Showing posts with label wall street jackass. Show all posts
Showing posts with label wall street jackass. Show all posts

Tuesday, February 12, 2008

Merrill Lynch - some execs believe there is an "I" in team - yes im talking about you Greg Fleming (dealbreaker.com)

From Deal Breaker.com:

Despite rapid changes in the management structure at Merrill Lynch, Greg Fleming has held onto his position as the president of the firm. He has insisted that he will remain the sole president, and resisted any plans to elevate others at the firm to be co-president. But his inflexibility on this point may be imperiling his position, according to people familiar with the situation.

“He’s on the verge of a nervous breakdown,” a source tells DealBreaker.

When John Thain took over as chief executive of the bank, one of the very first changes he announced was a flatter management structure. More executives now report directly to Thain, in effect circumventing Fleming’s office. Under Stan O’Neal, the risk management executives did not report directly to the top—a situation which has been blamed for some of the excesses that lead to enormous losses over the last several months.

Fleming, who also serves as chief operating officer and oversees the investment banking business, is said to have dug in as president, and told others that he will not accept a co-presidency with others at the firm. This is seen by many as resisting the flatter structure Thain is putting in place, and may be alienating him from others at Merrill. Perhaps more important, Thain is thought to be chagrined by Fleming’s stance.

“Fleming could have been a team player. He’s still got the investment bank under him,” said one person with knowledge of the dynamics within the firm. “But he went the other way. He saw moving back to being just head of investment banking as a demotion.”

Some feel that the flatter management structure has effectively demoted Fleming already. With the new head of risk management, the top spokesperson, their general counsel, the chief financial officer and the brokerage head of the brokerage arm, among others, reporting directly to Thain, the office of the bank’s president may be superfluous. Last week, both Market Watch and Bloomberg referred to Fleming as the “chief operating officer” of Merrill without mentioning his role as president.

Fleming remains respected as an investment banker at the firm, even by those who are surprised at his alleged inflexibility. He remains youthful, plain-spoken and full of energy, according to people at Merrill Lynch. He is known as a perfectionist and an investment banking star—which is all the more reason his continued grasping to the title of sole president has some feeling “mystified.”

Merrill Lynch would not comment on this story.

Tuesday, February 5, 2008

Moishe: This is not a Good Cocktail Party Conversation Piece with Kudlow

Food stamps offer best stimulus - study
Moody's study suggests extending unemployment benefits, increasing food stamps fastest ways to stimulate economy.
WASHINGTON (CNN) -- As Congress and the White House consider a $150 billion stimulus package that includes tax rebates and tax incentives for business, a report released Tuesday suggests that other methods would do a better job of infusing money into the flagging economy and doing it fast.

The industry research firm Moody's Economy.com tracked the potential impact of each stimulus dollar, looking at tax rebates, tax incentives for business, food stamps and expanding unemployment benefits.

The report found that "some provide a lot of bang for the buck to the economy. Others ... don't," said economist Mark Zandi.

In findings echoed by other economists and studies, he said the study shows the fastest way to infuse money into the economy is through expanding the food-stamp program. For every dollar spent on that program $1.73 is generated throughout the economy, he said.

"If someone who is literally living paycheck to paycheck gets an extra dollar, it's very likely that they will spend that dollar immediately on whatever they need - groceries, to pay the telephone bill, to pay the electric bill," he said.

Link via the great site Wall Street Jackass