27 Oct 2008
By Andrew Sawers
In June, Lehmans reported Q2 losses of $2.8bn worse than expected, thanks in part to “negative net revenue” and unveiled plans for a $6bn capital injection. Moreover, Moody’s put Lehman’s credit rating on watch, calling into question the bank’s risk management practices. Within days, she found herself “rejoining the investment banking division in a senior capacity”, and being replaced by Ian Lowitt, 44, the bank’s co-chief administrative officer responsible “for the global oversight of corporate real estate, expense and sourcing services, finance, operations, productivity and process improvement, risk management, and technology”.
He’d been CAO of Lehmans Europe and was also global treasurer and global head of tax. He’s got a clutch of university degrees and is ex-McKinsey. In his role as co-CAO Levitt earned a salary of just $200,000 last year, but a bonus of $2.65m, plus another $6.6m in so-called restricted stock units (RSUs).
No salary details were disclosed for Callan, but her predecessor, Chris O’Meara, was on the same deal as Lowitt. O’Meara was promoted to global head of risk management. The promotion of O’Meara and Callan was specifically cited in the 2007 annual report as examples of “putting the right talent where it is needed most”.
O’Meara was named CFO at the end of 2004 at the age of 43 after ten years with the bank, most recently as global controller. Chief executive Richard Fuld praised O’Meara’s experience in “financial control, business performance planning, measurement, reporting and analysis, financial and regulatory reporting and accounting policy” skills that were apparently not regarded as necessary three years later when Callan succeeded him.
Bear Stearns
The cover page of Bear Stearns’ 2006 annual report reads “Eighty-three years of
profitability” and back then the bank was worth some $18bn. In March this year
the bank, Wall Street’s fifth-largest, was taken over by JP Morgan Chase for
just $240m, with $30bn of central bank support.
The previous August, CFO Samuel Molinaro was also named COO, just weeks after two of Bear Stearn’s big, highly-geared hedge funds collapsed under the weight of bad sub-prime mortgages. At the same time, Molinaro raised $4.5bn it didn’t need, simply to prove to the market that it could still raise huge amounts of capital (though they paid 2.45% over five-year Treasury bonds for this show of machismo).
In December, Molinaro said the firm was able to meet all its “unsecured debt maturities over the next 12 months without issuing additional unsecured debt or liquidating assets,” reported the New York Sun. “We like to hope we have the worst of the mortgage marks behind us,” he said, using a phrase that has been repeated in articles headlined ‘Famous last words’. Molinaro admitted, however, that “people keep saying that every quarter”.
Molinaro had one of the best remuneration packages at the bank not surprising as he had been CFO since 1996. He made just $250,000 in basic salary according to the bank’s proxy statement for 2006, but his $13m bonus almost matched his bonus earnings for the previous two years together so call that almost $28m cash in three years, plus long-term stock awards of $21m and another $5m in other compensation and earnings.
Small change short of $55m earned over 2004, 2005 and 2006. It’s not all good news, though: Molinaro had almost $30m in unvested equity at the time of the bank’s 2007 proxy statement, so most of that will have been lost.
Northern Rock
Nearer to home, the nationalisation of Northern Rock damaged the government
almost as much as it damaged confidence in British banking.
The Bank of England provided emergency funding for Northern Rock in September 2007 but to no avail: in February it was taken into “temporary” public ownership. Now, if customers are seen queuing outside the bank again, it’s to put their money back in, given that the Rock is as safe as the Bank of England (nationalised in 1946).
Finance director Bob Bennett was with the bank for 13 years, steering it through its 1997 flotation after it converted from building society status to fully-fledged bank. In his last five years, Bennett helped ‘young blood’ chief executive Adam Applegarth take the bank from total assets of £42bn to just over £100bn. An accountant twice over (ICAEW and CIMA), Bennett earned £455,000 in salary plus £435,000 in bonuses in his last full year.
Bennett retired in January 2007 at the age of 59 and was succeeded by his deputy FD, David Jones, 49, who was put on a salary of £415,000. Jones received no bonus for his work in 2007 and in February this year he stepped down from the board, but in other respects kept his job (and his salary). He was replaced by Anne Godbehere, 52, who left her job as CFO of Swiss Re to take up the challenge.
Even though the succession of Bennett by Jones ought to have provided a degree of continuity Jones was, after all, a long-serving finance man with Northern Rock the Financial Services Authority still drew attention to the question of succession in its report into the supervisory failures.
The new board, led by Sir Ron Sandler, asked law firm Freshfields to investigate the conduct of the previous board. Bennett has been vociferous in the financial press about what happened at Northern Rock after his departure and makes no bones about having had disputes with Applegarth. In particular, Bennett called into question why the bank had grown by almost 50% in the first half of 2007. “Our growth strategy was between 15% and 25%, and 20% was the centre of the range,” Bennett told Financial Adviser. “So why did it grow 50% in the first half of 2007 when economic conditions in the UK were clearly moving unfavourably? It is my belief you cannot grow a business 20% compound. At some stage the wheels come unstuck.” In fact, he says that had the business grown at its trend rate in 2007, it would have needed £8bn less funding “which would have been enough to have stopped them going to the Bank of England for emergency funding”.
advertisement
Have similiar articles delivered to your email box
advertisement
Email Newsletters
Email Newsletters
Please enter your email below to receive your profile link
advertisement
8.30am, 14 Jun 2012
The Financial Director Summit 2012 will provide a unique platform in which to share, compare and contrast experiences whilst learning and networking with peers
Our annual day of golfing fun will be held on 12 July at Porters Park Golf Course, Hertfordshire
International qualifications and experience are more important than ever for those wanting to sit at the finance directors’ top table, finds Rachael...