Showing posts with label Stanley O'Neal. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Stanley O'Neal. Show all posts

Saturday, March 8, 2008

FBI Probes Countrywide in Possible Fraud, Which Includes Exploiting Black Borrowers

As the whispers grow louder, Countrywide Financial Corp., the largest U.S. mortgage lender, is now officially under investigation by the Federal Bureau of Investigation for possible securities fraud.

Along with San Francisco-based Wells Fargo & Co., both were recently subpoenaed as part of an Illinois probe into whether minority borrowers were steered into higher-cost loans. Countrywide pledged to cooperate in any probe and said it analyzes its data to ensure that borrowers are treated fairly. Wells Fargo said race isn't a factor in lending.

Corporate CEO's get taken to the woodshed

Countrywide is among at least 14 companies that the FBI is checking for possible accounting violations related to the subprime lending crisis, including mortgage lenders, housing developers and Wall Street firms that package loans as securities. The FBI announced the review in January without identifying any of the companies.

Lenders are facing increased scrutiny from regulators as record foreclosures displace homeowners and depress property values. U.S. mortgage foreclosures rose to an all-time high at the end of 2007 as borrowers with adjustable-rate loans walked away from properties before their payments increased, the Mortgage Bankers Association said this week.

Countrywide yesterday declined 13 cents, or 2.5 percent, to $5.07 a share, 20 percent lower than its closing price on Jan. 11 when Bank of America, the nation's second-biggest bank by assets, offered to buy the company for about $4 billion in stock. The stock has declined 86 percent in the past year in New York Stock Exchange trading.

Forty-two percent of new foreclosures in the fourth quarter were people with adjustable-rate subprime mortgages, given to borrowers with limited or tainted credit records, according to the report. Those types of loans accounted for about 7 percent of all mortgages.

Investigators are focusing on whether Countrywide officials misrepresented the company's financial position and the quality of its mortgage loans in securities filings. [CNN]

Tuesday, October 30, 2007

BREAKING NEWS: Black Business Icon Stan O'Neal Told To Take A Hike, Retires From Merrill Lynch... Today!


Following much speculation and drama over his inevitable departure, Merrill Lynch's Stanley O'Neal was kicked out... er, stepped down from his positions as company chairman and chief executive.

The top African American businessman had to leave the big house after Lynch posted $8 billion dollars in subprime losses. Merrill (Fortune 500) shares fell 1.4 percent in early trade Tuesday on the New York Stock Exchange.

The nation's largest brokerage said O'Neal, 56, would retire immediately and that board member Alberto Cribiore would take over for him as interim non-executive chairman. Merrill said both O'Neal and the board agreed that a change in leadership would help the company move forward as it attempts to overcome the $8 billion in losses it suffered last week.

Merrill Lynch Turmoil Won't Hold Other Blacks Back

"We would like to thank Stan for the contribution he has made leading a major transformation of Merrill Lynch into a global and diversified company with enormous potential ahead of it," Cribiore said in a prepared statement devoid of any sincerity. Laurence Fink, chairman and CEO of investment firm BlackRock, in which Merrill owns a 45 percent stake; John Thain, CEO of NYSE Euronext; Bob McCann, the head of Merrill's brokerage division; and Gregory Fleming, Merrill's co-president and co-chief operating officer, have been reported as potential successors to O'Neal. Cribiore, who has served on the board since 2003, is a managing partner of the private equity firm Brera Capital. Previously he served as a president of private equity firm Clayton Dubilier & Rice. The company Tuesday also said that Fleming and Ahmass Fakahany will remain as co-presidents and chief operating officers.

Stan Is The Man, Deserves Every Penny Merrill Will Be Paying Him

The company, currently dealing with racial emails being sent to Lynch's African American employees, did not indicate what kind of payout O'Neal would receive upon his exit. Analysts at the Corporate Library, which tracks executive compensation, estimated the figure to be as high as $250 million. Including salary and annual bonuses, O'Neal took home a total of $46 million in compensation in 2006.

In the firm's announcement Tuesday, O'Neal, whose career at Merrill spanned 21 years, thanked his colleagues for improving the company's competitiveness and expanding its global reach. "The company has provided me with opportunities that I never could have imagined growing up, culminating with my leadership of the company over the past five years," O'Neal said. According to a profile from Harvard Business School, where he got his MBA in 1978, O'Neal was born into poverty in Wedowee, Ala. He worked as a young boy picking cotton on a family farm, while his mother worked as a cleaning lady.

When O'Neal was 12, his family moved to Atlanta and his father went to work at General Motors. He rose through the ranks at Merrill, becoming president and chief operating officer in July 2001; he was tapped as CEO in December 2002 and added the title of chairman in April 2003.

The posts made him one of the most powerful African-American executives on Wall Street, along with Kenneth Chenault (pictured right), who holds two titles at American Express. After taking over as chief executive, O'Neal quickly earned a reputation as an aggressive cost cutter. By slashing jobs and shutting down operations around the globe, he helped revive Merrill's stock, which reached an all-time high in January. Merrill shares have lost 33 percent of their value since this summer's market meltdown.

CNN Money

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Saturday, October 27, 2007

Folks Who Get It: Stan Is The Man, Whether Merrill Lynch Kicks The Black Man To The Curb Or Not


Don't Trip, Stan O'Neal Will Get Paid At Least $159 Million For Making White Folks (And A Few Of Us) Rich

Merrill Lynch’s directors may be weighing E. Stanley O’Neal’s future, but one thing is already guaranteed: the company’s chairman and chief executive is entitled to $30 million in retirement benefits as well as $129 million in stock and option holdings. That would be on top of the roughly $160 million he took home in his nearly five years on the job.

O'Neal, 56, joined Merrill in 1986 and has been CEO for nearly five years. He is the highest-ranking African American on Wall Street, and the first African American to run a major investment bank.

Under O’Neal, Merrill moved aggressively into lucrative businesses like the packaging of subprime mortgages and other complex debt securities. Last year, Mr. O’Neal’s $46.4 million pay package made him Wall Street’s second-highest paid chief executive, behind Lloyd C. Blankfein of Goldman Sachs, who was paid $54.3 million, according to Equilar research.

But those big bets appeared to go bust this week. Merrill announced an $8.4 billion write-down, raising questions about whether Mr. O’Neal will keep his job. It is unclear whether Mr. O’Neal will resign. But his $159 million exit package may not look all that egregious when compared with those of other executives. At Pfizer, for example, Henry A. McKinnell Jr. collected a $200 million exit package last year. At Morgan Stanley, Phillip J. Purcell walked out with $114 million in 2005. At Merrill, Mr. O’Neal works without a severance contract and would be expected to forfeit any unvested options. But the Merrill proxy says the compensation committee has “discretion” to award severance benefits.

Mr. O’Neal would walk away with an even bigger pay package if he left after a merger — a potential $274 million payout. That made the Wachovia offer personally lucrative. On Wall Street, of course, bad news can be transformed into good with the same type of alchemy that changed subprime mortgages into investment-grade securities. Even as Mr. O’Neal came under fire yesterday, investors bid up Merrill’s stock by $5.19. That gave Mr. O’Neal a paper gain of $16 million.

New York Times /ERIC DASH

Time Warner's Richard Parsons & Merrill Lynch's E. Stanley O'Neal Are Black Fortune 500 CEO's Making News For All The Wrong Reasons