 2018-2020"
More information regarding the plans above mentioned are provided further in chapters 4.1.2 and 5 and in the Annexes.
The measure and duration of the deferral are aligned with the provisions set by regulators and are consistent with the characteristics of the business and with the Bank's risk profiles.
65 Since the CFO - included in the Executives with Strategic Responsibility - cover also the activities related to the Financial Statements, the individual goals are defined in coherence with the assigned tasks #### Indemnities to directors in the event of resignations, dismissal or termination of employment following a public purchase offer (as per section 123/bis, paragraph 1, letter i), of TUF)
None of the Directors have contracts containing clauses envisaging the payment of indemnities, or the right to keep post-retirement benefits, in the event of resignations or dismissal/revocation without just cause or if the employment relationship is terminated following a public purchase offer. In case of early termination of the mandate, the ordinary law provisions would therefore apply.
The individual employment contract of the Chief Executive Officer and General Manager, Mr. Alessandro Foti, is today governed - also concerning the event of resignations, dismissal/revocation or termination - by the ordinary provisions of the law and National Labor Agreement for Banking Industry Executives. In such context, the annual remuneration used to define the possible indemnity due in the above mentioned instances would include the fix remuneration, any other continuative compensation and the average of the variable pay (inclusive of the components paid in equity - such as for example free shares, restricted shares, performance shares - with the only exclusion of the valorisation of the stock options potentially assigned within long-term incentive plans) received in the last three years prior to the termination. The actual amount of such indemnity – in terms of months of compensation considered – is then bound to vary depending on the events which led to the termination and on the relationship's duration and is anyway subjected to provisions of the "Severance Policy" of FinecoBank approved by Shareholders' Meeting.
Non-executive Directors do not receive, within incentive plans, stock options or others equities. For the Chief Executive Officer and General Manager no specific provisions are provided with reference to the right to keep, in case of termination, the options received and the plans' provisions apply.
For none of the Directors currently in office, provisions exist regarding the establishment of advisory contracts for a term following the termination of the directorship, nor the right to keep post retirement perks. No agreements exist either providing compensation for non-competition undertakings.
The 2019 Incentive System, approved by FinecoBank Board of Directors on January 10, 2019, provides - in continuity with 2018 System - a "bonus pool" approach, which directly links bonuses with Company results, ensuring the link between profitability, risk and reward.
The System, implemented within the framework of our policy and governance, provides for the allocation of a performance related bonus in cash and/or free ordinary shares over maximum 6 years.
The bonus pool dimension is related to the actual profitability measure multiplied for the percentage of the bonus pool funding rate defined in the budgeting phase.
This calculation determines the so called "theoretical bonus pool" that, during the year of performance, has been adjusted based on the effective performance trend.
For the purpose of alignment with regulatory requirements, specific indicators are set to measure profitability, solidity and liquidity on an annual basis, which act as access conditions. In particular, the indicators and thresholds that are defined as access conditions for the 2019 Incentive System which confirm or cancel immediate and deferred payments - are as follows66:
| Fineco Entry Conditions | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Net Operating Profit adjusted ≥0 and | ||||||
| Net Profit ≥0 and | ||||||
| Common Equity Tier 1 Ratio Fully Loaded >11,1% (RAF Limit) and | ||||||
| Liquidity Coverage Ratio >101% (RAF Limit) | ||||||
| Net Stable Funding Ratio >101% (RAF Limit) |
66 As modified by the BoD on July 8, 2019, in order to eliminate the entry conditions defined at UniCredit Group Level
According to the actual results, verified and approved by the Board of Directors of FinecoBank S.p.A. on February 11, 2020, the relevant entry conditions have been achieved, confirming FinecoBank bonus pool67 .

Once the entry conditions have been verified, the effective bonus pool for FinecoBank's employees was confirmed, also in light of the overall positive ("++") assessment of the performance of the so-called "CRO dashboard"68, carried out by FinecoBank CRO.
This method provides a quarterly monitoring of the progress of the indicators included in the Dashboard and an annual assessment.
In line with Fineco governance, 2019 evaluations and pay-outs for Chief Executive Officer and General Manager, Deputy General Managers, other Executives with strategic responsibility and other Identified Staff have been approved by the Board of Directors, based on the positive opinion of Remuneration Committee.
