Wall Street is already talking about more Countrywide bailouts now that the almost bankrupt lender has been rescued by Bank of America, a bank with its own share of problems, though still deep pockets. Some of the details that everyone should be aware of include the payout for
failed CEO Angelo Mozilo of Countrywide. The cash payout of $88 million is a pretty health start to what he's going to receive. Imagine that. He trashed the company, trashed countless other lives and he's getting a big juicy payout for his efforts. Wow, is America an amazing country or what?
More on CEO worship and the payout after the jump.
How many more deals like this are out there? When Fleet was sold to Bank of America a few years ago, I remember being disgusted when the CEO - who admittedly had done a decent enough job with Fleet - wrote in to the contract, a guaranteed job for himself (5 years) plus all of the normal benefits. Naturally that went along with a pretty nice payout. I contrasted that to my sister who had to learn her group was fired (despite previous denials by Fleet) while watching TV. Classy. Looking back, that was nothing since at least Fleet was making money.
Fast forward to recent months, where the Citigroup CEO walks with tens of millions, Merrill Lynch pays their failure $161 million and other big names on Wall Street are on their way out, such as Bears Stearns CEO Alan Schwartz. (Maybe he didn't fail enough, so his payout might not be as large as others.) At Countrywide, a company at the heart of the subprime collapse in the US, Mozilo is bracing himself for a very treacherous retirement and I can only imagine how awful it's going to be.Aside from nearly $88 million in cash, he'll have to make do with not one but two pensions, accelerated payment of stock options, free rides on the company jet and his country club bills being paid until 2011.
Poor fellow. How's he going to do it? I wonder how the 12,000 workers he fired are doing. And the previous homeowners? And heck, let's not forget about the rest of the country, since now we all have to live with the downside of the bubble and its economic consequences. There's something fundamentally wrong with our society these days when we worship garbage like this. These people are ruining a way of life for the US and yet somehow, we just keep propping them up instead of calling them out.
We keep hearing about how boards may change, but anyone who thinks that the old boy network is going to somehow bring change is crazy. It's not going to happen. Ever. Talk of involving more people/shareholders in this decisions is worthless as well. Not going to happen. If it does, it won't matter. If the Democrats are looking for ways to fill gaps in the budget, why doesn't someone get creative and tax both the companies and the individual CEOs on their excesses. When their pay deviates from a certain average employee-to-CEO balance, start taxing them and no loopholes. The higher the deviation, the higher the tax rate. I'm sure we have enough clever people in Congress who can come up with a plan.
Will it hurt? Of course. Will it disrupt business? Probably for a while and then someone is going to figure out how to find a balance. They'll cry, moan and groan and smear everyone but I just don't care any more. Enough is enough and any CEO who thinks they're going to find enough sympathetic Americans is crazy. "Boo hoo...I only made $88 million" might not be the catch phrase that's going to help. European CEOs live pretty comfortably yet they somehow manage to live on a fraction of what American CEOs make. Their companies are doing just fine as are employees. (Yes, this too is changing via the UK CEO worship that is more prevalent.) This comes back to the issue of business monitoring itself. It can't and it never has been able to monitor itself. Something radical needs to change and soon. When the greedy few prosper during such catastrophic performances, we're ready for change.
(h/t to reader C.V.)
Read More......