Blogs at the CUNY Graduate School of Journalism

Archive for the ‘JP Morgan Chase’ Category

Wall Street Bonuses VI

November 18th, 2008 by Carl Winfield

So, Lloyd Blankfein has decided that Goldman Sachs’ top management will forgo their yearly bonuses this year, bringing the “will they or won’t they” argument to a close. Now the others are expected to follow suit.

Smooth move, Lloyd: Please Washington by taking a hit at the top; let the “little people” take home their bonuses; and Wall Street and Main Street are finally reconciled.

Goldman’s “goodwill” move has prompted executives at UK-based, Barclays, PLC, Germany’s Deutschbank AG and Switzerland’s UBS AG to abandon bonuses for senior managers. But executives at Morgan Stanley, Citigroup and AIG aren’t lining up to fall on their swords. In fact, John Mack and Brady Dougan are conspicuously silent on the matter while Vikram Pandit has decided to eliminate the bonus question altogether by slashing jobs.

(more…)

$125 billion is a lot to bluff over in these times

October 15th, 2008 by D Gigs

John Mack “quickly signed,” the Wall Street Journal said in its coverage of the Treasury meeting with America’s top nine banking chiefs on Monday.

Maybe he did, or maybe he actually signed in alphabetical order — which would put him somewhere in the middle. “Before the meeting, John J. Mack said his bank, Morgan Stanley, did not need capital from the Treasury. It had just sealed a $9 billion deal with a large Japanese bank,” according to the New York Times account of the same event.

The details here might paint different pictures of Morgan Stanley, but the outcome is all the same. Mack and each of his peers definitively signed away on a $125 billion cash injection (executive pay caps included). Both papers clearly made that point in their coverage of the Washington gathering between the nine CEOs, Henry Paulson, Ben Bernanke and other government officials.

(more…)