Friday, July 23, 2010

ECONOMY - How to Rob Shareholders, Among Others

"Federal Report Faults Banks on Huge Bonuses" by ERIC DASH, New York Times 7/22/2010

Excerpt

With the financial system on the verge of collapse in late 2008, a group of troubled banks doled out more than $2 billion in bonuses and other payments to their highest earners. Now, the federal authority on banker pay says that nearly 80 percent of that sum was unmerited.

In a report to be released on Friday, Kenneth R. Feinberg, the Obama administration’s special master for executive compensation, is expected to name 17 financial companies that made questionable payouts totaling $1.58 billion immediately after accepting billions of dollars of taxpayer aid, according to two government officials with knowledge of his findings who requested anonymity because of the sensitivity of the report.

The group includes Wall Street giants like Goldman Sachs, JPMorgan Chase and the American International Group as well as small lenders like Boston Private Financial Holdings. Mr. Feinberg’s report points to companies that he says paid eye-popping amounts or used haphazard criteria for awarding bonuses, the people with knowledge of his findings said, and he has singled out Citigroup as the biggest offender.

Shucks, blow me down! What do you expect when CEOs and other top officials pack company boards with their friends and supporters?

Hay, shareholders don't care that these eye-popping bonuses take money away from dividends. It's buyer beware after all.

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