| David Mandl on Sun, 30 Nov 2008 15:26:45 +0100 (CET) |
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| <nettime> Robert Rubin: I had some/all/no responsibility at Citigroup |
Today's Wall Street Journal features an interview with former Treasury
secretary Robert Rubin that probably caused him to squirm for all of
thirty seconds, but it's better than nothing.
Rubin was in the unique position of being at the very highest (i.e.
highest paid) echelon of Wall St., but having a mysterious non-
management job that gave him plausible deniability for, well, pretty
much anything that went on at the company he worked for. He had an
undefined senior role at Citigroup that some people might see as a
sinecure--payment for helping the company with their successful
campaign to have Glass-Steagall repealed a few years ago.
So now he's got to defend the astronomical sums he was paid while
claiming that he wasn't really involved in running the company (into
the ground). Seeing him spin this is surreal. But he does
acknowledge that "there's an enormous amount that needs to be learned."
--Dave.
-----
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB122791795940965645.html?mod=testMod#printMode
Rubin, Under Fire, Defends His Role at Citi
Under fire for his role in the near-collapse of Citigroup Inc., Robert
Rubin said its problems were due to the buckling financial system, not
its own mistakes, and that his role was peripheral to the bank's main
operations even though he was one of its highest-paid officials.
"Nobody was prepared for this," Mr. Rubin said in an interview. He
cited former Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan as another
example of someone whose reputation has been unfairly damaged by the
crisis.
Mr. Rubin, senior counselor and a director at Citigroup, acknowledged
that he was involved in a board decision to ramp up risk-taking in
2004 and 2005, even though he was warning publicly that investors were
taking too much risk. He said if executives had executed the plan
properly, the bank's losses would have been less. Its troubles have
put the former Treasury secretary in the awkward position of having to
justify $115 million in pay since 1999, excluding stock options, while
explaining Citigroup's $20 billion in losses over the past year and a
government bailout of at least $45 billion.
Mr. Rubin's salary made him one of Wall Street's highest-paid
officials -- and a controversial figure among Citigroup shareholders
and some executives, who questioned whether his limited duties
justified the big paydays. "Even though he has no 'operating'
responsibilities, he still has a fiduciary responsibility as a board
member," said William Smith, a New York money manager and frequent
critic of Citigroup's current management and board. "He has overseen
the entire meltdown, yet been compensated as an operating employee
while bragging about having no operating responsibility." Mr. Rubin
can't "have it both ways," Mr. Smith added.
Mr. Rubin said his pay was justified and that there were higher-paying
opportunities available to him. "I bet there's not a single year where
I couldn't have gone somewhere else and made more," he said. He turned
down his bonus last year, telling the board the money could be better
spent elsewhere. Asked if he had any regrets, Mr. Rubin said: "I guess
that I don't think of it quite that way," adding that "if you look
back from now, there's an enormous amount that needs to be learned."
Mr. Rubin's effort to salvage his reputation comes just after Chief
Executive Vikram Pandit appeared on PBS's Charlie Rose show. Mr.
Pandit, too, blamed the overall financial crisis, not Citigroup, for
the problems that led the government to decide to inject money into
the bank for a second time this fall. "This was something that was
bigger than Citi," Mr. Pandit said. "It was about confidence in the
financial system. It was about stability of the financial system."
From the time Mr. Rubin joined Citigroup in October 1999, shortly
after leaving the Treasury, the former Goldman Sachs Group Inc. co-
chairman said he didn't want to run any of Citigroup's businesses. At
the time, he told colleagues he wanted more time for activities such
as fly fishing. In the recent interview, he said his task was to meet
with clients and have an advisory role as an "experienced senior
person who has no ax to grind."
Since 1999, the bank has lurched from crisis to crisis, first with
regulatory authorities, then with investors who grumbled that the bank
lacked a strong strategy and was bloated. Since the housing market
turned down, Citigroup has grappled with its worst crisis ever.
Besides an initial $25 billion injection as part of a broad rescue of
financial firms, the government recently agreed to put in $20 billion
more and vowed to protect Citigroup
[...]
--
Dave Mandl
dmandl@panix.com
davem@wfmu.org
http://www.wfmu.org/~davem
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