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That would be 35 percent less than the $9.05 million in restricted stock awards that he was eligible for in 2010. Excluding the restricted stock awards, which are redeemable only if the bank meets certain guidelines, Moynihan was paid $1.25 million in...
Excluding the restricted stock awards, which are redeemable only if the bank meets certain guidelines, Moynihan was paid $1.25 million in 2010, including a salary of $950,000. Moynihan became CEO at the start of 2010, after predecessor Ken Lewis...
Artist Geoffrey Raymond poses with his painting of News Corp's CEO Rupert Murdoch, titled "Inverted Murdoch", in front of the NewsCorp building in New York in this August 3, 2011. Raymond, famous for his paintings of troubled Wall Street figures, has... View Photo »
Bankers didn’t disclose the extent of their borrowing. On Nov. 26, 2008, then-Bank of America Corp. Chief Executive Officer Kenneth D. Lewis wrote to shareholders that he headed ‘one of the strongest and most stable major banks in the world.’ He didn’t say that his Charlotte, N.C.-based firm owed the ce...
The 1989 purchase of the remains of First Republic Bank put the banking industry on notice for the national ambitions of the company's then CEO, Hugh McColl, and a top lieutenant who succeeded him at the helm, Kenneth Lewis. Brian Moynihan, who took...
The 1989 purchase of the remains of First Republic Bank put the banking industry on notice for the national ambitions of the company's then CEO, Hugh McColl, and a top lieutenant who succeeded him at the helm, Kenneth Lewis. Brian Moynihan, who took...
Coming so soon after Paulson had wiped out Shareholders in Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac one wonders how this Goldman Strategy of "Fuck Your Client" ever got into the US Treasury Oh and btw, Ken Lewis had the Feds lean on the Federal Reserve Bank of...
Artist Geoffrey Raymond waits as he asks passers-by if they would like to sign his painting of News Corp CEO Rupert Murdoch, titled "Inverted Murdoch", in front of the NewsCorp building in New York in this August 3, 2011 file photo. Raymond, famous for... View Photo »
Hugh McColl Jr. and Ken Lewis would win more national acclaim and notoriety, Storrs often won praise from his former pupils for his stewardship of a regional bank that would one day become the nation's largest. "He's one of the great CEOs this city has...
Upon retiring as CEO of NCNB in 1983, Storrs’ appointed McColl to run the growing bank. And it was McColl and his successor Ken Lewis who grew the bank to more than $2 trillion in assets and an international presence while keeping headquarters in...
Kenneth D. Lewis (Born 9 April 1947 in Meridian, Mississippi) is the current Chairman, CEO, and President of Bank of America, the 2nd largest bank in the United States, positions he has held since the retirement of Hugh McColl in 2001. He joined the organization (at that time NCNB) as a credit analyst in 1969, and served as the head of both... Full Article
Artist Geoffrey Raymond poses with his painting of News Corp's CEO Rupert Murdoch, titled "Inverted Murdoch", in front of the NewsCorp building in New York in this August 3, 2011. Raymond, famous for his paintings of troubled Wall Street figures, has found his next muse in MF Global...
View Photo »Artist Geoffrey Raymond waits as he asks passers-by if they would like to sign his painting of News Corp CEO Rupert Murdoch, titled "Inverted Murdoch", in front of the NewsCorp building in New York in this August 3, 2011 file photo. Raymond, famous for his paintings of troubled Wall...
View Photo »Artist Geoffrey Raymond asks passers-by if they would like to sign his painting of News Corp CEO Rupert Murdoch, titled "Inverted Murdoch", in front of the NewsCorp building in New York August 3, 2011. Raymond, famous for his paintings of troubled Wall Street figures, has found his next...
View Photo »Artist Geoffrey Raymond poses with his painting of News Corp's CEO Rupert Murdoch, titled "Inverted Murdoch", in front of the NewsCorp building in New York in this August 3, 2011. Raymond, famous for his paintings of troubled Wall Street figures, has found his next muse in MF Global...
View Photo »Bankers didn’t disclose the extent of their borrowing. On Nov. 26, 2008, then-Bank of America Corp. Chief Executive Officer Kenneth D. Lewis wrote to shareholders that he headed ‘one of the strongest and most stable major banks in the world.’ He didn’t say that his Charlotte, N.C.-based firm owed the ce...
