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"Ford CEO Mulally got $28 million for four months ... - 4/5/2007 6:16:36 PM   
Vendaval


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"Ford CEO Mulally got $28 million for four months work"

"Former Boeing exec got $18.5 million bonus, almost $9 million in stock and options and base salary at annual $2 million rate, according to proxy."
April 5 2007: 6:31 PM EDT

"NEW YORK (CNNMoney.com) -- Struggling Ford Motor Co., which posted a record $12.7 billion net loss in 2006, gave its new CEO Alan Mulally $28 million for four months on the job, according to the company's proxy statement filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission Thursday."

http://money.cnn.com/2007/04/05/news/companies/ford_execpay/index.htm?cnn=yes

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RE: "Ford CEO Mulally got $28 million for four mon... - 4/5/2007 10:02:09 PM   
Sinergy


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quote:

ORIGINAL: Vendaval

"Ford CEO Mulally got $28 million for four months work"

"Former Boeing exec got $18.5 million bonus, almost $9 million in stock and options and base salary at annual $2 million rate, according to proxy."
April 5 2007: 6:31 PM EDT

"NEW YORK (CNNMoney.com) -- Struggling Ford Motor Co., which posted a record $12.7 billion net loss in 2006, gave its new CEO Alan Mulally $28 million for four months on the job, according to the company's proxy statement filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission Thursday."

http://money.cnn.com/2007/04/05/news/companies/ford_execpay/index.htm?cnn=yes


Sucks to be in a union.

Sinergy

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(in reply to Vendaval)
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RE: "Ford CEO Mulally got $28 million for four mon... - 4/5/2007 10:23:32 PM   
popeye1250


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That's utterly rediculous.
The Stockholders of Ford should fire the whole board of directors.
And companies like Circuit City want to shave a few bucks an hour off of their employees wages to save money?

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RE: "Ford CEO Mulally got $28 million for four mon... - 4/5/2007 10:27:25 PM   
SusanofO


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I gotta love Warren Buffet. Sometimes I think he is one of the few CEO types in the corporate world left with a functioning brain. I saw him on a tv show last night, and he again spoke out about over-the-top CEO salaries. He is adamantly against them, and thinks a lot of this money should be going to stockholders, instead.

He said he's never paid anyone on the board of directors at his company more than $900 a year (that's 900 dollars, not 900 million dollars), and people are still lined up to be on it.

He doesn't very often get asked to sit on corporate boards of directors himself much anymore, though, he said - because one of the first things he usually does is recommend pay cuts for most of the top management. Ha!

He certainly seems to be an exception to the rule, though, sad to say.

He is really adamant about lowering CEO salaries. He's made speaking out against it kind of his"late-in-life mission", and whenever he is on tv for any reason, he usually mentions it. 

There were several other CEO's on this panel on the tv show he was on last night. I noticed several of them squirming in their chairs when he brought up this topic, hehe.  

- Susan

< Message edited by SusanofO -- 4/5/2007 10:38:32 PM >


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RE: "Ford CEO Mulally got $28 million for four mon... - 4/5/2007 10:37:54 PM   
popeye1250


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quote:

ORIGINAL: SusanofO

I gotta love Warren Buffet. Sometimes I think he is one of the few CEO types in the corporate world left with a functioning brain. I saw him on a tv show last night, and he again spoke out about over-the-top CEO salaries. He is adamantly against them, and thinks a lot of this money should be going to stockholders, instead.

He said he's never paid anyone on the board of directors at his company more than $900 a year (that's 900 dollars, not 900 million dollars), and people are still lined up to be on it.

He doesn't very often get asked to sit on corporate boards of directors himself much anymore, though, he said - because one of the first things he usually does is recommend pay cuts for most of the top management. Ha!

- Susan


Susan, I always liked Warren Buffet. He's obviously a great businessman and manager.
We studied him in Business School. A great "value" investor. "The Oracle of Omaha."
What part of Omaha does he live in?
Have you ever bumped into him in public out there?

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RE: "Ford CEO Mulally got $28 million for four mon... - 4/5/2007 10:50:19 PM   
SusanofO


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I grew up living across the street from him. He lives in a part of town called "Dundee" - it's a nice part of town, however, there are parts of town that are definitely more expensive to live in. Dundee is an older neighborhood, and the houses are mostly two-story brick, and in it there are lots of trees. 