The Board of Directors of FinecoBank on February 11, 2020, has approved the allocation of a total number of shares equal to 163,658 to be assigned in 2021, 2022, 2023, 2024 and 2025.
On the same date, the Board of Directors also approved the implementation - in 2020 - of the Incentive Systems 2014, 2015, 2016, 2017, 2018 and "2014-2017 Multi-year Plan Top Management Plan"69 .
67Calculated applying the funding rate percentage to the profitability results
68The CRO Dashboard 2019 is a set of indicators selected among the Risk Appetite Framework KPIs, plus a single indicator on operational risks; the threshold values have been approved by the Board of Directors at the beginning of the year (January 2019).
69 The data relating to the assignments are included in the information reported in chapters 4.1.2 and 5 of the Remuneration Report and in the Annexes
The Board of Directors, upon positive opinion of Remuneration Committee, assessed the 2019 performance of FinecoBank CEO and General Manager as Exceeds Expectations. Below the details of the individual scorecard assessment70 .
| # | GOAL NAME | RESULTS | ASSESSMENT | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | ROAC/EVA vs. budget |
Bdg: ROAC Bdg 33.3%, EVA Bdg 201,293 k€ Result: ROAC 40.01%, EVA 229,576 k€ |
||
| 2 | New business EL% vs. target |
Target: 0.28% - Result: 0.25% | ||
| FINALISATION | 3 | Operating Costs vs. budget |
Bdg: 254,170 k€ - Result: 249,585 k€ | |
| 4 | Net New Clients vs target |
Target: NET 62,780 - Result: NET 80,046 | ||
| 5 | Net Sales of Guided Products vs. budget |
Budget: 3,518,065 k€ - Result: 3,749,061 k€ | ||
| 6 | New Strategic Plan preparation Qualitative assessment based on: · contribution to the preparation of the new MYP · development of Proof of Concepts on the effective implementation of new technologies (e.g.: Artificial Intelligence, big data, etc.) in own domain |
The preparation and implementation of the Strategic Plan 2020-2023 is one of the focus points of the year. All areas of the Bank have been involved and the project was regularly discussed in details by the Management Committee. We also included into the new strategic plan sustainability goals. We focused on the development of new technologies that represent the major driver of Fineco's success. |
||
| 7 | Gender balance and pay gap Qualitative assessment based on: Group-wide % of women in EVP roles vs. 2019 target Y/Y delta on % of women in VP, FVP, SVP roles Y/Y delta on gender pay-gap |
Thanks to our continuous focus on increasing managers' awareness, this year we achieved good results in terms of gender pay gap: no significant gap in 2019 and a slight improvement compared to 2018. Analysis show that we need to focus on executive positions. In 2019 two women have been appointed in ESVP and EVP roles. |
||
| 8 | Tone from the top on conduct and Compliance Culture Qualitative assessment based on Scope, kind and numbers of documented initiatives - pre- committed with EMC, aimed at promoting staff integrity / customer protection / trustworthiness · The overall status of findings or proceedings in place (intemal or external) considering the trend, type, severity and the timely completion of the related remediation actions |
Tone from the top activities have been all well carried out and ad hoc communication on compliance culture within the Bank as well as on staff integrity and behavioral expectations. Commitment towards Compliance topics is crucial and is kept at the highest levels. Overall audit findings as at 4Q 2019 show neither critical nor major aspects. |
70 "MEET" evaluation for ROAC/EVA goal takes into account the effect of the demerger from UniCredit Group, which determined a different methodological approach in the calculation of the economic capital for ROAC.
The results achieved by FinecoBank Group as of December 31, 2019 (2019 financial year) are of fundamental importance for its history. Numbers and facts confirm the sustainability and the quality of Fineco's business model.
In particular:
The greatest result ever has been achieved thanks to transparency and efficiency values, which are constantly part of Fineco identity, and to the ability of our Advisors to meet the customers' financial needs effectively, in combination with increasingly advanced investment solutions.
It is the evidence of a strong growth involving all business units.
2019 performance evaluation of the Chief Executive Officer and General Manager's individual goals resulted excellent ("Exceeds Expectations"), on the basis of the elements reported in the previous figure and evaluated by the Remuneration Committee and the Board of Directors of February 7 and 11, 2020.
In 2019 – also considering the excellent business results – the incidence of the short and long term variable remuneration on the fixed remuneration of the CEO and General Manager has been equal to 200%: such percentage results adding up the short term variable remuneration (up to 100% of fixed remuneration) and the annual tranche of the long term variable remuneration (2018-2020 LTI; up to 100% of fixed remuneration) incidence on the fixed remuneration.
