-
-
CEO Available
Available: CEO
I have never once run a company into the ground but I am certain I can adapt my business skills to these new market trends and help turn your companys' stock into birdcage liners.
Companies doing things I've never heard of are preferred although I will set aside common sense and moral values if I am familiar with your products or services to insure the least oversight, insight and customer satisfaction.
Eight figure minimum salary plus bonus, two year contract including early termination package, tons of stock, plus dental.
Housing, limo, jet, expense account standard.
Federal positions considered if accompanied by incentive offer and immunity from prosecution.
Please contact me through this website.
Citigroup CEO Charles Prince. He earned $35.6 million in bonus pay during the boom years of 2005-07 and took home a total of $41.5 million.
Wachovia CEO G. Kennedy Thompson, who left in June, did well during his tenure. He took home $16 million during 2005-07, including $10 million in bonus pay.
Washington Mutual CEO Kerry Killinger took home $36 million in 2005-07. That included $11 million in bonus pay for his performance.
Merrill Lynch CEO Stan O'Neal left a year ago with $66 million in earnings under his belt for 2005-07. That included $32.6 million in bonuses.
American International Group CEOCEO Martin Sullivan got the boot in June. He raked in $25.4 million in take-home pay over three years.
Lehman Bros CEO Richard Fuld walked away with $186.5 million in earnings from the past three years.
Bear Stearns CEO James Cayne, who left in January, lost millions on Bear stock during the plunge. But he had also cashed out millions in stock before the fall. He took home $42.3 million in his final three years on the job, 2005-07, including $29.8 million in bonus pay for accomplishments that included leading Bear Stearns into the arena of mortgage-backed securities.
Freddie Mac CEO Richard Syron did just fine. He took home $12.9 million from 2005-07, according to Equilar, including $8 million in bonuses.
Fannie Mae CEO Daniel Mudd was denied a golden parachute worth $9.8 million, by one estimate. But he still took home $11.6 million during the boom years of 2005-07, according to Equilar, including $8.3 million in bonus pay. Experts trace the history of many of Fannie's problems to predecessor Franklin Raines, who left in an accounting scandal and later agreed to pay $24.7 million to settle civil charges. But Mudd was at the wheel when the ship went down.
If the home-mortgage mess has a ground zero, it's Countrywide Financial. Under the leadership of Angelo Mozilo, Countrywide helped fuel the housing bubble by writing thousands of questionable subprime mortgages -- the kind used to create the toxic mortgage-backed securities that taxpayers are now being asked to clean up. A spike in bad loans hammered Countrywide in 2007, and in January it agreed to be purchased by Bank of America. Mozilo's total take-home pay for 2005-07 was $361.7 million, most of it from gains on options, according to Equilar.
Equilar, the market leader for executive compensation benchmarking.
http://www.equilar.com Available: CEO ... more -
Oil Spill in the Mississippi River
According to U.S. Coast Guard officials, a 739-foot freighter, the Bright State, struck the Genmar Alexandra, a 792-foot tanker. Approximately 22,000 gallons of fuel oil leaked from the tanker and the product is anticipated to continue to flow down river. According to U.S. Coast Guard officials, a 739-foot freighter, the Bright State, struck the Genmar Alexandra, a 792-foot tanker. Appro... more
-
The Iran Plans
Would President Bush go to war to stop Tehran from getting the bomb? by Seymour M. Hersh
-
Helping to End World Hunger
If you have not heard of the Yes Men, take a few minutes to look at their work.
-
Your flag decal won't get you into heaven anymore
What seething cesspool of American hatred shall we liberate next?
-
Gitmo
How long in prison does it take to affect someone for the rest of their life?
-
Farm Bill Fraud Time Again
What can we citizens expect if the proposed $300-billion farm bill is signed into law? Federally subsidized feed -- corn, soybeans and cottonseed -- for animal factory farms that spread disease, greenhouse gases and dangerous working conditions wherever they set up shop. (Farm bill "environmental quality" programs will even pay up to $450,000 for the construction of lined "lagoons" to be filled with lethal concentrations of manure.) The continuation of America's obesity campaign, which ensures the cheapest and most widely available foods are made up of such high-calorie ingredients as high-fructose corn syrup, refined flours, saturated fats and unhealthy meat and dairy products. And more federally backed exports of California's water -- in the form of cotton and rice, mostly sold overseas. What can we citizens expect if the proposed $300-billion farm bill is signed into law? Federally subsidized feed -- corn, soybeans and... more
-
showing 1 - 8 of 8




