By Justin Baer 

Wall Street pay will rise slightly this year, though the increase will be offset at some banks by huge legal settlements agreed to this year, an industry recruiter said in a new study to be released later this month.

"This is the year those legal costs come home to roost," said Michael Karp, a managing partner with Options Group, which is publishing the study.

Total compensation for traders, investment bankers and wealth managers will rise 4% in 2014, matching last year's gain, according to the study by Options Group. But big legal penalties should temper payouts at some banks and put the final figures closer to flat.

Financial firms such as Bank of America Corp., BNP Paribas SA, Citigroup Inc. and Morgan Stanley have announced agreements this year to pay more than $1 billion to settle various allegations from regulators or law-enforcement officials.

Options Group didn't factor in such legal costs in its 4% industrywide forecast for this year's pay, though the recruiter did acknowledge that the regulatory fines and settlements "will negatively impact bonus pools."

"Banks have faced an increasing number of fines related to behavior that contributed to the financial crisis," Options Group wrote. "Some banks will be tapping into bonus pools to pay for these legal costs."

Investment bankers are expected to be pay winners during bonus season. Their total pay should rise 9% from a year earlier, their biggest increase since 2009, as the market for mergers, stock sales and other deals heats up. Overall, trader compensation is expected to be little changed from 2013; fixed-income, currencies and commodities employees should see a 1% decline, while stock traders may earn 1% more, Options Group predicted.

The findings were based in part on how banks performed during the first nine months of 2014, and also factored in the results of a survey from more than 5,000 Wall Street employees. Of course, there's a bit more than a month for bankers to close deals and traders to win or lose on some of their remaining positions. That could push the final pay numbers up or down.

Within each of these businesses, only one--securitized products--is expected to hand out double-digit raises, Options Group said. That business had been hard hit during the crisis, but is now recovering.

Banks' wealth-management employees expect to earn 7% more this year than last year, as the business of managing wealthy individuals' money remained on its steady climb.

While total Wall Street pay may show modest gains this year, compensation may vary markedly from bank to the bank, and from one business to the next, Options Group said. Not all of the biggest financials firms faced multibillion-dollar legal settlements this year.

The new pay data come as a spate of new rules on bank capital and risk-taking has forced each of the largest firms to define its core strengths--as well as activities it simply can't sustain. Those choices--and the diverging path banks' individual businesses are on--are now reflected in what they're willing to pay employees, the recruiter said.

"Many banks are near completion of their multiyear restructuring plans, shedding noncore operations, addressing a variety of legal issues, streamlining operations and creating a whole new approach to preserving profitability," Options Group executives wrote in their report. "These issues have also forced many banks to make difficult choices that arguably should have been made years ago."

Another recent study on Wall Street pay predicted this year's bonuses would vary more greatly from business to business. Johnson Associates, a compensation-consulting firm, said last week that investment bankers' year-end payouts could jump by as much as 15%, with traders' bonuses falling by up to 10%.

According to the Options Group report, banks shed 30%-40% of their sales and trading workforce between 2010 and 2013. Revenue fell by less than 20% during the period, making those employees who remain more productive, the firm said.

The largest banks set aside on average about 40% of their revenue from trading, investment-banking and treasury services for employee pay during the first nine months of 2014, down about 1 percentage point from the same period a year ago, according to Options Group research.

Write to Justin Baer at justin.baer@wsj.com

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