Considering the performance assessment and the results of the KPIs in the Entry Conditions, the Board of Directors approved for the CEO and General Manager a bonus amounting to Euro 850.00071 .
Here is detailed the remuneration structure of FinecoBank's CEO and General Manager for 201972 .

71 For the picture presenting the total remuneration package of CEO and General Manager, see the Executive Summary section.
72 In January 2020, CEO and GM's fixed remuneration has been increased to € 1,000,000. This choice is explained by the great results achieved by the Bank in the past few years (see on pag. 10, 2019 FY main results), as well as by the need to align the fixed remuneration to the market benchmark and the increasing complexity due to the new business structure.
The achievement of all entry conditions and the subsequent bonus pool confirmation related to the positive evaluation for the performance year 2019 allow the execution of the Incentive Systems for the Employees Identified Staff, which have been approved in previous years and provide a cash and/or shares instalment in 2020. In particular, these are 2014, 2015, 2016, 2017, 2018 Incentive Systems and "2014-2017 Multi-year Plan Top Management" 73, for which the Board of Directors approved on February 11, 2020:
Following, the implementation dashboard for the aforementioned plans:
| IMPLEMENTED | PAYMENT | OUTSTANDING | ||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2015 | 2016 | 2017 | 2018 2019 2020 2020 2022 2022 2023 2024 | |||||||
| 2014 Incentive System | CASH CASH | CASHI SHARES |
SHARES | SHARES | SHARES | |||||
| 2015 Incentive System CASH |
CASH SHARES | SHARES I | SHARES | CASH/ SHARES |
||||||
| 2016 Incentive System CASH |
CASH SHARES | SHARES | SHARES | CASHI SHARES |
||||||
| 2017 Incentive System | CASH | CASH CASH | SHARES | CASH/ SHARES |
SHARES | CASHI SHARES |
||||
| 2018 Incentive System | CASH | CASH CASH SHARES SHARES SHARES | CASHI SHARES |
|||||||
| 2014-2017 Multi-year Plan Top Management |
SHARES SHARES SHARES SHARES | SHARES |
73 In 2020 it will also be paid the last instalment of 2014 Incentive System with UniCredit shares, for only one identified staff (see Annex 2 for details)
2019 Incentive System PFA, approved by the Board of Directors on January 10, 2019, takes into consideration all the national and international regulatory requirements for the sales networks incentives and directly links bonuses with the objectives of growth in the medium and long term, in a general framework of overall sustainability. In the same way as for the Employees, the 2019 PFA System is based on a Bonus Pool approach that directly links bonuses with Company results, ensuring the link between profitability, risk and reward.
The System, implemented within the framework of our policy and governance, provides for the allocation of a performance related bonus in cash and/or shares over 4 years.
The bonus pool dimension is related to the actual profitability measure multiplied for the percentage of the bonus pool funding rate defined in the budgeting phase.
This calculation determines the so called "theoretical bonus pool", that, during the year of performance, has been adjusted based on the effective performance trend.
In order to align to regulatory requirements, specific indicators measuring annual profitability, solidity and liquidity results had been set as Entry Conditions. In particular, metrics74 and thresholds for 2019 PFA Incentive System as defined within the Entry Conditions that confirm or cancel upfront and deferred payouts are75:
| Fineco Entry Conditions |
|---|
| Net Operating Profit adjusted ≥0 and |
| Net Profit ≥0 and |
| Common Equity Tier 1 Ratio > 11,1% (RAF Limit) and |
| Liquidity Coverage Ratio >101% (RAF Limit) |
| Net Stable Funding Ratio >101% (RAF Limit) |
According to the actual results, verified and approved by the Board of Directors of FinecoBank S.p.A. on February 11, 2019, the relevant entry conditions have been achieved, confirming FinecoBank PFA bonus pool76 .
| Entry Conditions | Results |
|---|---|
| Net Operating Profit adjusted ≥0 | V |
| Net Profit ≥0 | > |
| Common Equity Tier 1 Ratio > 11,1% (RAF Limit) |
> |
| Liquidity Coverage Ratio > 101% (RAF Limit) |
1 |
| Net Stable Funding Ratio > 101% (RAF Limit) |
> |

74For the KPIs definition see chapter 4.1.1
75 As modified by the BoD on July 8, 2019, in order to eliminate the entry conditions defined at UniCredit Group Level
76 Calculated applying the funding rate percentage to the profitability results
Once the entry conditions have been verified, the effective bonus pool for FinecoBank's Financial Advisors was confirmed, also in light of the overall positive assessment ("++") of the performance of the so-called "CRO dashboard"77, carried out by FinecoBank S.p.A. CRO.