Warren Buffett is just a regular guy, and he actually doesn't seem to be particularly materialistic, IMO. When I used to see him, he tended to wear the same clothes all the time (like the same sweater over and over.) He doesn't belong to any country clubs, or care about owning 10 houses, or much of that kind of stuff.

He did buy his favorite steakhouse in town, though. Because he wants to eat lunch there almost every day, and it is such an old business, that he thought it might just completely go out of business, so he just bought it. It is called Gorats (pronounced Go- raahts). He doesn't seem to walk around the neighborhood like he used to do, say, 30 years ago, but he is older now, and I think he is out of town a lot, too. But sometimes, you can see him eating at Gorats.

He is friendly, and when I was in junior high and high school, he used to go for walks in the neighborhood. I think if he had been born later, he's what I'd classify as a "computer nerd" type (and I mean that in a nice way). He is pretty "heady" - very smart, but he usually appears to have his mind elsewhere. But I always thought he was a very nice man.  

I used to date his younger son, Peter, in high school (for a few months). Peter is a musical prodigy - plus, I thought he was a real fox: Dark brown hair, and really dark brown eyes, and very intense-looking. He was musically amazing. He could just listen to a song once on the radio, and, no matter how complicated it was, he could then sit down at the piano - and just play it. After hearing it just one time. 

My mother was a music and piano teacher, and she just loved Peter. I think she wanted to adopt him. She was always asking him to play the piano for her. I quit taking piano lessons about 2 years after I started, which always seemed to disappoint my mother.

Peter was a really nice, down-to-earth guy. He was mostly obsessed with music, and playing the piano. His dad turned part of their basement into a make-shift music studio for him, when I knew him. He and his high school buddy, named Lars Erickson, were a musical "team", kind of like Simon and Garfunkel, only of course much less famous. They were seemingly inseperable throughout most of high school, and Lars wrote great music. Then Peter played it (although Peter could write music too, and they did play music together, as well.) Actually, Peter didn't learn to read music until he was in high school. Which is why it amazed my mother so much, that he was as musically talented as he was. It was completely natural talent.

Today, Peter is a professional musician, and has his own band, and he's made several records. It's not rock music though, it is some blend of Indian and Eastern spiritual type of music. He is genuinely very musically talented. I think he wrote part of the score to that Kevin Costner movie "Dances With Wolves."

After he left for college, I never saw him anymore, really, although I did talk to him once about five years ago, in the yard of his dad's house. By the time he left for college, I had already moved out of the neighborhood and was living elsewhere in my own apartment. I know he got married, but I can't remember who she is, or if they have kids, or are still married.

- Susan

< Message edited by SusanofO -- 4/5/2007 11:45:38 PM >


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"Hope is the thing with feathers,
That perches in the soul,
And sings the tune without the words,
And never stops at all". - Emily Dickinson

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RE: "Ford CEO Mulally got $28 million for four mon... - 4/6/2007 1:50:17 AM   
SimplyMichael


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And automakers want to whine that it is unions that are killing their competitiveness!  Upper management who run the companies into the ground and yet award themselves massive compensation is the real problem.

In Germany, labor IS on the board, and no other country rewards CEO's and upper management in the obscene way we do.

(in reply to SusanofO)
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RE: "Ford CEO Mulally got $28 million for four mon... - 4/6/2007 2:28:36 AM   
SusanofO


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I know when I worked at General Motors corporation, in the 1980's, as a market researcher (I was based in Chicago, IL), when the division I was working for started massively laying off people, some of the top execs at the company received death threats (supposedly) from some of the workers.

That didn't really surprise me, for the reason you mentioned - many of them were being over-compensated for under-performing, and then they were laying off something like 3/4 of the labor force in that division, at the same time. Maybe they used part of their inflated salaries to hire extra security for themselves...

- Susan 

< Message edited by SusanofO -- 4/6/2007 2:35:44 AM >


_____________________________

"Hope is the thing with feathers,
That perches in the soul,
And sings the tune without the words,
And never stops at all". - Emily Dickinson

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