Print | E-mail | Text Size | Bookmark and Share

Merrill Ex-CEO Thain Agrees To Leave Bank Of America


By Josh Fineman & David Mildenberg, Bloomberg
Thursday, January 29, 2009
New York — John Thain, who engineered the sale of 95-year-old Merrill Lynch & Co. to Bank of America Corp. in September, was ousted after Merrill’s $15.4 billion loss forced the lender to seek more money from the U.S. government.

Mr. Thain, 53, “agreed his situation was not working out and that he should resign,” Bank of America spokesman Robert Stickler said in an e-mail on Thursday. His exit ends Mr. Thain’s tenure with the Charlotte, N.C.-based bank less than a month after Merrill’s takeover was completed.

Mr. Thain negotiated the sale with Bank of America Chief Executive Officer Kenneth Lewis, 61, whose credibility was undercut when the brokerage reported a record fourth-quarter deficit. Mr. Lewis, who considered backing out of the deal when he learned of the extent of Merrill’s losses last month, went ahead at the insistence of U.S. regulators who provided a new $138 billion aid package.

Mr. Lewis “is by no means in his job in any secure way,” Gary Townsend, president of Hill-Townsend Capital LLC in Chevy Chase, Md., said in a Bloomberg Radio interview. “Ken Lewis has his issues.”


Shares of Bank of America, down 53 percent this year through Wednesday, slid 8 percent to $6.16 as of 2:09 p.m. in New York Stock Exchange composite trading.

Mr. Thain, who had headed Bank of America’s wealth management and corporate and investment banking divisions, will be succeeded by General Counsel Brian Moynihan, the bank said in a statement. Mr. Moynihan, 49, ran global corporate and investment banking at Bank of America prior to the Merrill takeover, and had also served as president of global wealth and investment management.

Senior Merrill executives Robert McCann and Greg Fleming resigned less than a week after the transaction was completed on Jan. 1.

Trading chief Tom Montag, 52, who was hired by Mr. Thain from Goldman Sachs Group Inc., will stay with the company, according to Mr. Stickler, the Bank of America spokesman. Mr. Montag will continue to run global markets, and will now report to Mr. Lewis and be a member of the team that sets company strategy.

Thain agreed to sell Merrill after less than a year as CEO, on the same weekend that Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. filed for a record-breaking bankruptcy.

Goldman, NYSE


Merrill had hired Thain, a longtime Goldman Sachs Group Inc. banker, from the New York Stock Exchange in late 2007 with a $15 million signing bonus. Replacing E. Stanley O’Neal as Merrill’s CEO, Thain pledged to live up to his reputation as “Mr. Fixit,” the sobriquet he earned while rescuing the NYSE.

Instead, he held onto more than $40 billion of subprime- tainted bonds as the market cratered. He agreed to terms with investors such as Singapore sovereign wealth fund Temasek Holdings Pte. that later cost the firm $4.9 billion.

Thain also recruited a chief financial officer with no experience at a securities firm, while more than 40 senior executives, bankers and traders departed. In the end, he merged Merrill into a large bank -- a step O’Neal concluded was needed in mid-2007, when the stock was trading at more than six times higher.

The former Merrill CEO received a salary of $750,000 last year and didn’t get a bonus. New York Attorney General Andrew Cuomo said in December that a performance bonus for Merrill’s CEO and other top executives would be an “oxymoron” during such an “abysmal year.”

Thain this year spent $1.2 million to redecorate his office at New York-based Merrill, CNBC reported today. CNBC earlier today reported Thain’s departure.



Previous   Next
Pennsylvania Jobless Problem Worsens   Former Fannie Exec: Housing Crisis Worse Than The Depression

Reader Comments

The following are comments from the readers. In no way do they represent the view of thebulletin.us.
You must register with a valid email to post comments. Only your Member ID will be posted with the comments.

Registered users sign in here:

Become a Registered User

*Member ID:
*Password:
Remember login?
(requires cookies)
  Forgot Your Password?
 

Do not use usernames or passwords from your financial accounts!

Note: Fields marked with an asterisk (*) are required!

*Create a Member ID:
*Choose a password:
*Re-enter password:
*E-mail Address:
*Year of Birth:
 

(children under 13 cannot register)

*First Name:
*Last Name:
Company:
Home Phone:
Business Phone:
*Address:
*City:
*State:
*Zip Code:
 
Return to: Business « | Home « | Top of Page ^
 


Latest Video



 
 
The Bulletin, 1500 Walnut Street, Suite 300, Philadelphia, PA, 19102 (Directions) | 1-215-735-9150
Copyright 2009 The Bulletin; All Rights Reserved  |  Published by Thomas G. Rice
The Locally Owned, Independent Philadelphia Newspaper