This method provides a quarterly monitoring of the progress of the indicators included in the Dashboard and an annual assessment.
In line with Fineco governance, 2019 evaluations and payouts for PFA Identified Staff have been approved by the Board of Directors, based on the positive opinion of Remuneration Committee.
Based on the resolutions of the Board of Directors of February 11, 2020, the total number of shares serving the 2019 Incentive System for Financial Advisors is 35.859 to be assigned in 2021, 2022, 2023.
On the same date, the Board of Directors also approved the implementation - in 2020 - of the Incentive Systems 2015, 2016, 2017 and 201878 .
The achievement of all entry conditions and the subsequent bonus pool confirmation related to the positive evaluation for the performance year 2019 allow the execution of the Incentive Systems for the Persona Financial Advisors Identified Staff, which have been approved in previous years and provide a cash and/or shares instalment in 2020. In particular, these are 2015, 2016, 2017 and 2018 PFA Incentive Systems, and "2015-2017 Plan PFA", for which the Board of Directors approved on February 11, 2020:
Following, the implementation dashboard for the aforementioned plans:
| IMPLEMENTED | ALLOCATION | OUTSTANDING | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2016 2017 2017 2018 2019 | 2020 | 2021 | 2022 2 2023 | |||||
| 2015 PFA Incentive System |
CASH | CASH | PHANTOM SHARES |
CASH/ PHANTOM SHARES |
PHANTOM SHARES |
|||
| 2016 PFA Incentive System |
CASH | CASH | SHARES | CASH/ SHARES |
SHARES | |||
| 2017 PFA Incentive System |
CASH | CASH | SHARES | CASH/ SHARES |
SHARES | |||
| 2018 PFA Incentive System |
CASH | CASH | SHARES | CASH/ SHARES |
SHARES | |||
| 2015-2017 Plan PFA | SHARES SHARES | SHARES |
77 The CRO Dashboard is a set of indicators selected among the Risk Appetite Framework KPIs, plus a single indicator on operational risks; the threshold values have been approved by the Board of Directors at the beginning of the year (January 2019). The assessment methodology is the one used for Employees.
78 The data relating to the assignments are included in the information reported in chapters 4.1.4 and 5 of the Remuneration Report and in the Annexes.
| Euro/ 000 | ||
|---|---|---|
| 2020 Compensation Policy | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 5. Dati retributivi | ||||
| 5.1 2019 Compensation Outcomes | ||||
| Employees | ||||
| Euro/ 000 | ||||
| Population | Upfront No. Fix € |
2019 Variable Deferred Shares4, 5 Shares € |
Deferred variable from previous exercises Vested in 2019 6 Unvested € Shares € Shares |
Variable paid in 2019 from previous exercises6 € Shares |
| Chief Executive Officer and General Manger (CEO)1 | 1 850 170 |
- 204 476 |
85 2,446 622 1,144 |
255 1,843 |
| Non-executive Directors2 Executives with strategic responsibilities |
8 737 - 4 1,464 370 |
- - - - - 425 1,008 |
- - - 181 4,242 1154 2,191 |
- - 511 3,187 |
| Other Identified Staff3 | 10 1,760 495 |
- 187 507 |
57 236 323 613 |
456 158 |
| Total | 23 4,811 1,035 |
- 816 1,990 |
323 6,923 2,099 3,948 |
1,223 5,189 |
| 1 10 % of the amount has been paid by UniCredit S.p.A. until May 2019. 2 Including a UniCredit Group Employee, whose compensation, in light of FinecoBank belongning to UniCredit Group until May 10, 2019, has been defined in compliance with the in force policy "Policy in materia di struttura, composizione e remunerazione degli Organi Sociali delle Società di Gruppo" at UniCredit Group level and which is subject to the payment criteria until termination date. 3 Including an Employee hired in Fineco in June 2019 through transfer of contract from UniCredit S.p.A. The amounts are referred to annual basis. 4 Including the reference amount of the bonus component in financial instruments for an Employee, who is posted in Fineco Asset Management DAC, in line with the applicable UCITS provisions. 5 2018-2020 LTI Plan is not included since it is long-term performance and it has not been evaluated. 6 The shares amounts related to UniCredit Group Incentive System Plans are expressed with convertion rate and after Capital increase resolved on March 13, 2017 |
||||
