Rick Wagoner Gets Over $10 Million In Exit Package From GM

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First Posted: 07-14-09 06:40 PM   |   Updated: 08-14-09 05:12 AM

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DETROIT (AP) -- Former General Motors Corp. Chairman and CEO Rick Wagoner will retire Aug. 1 with a pension and benefit package the automaker valued at more than $10 million.

Wagoner, 56, who was ousted by the Obama administration on March 30, will get $1.64 million in benefits annually for each of the next five years, plus an annual pension of $74,030 for the rest of his life, according to company documents filed Tuesday with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission.

The former CEO, who spent 32 years with the company, can also choose to cash out his company-provided life insurance policy at $2.6 million, according to the filing.

The benefits are worth about half the $22.1 million value that the company placed on Wagoner's retirement package at the end of 2008. The severance package is also far smaller than those afforded to many other large-company CEOs in the past, before the market meltdown made compensation practices a touchstone for public and congressional outrage.

Lee Raymond, former chairman of energy giant ExxonMobil, received a nearly $400 million retirement package in 2006. Stan O'Neal, ousted from Merrill Lynch in 2007 after the investment bank reported a huge quarterly loss, walked away with $161.5 million in stock, options and retirement benefits. Walt Disney Co. directors awarded a $140 million severance package to Michael Ovitz at the end of his brief stint in the mid-1990s as president of the entertainment company.

Although many GM retirees whose benefits have been cut or investors who lost money may consider Wagoner's package excessive, it is not out of line in comparison to other executives' pay, said Aaron Boyd, a research manager with Equilar Inc., an information services firm that specializes in researching executive compensation.

"For a company making billions of dollars in revenue, an executive regularly making millions of dollars every year, I think a $10 million retirement package, considering the length of time that he's been with the company, I think it's certainly understandable," Boyd said.

Wagoner's package comes at a time when the company slashed benefits for most of its retirees, including eliminating vision and dental coverage. Health benefits for blue-collar retirees also are somewhat at risk because they soon will be paid by a union trust that is largely funded by stock in the new GM.

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Wagoner was credited by industry analysts with restructuring GM more than any other CEO in its history, shedding thousands of jobs while globalizing and energizing its vehicle design, engineering and manufacturing.

But since he became president and CEO in 2000, the company's shares have tumbled in value. In 2000, GM shares topped $92, according to the Center for Research in Security Prices at the University of Chicago. Trading of the stock, which stayed with the old GM still in bankruptcy protection, was suspended as of Friday at $1.15 per share. The company has said repeatedly that it likely will have little or no value.

In the past four years, GM has racked up more than $80 billion in losses as the recession and high gas prices cut into its sales.

Wagoner's ouster came at the hands of former Obama administration autos task force leader Steven Rattner, as the administration rejected a GM restructuring plan and ordered deeper cuts.

Wagoner has remained on the GM payroll since his ouster, but he had been working for $1 per year since late last year. Company spokeswoman Renee Rashid-Merem said GM disclosed last year that it had annual pensions for top executives by two-thirds.

GM has received $50 billion in U.S. government loans. On Friday, the automaker emerged from a 40-day stay in Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection with its best assets moving to a new company called General Motors Co. The U.S. government owns more than 60 percent of the new company, with hopes of selling stock to get some of its investment back, perhaps as soon as next year.

Wagoner earned $14.9 million last year at GM, although $11.9 million of that was in the form of stock and options which are now worthless.

He also was entitled to $366,602 in unvested stock awards and $534,627 in deferred compensation as of Dec. 31, according to GM's 2008 annual report. At the time, Wagoner got to keep about 3 million stock options, which allow him to buy GM shares at prices ranging from about $20 to $76.

As a condition of GM's government loans, the automaker is not allowed to pay severance packages to departing executives. Government officials began to crack down on so-called "golden parachutes" after last fall's backlash over $24 million in exit packages for the ousted chief executives of mortgage finance companies Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. The severance payments were never made. Former AIG chief Robert Willumstad opted out of his $22 million severance package after being deposed as part of the insurer's government bailout last September.

From the beginning of his career at GM through the end of 2008, Wagoner received compensation totaling about $63.3 million, with $38.7 million of that coming during his years as chief executive. The totals take into account Wagoner's base salary, cash bonus payouts, long-term incentive plan payouts, gains from stock option exercises, and other compensation.

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DETROIT (AP) -- Former General Motors Corp. Chairman and CEO Rick Wagoner will retire Aug. 1 with a pension and benefit package the automaker valued at more than $10 million. Wagoner, 56, who was ous...
DETROIT (AP) -- Former General Motors Corp. Chairman and CEO Rick Wagoner will retire Aug. 1 with a pension and benefit package the automaker valued at more than $10 million. Wagoner, 56, who was ous...
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Based on performance, he was worth maybe $10.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:04 AM on 07/16/2009

Two worlds. The world of the highly compensated upper management and that of the hapless employees

CEO: I
SVP: have
VP: an idea
Management: now you
Employees: make it happen

CEO: oops
SVP: that
VP: idea
Management: was bad so you're
Employees: fired

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:51 AM on 07/16/2009
- rudolph I'm a Fan of rudolph 10 fans permalink

Someone, somewhere ought to be worrying about the rapidly increasing alienation of those left behind by the great payoffs and bailouts, those who may not see another pay cheque, ever....

