Ex-GM CEO gets retirement package

StevieD

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This POS is what's wrong with this country.

Ex-GM CEO gets retirement package worth over $10M
Ex-GM CEO Wagoner receives retirement package worth more than $10M; will retire Aug. 1
By Tom Krisher and Kimberly S. Johnson, AP Auto Writers
On Tuesday July 14, 2009, 8:08 pm EDT

DETROIT (AP) -- Former General Motors Corp. Chairman and CEO Rick Wagoner will retire Aug. 1 with a pension and benefit package the automaker valued at more than $10 million.

Wagoner, 56, who was ousted by the Obama administration on March 30, will get $1.64 million in benefits annually for each of the next five years, plus an annual pension of $74,030 for the rest of his life, according to company documents filed Tuesday with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission.

Wagoner, who spent 32 years with the company, can also choose to cash out his company-provided life insurance policy at $2.6 million, according to the filing.

The benefits are worth about half the $22.1 million value that the company placed on Wagoner's retirement package at the end of 2008.

The package is far smaller than those afforded to many other retiring large-company CEOs.

Stan O'Neal, ousted from Merrill Lynch in 2007 after the investment bank reported a huge quarterly loss, walked away with $161.5 million in stock, options and retirement benefits. Walt Disney Co. directors awarded a $140 million severance package to Michael Ovitz at the end of his brief stint as president of the entertainment company. And Hewlett-Packard Co. granted more than $42 million in cash, stock and other benefits to Carleton "Carly" Fiorina after she was ousted as CEO in 2005.

Wagoner has remained on the GM payroll since his ouster, but he had been working for $1 per year. Company spokeswoman Renee Rashid-Merem said GM disclosed last year that it had annual pensions for top executives by two-thirds.

GM has received $50 billion in U.S. government loans. On Friday, GM emerged from a 40-day stay in Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection with its best assets moving to a new company called General Motors Co. The U.S. government owns more than 60 percent of the new company, with hopes of selling stock to get some of its investment back, perhaps as soon as next year.

Wagoner's ouster came at the hands of former Obama administration autos task force leader Steven Rattner, as the administration rejected a GM restructuring plan and ordered deeper cuts.

Wagoner earned $14.9 million last year at GM, although $11.9 million of that was in the form of stock and options which are now worthless.
 

AbbyDoo

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Just out of curiosity, are you just as mad about the money that Kobe, or Tom Brady, or Brad Pitt, or Will Smith, or others who are the best in their field make?

Not picking a fight. Honest. The top 50 CEOs are just as valuable to their companies as the top 50 rock stars, or top 50 football players, or top 50 NBA players. GM was not failing because of the CEO. They've been failing for many years due to many factors. Some within their control. Others not so much.
 

marine

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"Wagoner earned $14.9 million last year at GM, although $11.9 million of that was in the form of stock and options which are now worthless."

hey. remember that thread about how overpaid CEO's are and blah blah blah.. and I kept telling you the numbers you see aren't real salary, and its a lot of stock options and what not put together to give those really astronomical numbers?


"Wagoner, who spent 32 years with the company"

"The package is far smaller than those afforded to many other retiring large-company CEOs."

"Wagoner has remained on the GM payroll since his ouster, but he had been working for $1 per year"

You'll find anything to bitch about won't you?
 

StevieD

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Just out of curiosity, are you just as mad about the money that Kobe, or Tom Brady, or Brad Pitt, or Will Smith, or others who are the best in their field make?

Not picking a fight. Honest. The top 50 CEOs are just as valuable to their companies as the top 50 rock stars, or top 50 football players, or top 50 NBA players. GM was not failing because of the CEO. They've been failing for many years due to many factors. Some within their control. Others not so much.
I do think that atletes are overpaid. But at least if they don't produce they get cut. If a Brad Pitts movies start losing money then he will not be paid at the rate he is now. This guy didn't produce. The company went belly up under his reign. A lot of people lost their jobs and houses under his watch. He should hang his head in shame not collect a multi-million dollar retirement.
If the CEO was worth all this money then he should have led them in another direction. That's why the top get the money they earn it. This guy drove the bus into a ditch.
 
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