| Please Note The amounts concerning Variable referred to previous financial years also include an Executive with strategic responsibility whose termination happened in 2018. |
||||
| Euro/ 000 | ||||
| Population | No. Fix |
2019 Variable Upfront Deferred |
Deferred variable from previous exercises Vested in 20195 Unvested |
Variable paid in 2018 from previous exercises5 |
| € | Shares3,4 Shares € |
€ Shares € Shares |
€ Shares |
|
| Business functions Identified Staff1 Support functions Identified Staff |
5 2,199 573 7 1,329 267 |
- 655 1,556 - 160 435 |
260 6,232 1,678 3,175 63 649 369 731 |
738 4,689 318 457 |
| Control functions Identified Staff2 | 3 546 195 |
- - - |
- 41 52 41 |
168 42 |
| Total | 15 4,074 1,035 |
- 816 1,990 |
323 6,923 2,099 3,948 |
1,223 5,189 |
| 5.1 2019 Compensation Outcomes | |||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Employees | |||||||||
| Euro/ 000 | Variable paid in 2019 from | ||||||||
| 1 10 % of the amount has been paid by UniCredit S.p.A. until May 2019. 2 Including a UniCredit Group Employee, whose compensation, in light of FinecoBank belongning to UniCredit Group until May 10, 2019, has been defined in compliance with the in force policy "Policy in materia di struttura, composizione e remunerazione degli Organi Sociali delle Società di Gruppo" at UniCredit Group level and which is subject to the payment criteria until termination date. 3 Including an Employee hired in Fineco in June 2019 through transfer of contract from UniCredit S.p.A. The amounts are referred to annual basis. 4 Including the reference amount of the bonus component in financial instruments for an Employee, who is posted in Fineco Asset Management DAC, in line with the applicable UCITS provisions. 5 2018-2020 LTI Plan is not included since it is long-term performance and it has not been evaluated. |
|||||||||
| 6 The shares amounts related to UniCredit Group Incentive System Plans are expressed with convertion rate and after Capital increase resolved on March 13, 2017 Please Note The amounts concerning Variable referred to previous financial years also include an Executive with strategic responsibility whose termination happened in 2018. |
|||||||||
| Euro/ 000 | |||||||||
| 2019 Variable | Deferred variable from previous exercises | Variable paid in 2018 from | |||||||
| Upfront | Deferred | Vested in 20195 | Unvested | previous exercises5 | |||||
| Population | No. | Fix | € Shares |
Shares3,4 € |
€ | Shares | € Shares |
€ | Shares |
| Business functions Identified Staff1 | 5 | 2,199 | 573 - |
655 1,556 |
260 6,232 |
1,678 3,175 |
738 | 4,689 | |
| Support functions Identified Staff Control functions Identified Staff2 |
7 3 |
1,329 546 |
267 - 195 - |
160 435 - - |
- | 63 649 41 |
369 731 52 41 |
318 168 |
457 42 |
The amounts concerning Variable referred to previous financial years also include an Executive with strategic responsibility whose termination happened in 2018. 1 Including an Employee hired in Fineco in June 2019 through transfer of contract from UniCredit S.p.A. The amounts are referred to annual basis. 3
Including the reference amount of the bonus component in financial instruments for an Employee, who is posted in Fineco Asset Management DAC, in line with the applicable UCITS provisions. 4 2018-2020 LTI Plan is not included since it is long-term performance and it has not been evaluated. 5
The shares amounts related to UniCredit Group Incentive System Plans are expressed with convertion rate and after Capital increase resolved on March 13, 2017
The vested component refers to cash and equity awards to which the right matured in 2019 as the performance conditions were achieved:
The unvested component refer to cash and equity awards for which the right did not matured in 2019 and for which any potential future gain has not been yet realized and remains subject to future performance:
The value of the shares shown as 2019 variable and deferred variable from previous exercises is calculated considering:
Variable paid in 2019 from previous exercises includes payouts based on demonstrated multi-year performance achievements related to Group Incentive Systems plans based on FinecoBank and UniCredit shares and to the "2014-2017 Multi-year Plan Top Management".
