To Jeff Skilling: When you appeal your guilty verdict in the Enron trial, try hiring Unfrozen Caveman Lawyer instead of Daniel Petrocelli. - Ed
For those who care about signs that managerial misdeeds are being addressed by those who are really responsible - the shareholders - this one should bring tears of joy, an example to be repeated the world over. Too bad this sort of response only came about because of an egregious fine, but we've got to start somewhere.
I should state that I am much more in favor of these issues being settled outside the courts as a matter of good corporate governance by shareholders smart enough to realize that it is in their interest to make sure the companies they OWN are keeping house correctly. - Ed
Key quote:
"Investors have to ask: 'What did you get compensated for? You just whacked us for $2.5-billion [Canadian]. Like, how does that justify a big fat bonus?'"
- Lex Kerkovius, PM, McLean & Partners (Calgary)
Investors want Hunkin to share CIBC pain Link 8/3/05
CIBC shareholders are asking that former chief executive officer John Hunkin and other departed officials be forced to give up some of their past compensation in light of an unprecedented $2.4-billion (US) legal settlement the bank struck with Enron investors this week.
Mr. Hunkin officially retired on Friday, taking with him about $52-million (Canadian) in stock and other securities. In addition, he pocketed nearly $15-million in salary and bonuses since he took over as CEO in 1999.
Virtually no one forecast the severity of the CIBC settlement, which will force the bank to take $2.5-billion in charges: the largest one-time hit in Canadian banking history. The charge accounts for about 25 per cent of the bank's entire book value.
Lex Kerkovius, a portfolio manager with Calgary-based McLean & Partners Wealth Management Ltd., said investors were “ambushed” by the news, and questioned whether Mr. Hunkin would accept “more than token responsibility” for the bank's costly entanglement with Enron.
CIBC has already paid U.S. regulators an additional $80-million (U.S.) for allegedly aiding and abetting the accounting fraud at the infamous energy trader, and is expected to announce a third settlement with the company itself, valued in the hundreds of millions of dollars, within days, according to sources. A spokesman for the bank declined to comment on this latter potential agreement over what has been dubbed the “MegaClaims” litigation.
“We all know that Mr. Hunkin made some rather large bonuses in the past few years, and I don't know how investors can sit still here,” Mr. Kerkovius said in an interview, adding that other investors have made similar complaints to the bank. He said investors have to ask: “What did you get compensated for? You just whacked us for $2.5-billion [Canadian]. Like, how does that justify a big fat bonus?”
