Money | Citigroup Shareholders to Citi CEO: No $15M Payday for You! 'There's good pay, and there's obscene pay' By Kevin Spak Posted Apr 18, 2012 9:36 AM CDT Copied Leslie Harris, right, talks with Pete Rokicki holding a sign during an Occupy Dallas tax day protest outside the Citigroup shareholders meeting, Tuesday, April 17, 2012, in Dallas. (AP Photo/LM Otero) Do you think Citigroup CEO Vikram Pandit deserves to make $15 million? Neither do Citi's shareholders, who yesterday voted against a proposed pay package for the company's top five executives that would have given Pandit that payday, the New York Times reports. It's one of the few times shareholders have voted against a compensation package since the Dodd-Frank Act instituted so-called "say on pay" votes, and the first at a financial giant. "CEOs deserve good pay, but there's good pay and there's obscene pay," says a principal at a firm that owns 5 million Citi shares. Roughly 55% of shareholders voted against the package. The vote is nonbinding, but outgoing chairman Richard Parsons says the board will take it under serious consideration. Citigroup has long been criticized for its executive pay; it has ranked among the top of the big banks in terms of compensation, despite being dead last in stock performance. Read These Next News outlets parse the fatal shooting in Minneapolis. House passes ACA subsidies extension with GOP votes. Patrick Swayze's younger brother dies at 63. Trump's 'own morality' is his only restraint, per Trump. Report an error