Bailout, shmailout. Executive pay still safe. - Top Stocks Blog - MSN Money
 
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Bailout, shmailout. Executive pay still safe.

Posted Sep 29 2008, 01:12 PM by Kim Peterson
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The bailout provisions that limit executive pay? Yeah, right. If you believe that, I have $700 billion in bad real estate to sell you. I read the executive compensation part of the bailout bill (which you can read here, but trust me, you don't want to).

The idea is pretty clear. Cut the pay for bosses at banks that sell toxic assets to the government. Take back the bonuses the execs got if a bank's financial statements prove inaccurate. Ban them from getting golden parachute payments.

But the loopholes in these conditions are huge -- huge enough certainly for a smart company to get around.  

"The golden parachutes have been exchanged for camouflage parachutes," one Democratic congressman said. "The execs on Wall Street will still get millions."

How is that possible?

The contracts stay. Top executives already have golden parachutes and other compensation lined up before they even start a job. The government isn't forcing any company to rewrite an employment contract. So any golden parachutes already in place will remain that way.

And future golden parachutes? They can still be paid, a Treasury official told CNN. But only if they're triggered by a sale of the company and not by involuntary termination or corporate failure. Now tell me, how often do you hear about a CEO's "involuntary termination?" Never. No company wants that public drama. Instead, a CEO might resign to pursue other interests or something like that. And what exactly is corporate failure? Very unclear.

Yanking bonuses won't matter. The Wall Street Journal says taking back bonuses upon discovery of inaccurate financial statements won't have much of an impact. That's because the existing Sarbanes-Oxley legislation already covers this, requiring that executives be paid for actual performance.

There's always a way around. What happened the last time Congress tried to restrict executive pay? That was in the early 1990s, according to USA Today, and companies quickly figured out how to reward executives with stock options, country club memberships and even private airplanes.

Former Countrywide CEO Angelo Mozilo, for example, made $362 million from 2005 to 2007. That included things like country club fees and the personal use of company planes, according to USA Today. The CEO of AIG received a company car, a home security system and financial planning services.

If golden parachutes disappear, the Journal says, a board can make up for it by giving executives massive signing bonuses. Or even bumping up salary by a few million. 

I don't mean to throw cold water completely over this effort. Some good may come out of this yet. Investors who paid little attention to executive pay in the past may start keeping track. And boards who previously approved ballooning pay packages might be more circumspect about doing so in the future.

So the politicians can go on bragging about how they won't reward CEOs for mistakes. It makes for good sound bites and happy voters.

But in reality, these executive pay provisions are not punitive or enforceable. 

Comments

 

I agree with you Kelly...no human on earth is worth the millions paid to athletes and movie stars, but the people continue to pay huge sums to see them.  Some of these wealthy bunch to give to charities; unfortunately most of the charities are in other countries.  There is no way these people can spend all the money that's given to them, so why can't they see the need right here at home??  I've always heard that charity starts at home, but not in America.

Compensation should be based solely on profitability.

No profit - no CEO compensation

Gary in NC's idea is the best one I've heard yet!  (Moderator, can it be forwarded to Congress?)  

... gee, how would I spend all that money Gary?

... maybe I could/should invest some of it in the stock market for my future?

hmmmm... looks faintly familiar...is this a endless BAD dream...American dream?

Ok..I'm awake now... time to plow the lower forty!

If the bank  insolvent why would they need to pay the CEO anything?  The stock and bond holders have to outraged by this turn of events when they get nothing.  The American taxpayer has to be disallutioned by the fact that the Federal Reserve has to guarntee the Bank's deposits.  Typical Corporate Amercia tricks where pay for performance doesn't exist.  Greed rules the day.

This is the way it will have to work for American citizens to have an affect on anything.

1.) Stop taking out loans and credit cards. They can't flow money up the chain if there isn't any flow.

2.) Stop going to sporting events if you think athletes are over paid.

3.) Gas prices getting you down, stop driving as much or get better mpg vehicle.

The only way this will ever change is if we the people act in a manner that forces it to change. The only to do that is to stop encouraging and enabling a system we are unhappy with.

One thing I haven't heard explained in the media is that, we have people struggling to pay their mortgages that are held by the financial institutions and now are are going to give $800 billion to these same companies to help them out of their crisis; does that not mean these home owners are paying for their mortgages twice? They still have to pay off the mortgare plus now they have to pay nearly the same amount if not more through their taxes (even if the taxes are not raised) to pay for this extreme amount of  money. Plus the $800 billion is just a loan from the Fed what's the intrest rate to the govement for this loan? How many hundreds of trillions of dollars is this going to cost in the end?

Kelly hit the nail on the head! ...not with the high pay of athletes, but her remark about the rest of us who are working to keep our jobs while the corps send our jobs out of the country and take the tax breaks that the Bush admin gave them, which were to create new and better jobs (what a joke),  and keep it for their execs.

Also, those of you who thought that a 100% loan or even worse, 125%, thought the money would be flowing forever...I think you deserve to sleep in the bed you made.

The Wall Street executives responsible for this huge mess should be imprisoned!

Everyone is missing the point.  The problem right now is confidence.  And everyone is losing it.  I don't know if the bailout will truly help in the long run or not, but if we don't do something, then we will all lose our retirement savings and be unable to borrow money to buy a new car when the one we are driving breaks down.  I didn't refinance.  I don't owe any money other than my mortgage and I have money in the bank.  But I am among the very few, paranoid individuals who grew up poor and are scared to spend money.  For once, that dysfunctional trait has paid off !  LOL

Seriously, though.  We have to get something out there or small businesses (like my local dry cleaner, local quick stop) won't be able to make salary or buy stock.  They won't be able to borrow.  And.. unfortunately, that's the way things work in the US these days.

Let's get something out there and get credit flowing again and get some regulations back in place to make these institutions accountable.

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