The Chief Executive Officer and General Manager and 3 Executives with strategic responsibility for 2019 have been rewarded with more than 1 mln Euro. In the end, it is underlined that in 2018 any non-standard remuneration79 has been paid for the Identified Staff.
79 On this topic, see par. 3.4 Section I
| 2020 Compensation Policy |
|---|
| Financial Advisor |
| Euro/ 000 |
| 2019 Variable2 Deferred variable from previous exercises2 Variable paid in 2018 from Population |
| previous exercises2 Fix 1 Deferred3 (31/12/2019) No. Upfront Vested in 2019 Unvested Shares4 Shares4 € Shares € Shares € € Shares € |
| Personal Financial Advisors belonging to Identified Staff 397 7 4,514 264 0 159 397 70 445 89 381 276 |
| 1 Recurring remuneration (benefits and other compensations in kind included) |
| 2 Non-recurring remuneration |
| 3 2018-2020 LTI Plan is not included since it is long-term performance and it has not been evaluated 4 Equity and Phantom share |
The vested component refers to cash, equity and phantom shares awards to which the right matured in 2019 as the performance conditions were achieved. In particular:
The unvested component refer to cash and equity shares to which the right did not matured in 2019 and for which any potential future gain has not been yet realized and remains subject to future performance. In particular:
The value of the shares shown as 2019 variable is calculated considering the arithmetic mean of the official closing prices of FinecoBank ordinary shares from February 12 to March 12 2020.
The value of the shares/Phantom shares shown as deferred variable from previous exercises is calculated considering the arithmetic mean of the official closing prices of Fineco ordinary shares from January 10 to February 10, 2020.
Variable paid in 2019 from previous exercises includes payouts based on actual performance achievements related to 2015 Group Incentive System PFA, to 2016 Group Incentive System PFA, 2017 Group Incentive System PFA and 2018 Group Incentive System PFA, and to "2015-2017 Plan PFA" for Financial Advisors and Managers of the Network Identified Staff.
| 2020 Compensation Policy | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| 5.2 2019 Compensation Policy | |||
| - pay; - performance culture; - |
Total compensation policy for non-Executive Directors, Identified Staff and for the overall employee population demonstrates in particular how: remuneration of the non-Executive Directors, as approved by the Shareholders' Meeting, does not include variable performance-related Identified Staff are offered opportunities for variable compensation in line with their strategic role, regulatory requirements and our pay for the general employee population is offered a balanced pay-mix in line with the role, scope and business or market context of reference. |
||
| COMPENSATION PAY-MIX | |||
| FIX AND OTHER NON PERFORMANCE RELATED PAY |
VARIABLE PERFORMANCE RELATED PAY |
||
| NON-EXECUTIVE DIRECTORS | |||
| Chairman and Vice Chairman | 100% | 0% | |
| Directors | 100% | 0% | |
| Statutory Auditors | 100% | 0% | |
| OVERALL EMPLOYEE POPULATION | |||
| Business areas | 76% | 24% | |
| Support function | 92% | 8% | |
| Overall Company | 88% | 12% | |
| 5.3 Benefit Data | |||
| as in retirement. | Our employees enjoy welfare, healthcare and life balance benefits that supplement social security plans and minimum contractual requirements. These benefits are intended to provide substantial guarantees for the well-being of staff and their family members during their active careers as well |
In Italy, among the complementary pension plans, there are defined benefit plans and defined contribution plans. In most cases, benefits are paid out once retirement requirements are satisfied: in the first ones the benefit's calculation is known in advance, while in defined contribution plans the benefit depends on allocated asset management results.
Complementary pension plans are external pension funds, legally autonomous from the Group. These plans are closed and do not allow new subscriptions, the only exception is represented by the defined contribution plan section of the "Fondo Pensione per il Personale delle Aziende del Gruppo".
Within this section subscribers can distribute contribution, depending on their own risk appetite, among four investment lines (Insurance, Short, Medium and Long Term) characterized by different risk/yield ratios. In addition, always in this section, the enrolled employees may open complementary pension plan positions in favor of their family members dependent for tax purposes.
70 FinecoBank Group·2020 Compensation Policy
Building tools?
Free accounts include 100 API calls/year for testing.
Have a question? We'll get back to you promptly.