Thane memo to the folks at Merrill Lynch

Pure

Fiel a Verdad
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Dec 20, 2001
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a propos of bonuses, the $85,000 carpet, etc. [sorry, title should spell the man's name, 'Thain,' properly]


from cnbc.com

[[CNBC's Maria Bartiromo to Interview Thain at 4:15 New York Time]]

Merrill Lynch's former CEO John Thain sent a parting memo to Merrill Lynch employees. The full text of the memo follows:

To my Merrill Lynch colleagues:

It has been an honor to lead this company over the last very difficult year. The decisions that I made were always with the best interests of our shareholders and employees above all. I believe that the decision to sell to Bank of America was the right one for our company and our clients. While the execution has been difficult, I still believe in the strategic rationale of the transaction and I wish you all the best for the future of the combined companies.

I want to address several topics that have been inaccurately reported in the press. The first issue is our year end bonus payments. Our 2008 discretionary bonus pool was 41% lower than 2007. The size of the pool, its composition (cash and stock mix), and the timing of the payments for both the cash and stock were all determined together with Bank of America and approved by our Management Development and Compensation Committee and our Board. The total bonus pool was also substantially less than the amount allowed under our merger agreement.


The second topic is the losses in the fourth quarter, which were very large and unfortunate. However, they were incurred almost entirely on legacy positions and were due to market movements. We were completely transparent with Bank of America. They learned about these losses when we did. The acting CFO of my businesses was Bank of America’s former Chief Accounting Officer. They had daily access to our p&l, our positions and our marks. Our year end balance sheet target (which we more than met) was given to us by Bank of America’s CFO.

The final topic is the expenses related to my office. The $1.2 million reported in the press was for the renovation of my office, two conference rooms and a reception area. The expenses were incurred over a year ago in a very different environment. Nonetheless, they were a mistake in the light of the world we live in today. I will therefore reimburse the company for all of the costs incurred.
I thank all of you for your hard work and your support over the past year. I wish you all success in the future.
John
 
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Update: Thain gossip

New York Post

January 27, 2009 --

FORMER Merrill Lynch chiefs John Thain and Stan O'Neal are finally getting with the penny-pinching program, but once again, they're stiffing the little people along the way. Thain - who was booted last week from Merrill's new parent, Bank of America, for excesses that included spending $87,000 on an office rug - was having dinner at San Pietro last week with BlackRock Chairman Larry Fink. He loudly told the waiter, for all to hear, "under the circumstances with this tough economy, I think I'll have tap water." Insiders say Thain and Fink are "not crazy about each other, but for business and financial reasons, they have to dine together every couple of months, and they only do it at a very public place."
 
I cannot describe to you the depth and breadth of the loathing at BoA/Merrill. Merrill, pre-purchase, was already involved on one of the nastiest culture wars on the street (for those of you to whom this means anything, it made Purcell vs the Morganites look like a mild disagreement between easygoing pragmatists.) Now, O'Neal is finding that the only subject which unites the two Merrill sides is their naked contempt for the retail bankers. For Merrill: couldn't happen to a nicer bunch of guys. For BoA: this is what happens when the cows buy the slaughterhouse. It's one of those marriages where each partner is getting exactly what they deserve.

Was there some schadenfreude to my tone there?

Best,
H
 
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