The folks who have brought us 10% unemployment for the next ten years are really doing quite well...witness Goldman etc.... and clearly, the great unwashed can go fly in the air as far as our porcine politicians are concerned; their health care is just fine.

Wagoner should perhaps be allowed to claim unemployment (or social security since he is obviously unemployable). To reward him for ruining GM is an insult to all the workers who actually toiled honestly for the company.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:48 PM on 07/15/2009

Isn't this special. He gets all this and we get no health insurance, almost no life insurance and they are talking about cutting our pension.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:27 PM on 07/15/2009

"Pay for performance" to please the stock holder requires short term stock runup at the expense of long range performance and survival. All thanks to Wall Street.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:26 PM on 07/15/2009
- blindhog I'm a Fan of blindhog 9 fans permalink

You see, that's the problem in a few words. Much to a very few and little to the rest.

I looked through an illustrated children's book some time ago and it showed how the old ships were weighted at the bottom to make sure the ship would not list. Folks, our ship of state is listing badly because of the decisions of a few (like boards of directors--who really weren't fiduciaries).

Unless we right this ship, we all go down, even the likes of Rich Wagoner.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:26 PM on 07/15/2009

The Wagoner's will go down, all right. They will go down to Monte Carlo to play a little Roulette with the taxpayer money they got.

:-)

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:18 PM on 07/15/2009
- lydiajean I'm a Fan of lydiajean 5 fans permalink

Obama is jealous of successful CEOs. He has never managed anything except ACORN.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:01 PM on 07/15/2009
- wm1066 I'm a Fan of wm1066 28 fans permalink
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He managed a successful Senate campaign as an anti Iraq war candidate, he managed to beat out a Clinton in the primary and win the Presidency, he managed to have two best selling books. And I don't think he managed Acorn.
Do you lydia, get even one thing right?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:42 PM on 07/15/2009
- Ivar I'm a Fan of Ivar 2 fans permalink

wm1066: Good for you! Obama wrote three books I agree with you otherwise. btw...lydiajean, isn't being the president of the United States sort of like being a CEO?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:03 AM on 07/16/2009

There is a reason why economic recovery is going to take a lot longer than the "experts" anticipate. As long as ordinary Americans feel that they are bearing the brunt of the crisis while incompetent, nonperforming CEOs are walking out with all the goodies (even if much diminished) with little punishment for their gross incompetence, they are naturally going to assume that business is "as usual." Why should there be any confidence at all?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:43 PM on 07/15/2009
- aj88 I'm a Fan of aj88 2 fans permalink

How about the fact that our government led us to believe he had been fired? Turns out he was still gainfully employed (from home) until the bankruptcy proceedings went through. How about the taxpayers ramifications from the ill-gotten bankruptcy proceeding? GM had fought to to limit dealers access to State courts for disputes in it's bankruptcy court. GM lost that option and dealers will now be able to sue in State courts. Guess who will have to foot the bills? How about Chrysler's bankruptcy protection that states that vehicles purchased prior to April 30th will have to sue the 'old" Chrysler for liability claims? Don't even worry about Wagoneers pay day, you will be paying for decades to come on this great debacle.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:00 PM on 07/15/2009
- Avanti2 I'm a Fan of Avanti2 6 fans permalink

This is not news. This was reported the day he was fired by Obama. Why does HP keep recycling old stuff?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:58 PM on 07/15/2009

How about giving him free private jet service for life as well?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:45 PM on 07/15/2009
- RJII I'm a Fan of RJII 72 fans permalink
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this is US capitalism . A big let down for 90% of its citizens, unbelievably awesome for the other 10%.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:18 PM on 07/15/2009
- jalowe1957 I'm a Fan of jalowe1957 29 fans permalink
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Rick Waggoner: A corporate welfare queen with a golden parachute who thinks life's a banquet while us poor suckers struggle to keep starvation at bay.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:14 PM on 07/15/2009
- wm1066 I'm a Fan of wm1066 28 fans permalink
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Wagoner is a failure but he wont suffer, the innocent will suffer, all those people that lost their jobs and lifes work will suffer. He gets to live in his gilded cage (gated community) and thousands wil lose everything.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:57 AM on 07/15/2009

The great thing about this country is from time to time we actually do value our contracts. We might not like the fact that Wagoner is getting a severance package, but I think we would all be much more unhappy if we lived in a society that did not honor written agreements. That is what you call the rule of law, and it is a much better system than the rule of man. Long live the Business Judgment Rule and the ability to enforce contracts.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:18 AM on 07/15/2009

Too bad that the breaking of contracts usually only applies to union workers, not CEOs.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:37 AM on 07/15/2009

Well, if you consider an international treaty a contract, then you can be happy that our government has decided to breach its obligations to mexican trucking companies in favor of the teamsters union. You could also look at the fact that the UAW was leapfrogged over secured creditors and given a huge chunk of GM. How about the removal of Wagoner from office by the government? What about going after the AIG bonuses? They may have been obscene, but they were contractual obligations.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:48 AM on 07/15/2009
- RJII I'm a Fan of RJII 72 fans permalink
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too bad contracts are broken every second of every day and our justice system discourages them from seeing the day of light because they involve average folks with limited legal resources.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:11 PM on 07/15/2009
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