Skip to main content

Flying empty jets across the country is only the latest way GE wastes money on executives

GE is finding innovative was to waste money

For a company trying to fend off activist investors targeting bloated corporate spending, General Electric has seemed particularly clueless about how it spends money.

Along with paying executives astronomical salaries for mediocre results, it has showered them with perks that read like a caricature of executive excess. Perhaps the most egregious example is the one revealed yesterday (paywall) in the Wall Street Journal. It reports that the company often sent an empty aircraft to follow then-CEO Jeffrey Immelt around as he traveled the world on another corporate jet, just in case his primary plane (no doubt equipped with GE aviation equipment) broke down during one of his business trips.

GE also paid Immelt $27.5 million last year—that’s total compensation, including some deferred money—for a performance so uninspiring that he resigned under pressure in June. His replacement, John Flannery, is cleaning house now. The new CEO has vowed to trim the fat, including grounding GE’s fleet of six jets and killing a program that provided company cars to 700 executives.

Under pressure from Trian, the activist fund run by Nelson Peltz, the company recently agreed to add a Trian representative to its board (paywall) rather than risk a proxy battle it might lose. (Immelt and GE have denied his resignation was linked to Trian’s pressure.)

Corporations naturally bridle at the outsized influence of short-term investors, whose only interest is the next quarter’s earnings. Companies are eager for shareholders with a longterm view that gives management room to maneuver. Often, their frustration with short-term thinking is justified—investments in the future of the company can take years to manifest, such as Walmart’s move to raise employee pay.

But when companies become profligate and waste money on excessive perks for executives, activists circle like a pride of lions ready to cut out the weakest member of the herd.

GE has a long history of bloated executive compensation. When former CEO Jack Welch retired in 2001, he was left with a retirement package valued at almost $420 million, and included items like the use of an $50,000-a-month Manhattan apartment, choice seats for the Yankees, Knicks, Red Sox, and at Wimbledon, and the use of GE’s airplanes. The size and excess of Welch’s golden parachute only came to light in his divorce filings, and its non-disclosure to shareholders became the subject of a SEC enforcement action.

But while Welch’s haul was embarrassing, it came when GE was still among the US’s richest companies, and it barely made a ripple among investors. Much has changed in the last 16 years, and GE went from leading the world with a $406 billion market capitalization, to being ranked to 25th, with a market cap of $200 billion today. It’s a lot easier to splurge on perks when you can afford it.

Quartz http://ift.tt/2l1pAZa October 19, 2017 at 10:23PM

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Controlling legend appearance in ggplot2 with override.aes

[This article was first published on Very statisticious on Very statisticious , and kindly contributed to R-bloggers ]. (You can report issue about the content on this page here ) Want to share your content on R-bloggers? click here if you have a blog, or here if you don't. In ggplot2 , aesthetics and their scale_*() functions change both the plot appearance and the plot legend appearance simultaneously. The override.aes argument in guide_legend() allows the user to change only the legend appearance without affecting the rest of the plot. This is useful for making the legend more readable or for creating certain types of combined legends. In this post I’ll first introduce override.aes with a basic example and then go through three additional plotting scenarios to how other instances where override.aes comes in handy. Table of Contents R packages Introducing override.aes Adding a guides() layer Using the guide argument in scale_*() Changing multiple aesthetic par...

Using RStudio and LaTeX

(This article was first published on r – Experimental Behaviour , and kindly contributed to R-bloggers) This post will explain how to integrate RStudio and LaTeX, especially the inclusion of well-formatted tables and nice-looking graphs and figures produced in RStudio and imported to LaTeX. To follow along you will need RStudio, MS Excel and LaTeX. Using tikzdevice to insert R Graphs into LaTeX I am a very visual thinker. If I want to understand a concept I usually and subconsciously try to visualise it. Therefore, more my PhD I tried to transport a lot of empirical insights by means of  visualization . These range from histograms, or violin plots to show distributions, over bargraphs including error bars to compare means, to interaction- or conditional effects of regression models. For quite a while it was very tedious to include such graphs in LaTeX documents. I tried several ways, like saving them as pdf and then including them in LaTeX as pdf, or any other file ...