About Financial Services Industry

The financial industry meltdown has been the worst since the great depression. BNET Financial provides daily industry trends and news coverage with insights for managers and executives about the major financial services companies in the banking and finance sector. In addition to detailed company profiles, we bring you industry analysis on new mergers, partnerships, financial products, rates, investments, capital, and a host of other critical factors of success in the finance business.

Insurance CEOs Immune to Leaner Paychecks

By Ed Leefeldt | Oct 7, 2009

U.S. unemployment is hovering around 10 percent, and those with jobs are working longer and harder to keep them. But there’s no shortage of cash for those at the top of the heap, particularly at insurance companies.

Was it only January when the grumbling and hoopla surrounding bonuses for unworthy American International Group employees became a Congressional sideshow? Then AIG CEO Ed Liddy, who was paid only $1 a year, took the brunt of that abuse.

Now times have changed. U.S. pay “czar” Kenneth Feinberg quietly approved new AIG CEO Robert FeinbergBenmosche’s annual pay package of $10.5 million, a third higher than the $7 million previously reported in the media. Feinberg oversees pay packages for executive compensation of companies that took TARP transfusions. AIG was one of them, with access to $182 billion.  Feinberg says Benmosche’s pay is consistent with federal guidelines.

True, $7.5 million of that is in stock, which should motivate him to bring the ailing insurer back to life. But he is also well provided for, thanks to his previous incarnation as MetLife CEO. And, with a villa in Croatia, he will never be homeless.

In a letter to AIG’s compensation committee Feinberg said he would also review the compensation packages for other unspecified AIG employees. Hopefully his open checkbook will cover staff rather than just executives.

Also in the category of “doing well on the taxpayers” is the new Hartford Financial CEO Liam McGee, who arrived just this month and is looking at an $8.2 million payday, according to National Underwriter.

McGee has a work history devoid of insurance background, but he was a success, at least initially, as a Bank of America executive. He left the building just as the walls came tumbling down around Ken Lewis, who resigned as BofA CEO and is now being investigated by New York Attorney General Andrew Cuomo. Hartford is the happy recipient of $3.4 billion of TARP money.

To be fair, insurance executives’ salaries have always registered in the stratosphere. In a good year AIG CEO Martin Sullivan got $25 million. Unfortunately when the good years ended, no one bothered to tell the insurers, or Mr. Feinberg.

Ed Leefeldt is an award-winning investigative and business journalist who has worked for Reuters, Bloomberg and Dow Jones, and is the author of The Woman Who Rode the Wind, a novel about early flight.

BNET User Analysis

Web Buzz:
  • Holiday spending seen flat

    Reuters - 64 days 15 hours 19 minutes ago

    By Lisa Baertlein LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - U.S. holiday spending is expected to be flat versus a year ago, as consumers remain cautious and the national unemployment rate hovers at nearly 10 percent, Deloitte said in a forecast released late on Sunday. Deloitte's retail group expects total holiday sales to be $810 billion, excluding motor...

  • On Politics: Jobs Nightmare

    Government Executive - 35 days 16 hours 19 minutes ago

    What if someone told you that 17 percent of American adults -- one out of every six civilians -- is unemployed, working part-time but seeking a full-time job, or would like to be employed but has given up the search? That would make the current 9.8 percent unemployment number pale in comparison, right? It also might really get your attention if...

  • Manufacturing Tumbles Globally

    The Wall Street Journal - 325 days 18 hours 57 minutes ago

    Manufacturing activity around the world fell sharply in December, suggesting that the U.S. recession will extend well into 2009, if not longer, and that unemployment will rise globally

  • Stocks May Decline After Jobs Report

    New York Times - 18 days 5 hours 50 minutes ago

    U.S. futures pointed to a drop at the open as unemployment topped the psychologically important 10 percent level

  • Stocks Flat on Wall Street After Jobs Report

    New York Times: World Business - 18 days 5 hours 16 minutes ago

    U.S. futures pointed to a drop at the open as unemployment topped the psychologically important 10 percent level

 

BNET TalkbackShare your ideas and expertise on this topic

Please add your comment:

  1. You are currently: a Guest |
  2.  

Basic HTML tags that work in comments are: bold (<b></b>), italic (<i></i>), underline (<u></u>), and hyperlink (<a href></a)

advertisement
advertisement
  • Click Here
  • Click Here
  • Click Here
advertisement