An entrepreneurial business owner, Todd Taskey has more than 25 years of finance and investing experience. Prior to founding Potomac Business Capital, Todd was a founding investor, board member or management team member to five other business ventures. Armed with the insight from his past successes and failures — and ongoing conversations with growing business owners and entrepreneurs — Todd provides market strategy and finance advice via his blog and national public speaking tours.
As taxpayers, you and I are owners of Citi Group Inc. Our 34% stake is valued today at about $35 Billion dollars and our most profitable employee is Andrew Hall who runs the energy trading operation. His old boss told the Wall Street Journal that “he has made money every year for the company he works for – a lot of money.”
His department has had earnings (not revenues, but earnings) of 1.86 Billion over the past 5 years. If you had an employee whose average annualearnings are $375 million per year, would you pay him $100 per year? I would. In fact, his department was one of the very few profitable operations within Citi over the past few years.
Enter government Bureaucrat Kenneth Feinberg from the
treasury department who “urged” CitiGroup to sever ties with its (our) star
employee or he would issue an “embarrassing ruling” if CitiGroup honored Mr.
Halls Contract.
Pause and reread.
Citi Group is being pressured to not honor a legally binding employment contract with an individual who has been generating steady, reliable profits for the bank, our bank.
With little option, Citi officials sold this highly profitable business for just the net asset value of the unit’s assets. Not the net asset value of the business, just the assets on its books. In essence, it gave away the business, and our star.
“If you’ve got to sell, why should I pay a premium?” asked Steve Chazen, the CEO of Occidental Petroleum and buyer.
Mr. Feinberg made it very clear that he thought CitiGroup should make a clean break. “Something like that would probably be best.”
Best for whom? We gave away a very profitable business, lost our star employee and a reliable money maker, how is that best?
These are the same people who want to manage our health care…
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said this on 15 Oct 2009 7:36:53 AM EST
Very well said, Todd. I can't wait to get healthcare DMV style...
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said this on 22 Oct 2009 10:07:22 PM EST
That's very interesting. Good job
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said this on 06 Nov 2009 1:43:44 PM EST
This makes no sense at all in a time when we all are feeling the crunch of little to no money. I have been put in the same place of being n a spot where I do not work due to the same issues. Fun Fun.
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