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Home Front Economy
Fannie plans bonuses of $1M for 4 execs
2009-03-19
So...will the congressional lynch mob have to be reconvened? Or are they gonna let this one slide since Fannie and Freddie are kinda part of the club? And what might their tax rate be readjusted to?
Fannie Mae plans bonuses of $1M for top executives; Freddie Mac has similar plans

WASHINGTON (AP) -- Fannie Mae plans to pay retention bonuses of at least $1 million to four key executives as part of a plan to keep hundreds of employees from leaving the government-controlled company.
So...how will million dollar bonuses to 4 guys keep "hundreds of employees from leaving"?
Rival mortgage finance company Freddie Mac is planning similar awards, but has not yet reported on which executives will benefit.

The two companies, which together own or back more than half of the home mortgages in the country, have been hobbled by skyrocketing loan defaults. Fannie recently requested $15 billion in federal aid, while Freddie has sought a total of almost $45 billion.

Fannie Mae disclosed its "broad-based" retention program in a recent regulatory filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission. The company was only required to disclose the amounts for the top-paid executives, who will pocket at least $470,000 on top of their base salaries. The bonuses are more than double last year's, which ranged from $200,000 to $260,000. Another round of bonuses ranging from $330,000 to $429,000 are planned for next February.

A company spokesman declined further comment.

Fannie Mae said regulators determined that the bonuses were needed because keeping key employees "was essential to ensure our viability through 2010, which would allow Congress, the administration and other parties involved time to determine what the form and function of the company will be in future years."

The bonuses were authorized last year by the Federal Housing Finance Agency, which seized control of Fannie and Freddie in September and ousted the companies' former CEOs. "It was critical to retain their most important asset -- their employees -- who are being asked to play a vital role in the nation's economic recovery," James Lockhart, the agency's director, said in a statement. "As the previous senior management teams left, it would have been catastrophic to lose the next layers down and other highly experienced employees."

But the generous paychecks could prove politically touchy amid outrage over roughly $165 million in bonuses paid out over the weekend by bailed-out insurance giant AIG.

Michael Williams, Washington-based Fannie Mae's executive vice president and chief operating officer, is due to receive a $611,000 retention award this year on top of his $676,000 base salary. Williams received a $260,000 retention bonus last year and is in line for another $429,000 next February, for an expected total of $1.3 million, according to the SEC filing.

David Hisey, the company's deputy chief financial offer, is expected to receive a $517,000 retention award this year in addition to his $385,000 salary and $160,000 cash bonus. He received a $220,000 retention award last year and is due to receive $363,000 next February, for a total of $1.1 million.

The other two executives receiving the bonuses are Thomas Lund, who oversees the company's single-family mortgage business and Kenneth Bacon, who heads up housing and community development. Both are receiving about $1 million.

The company's two top executives, Chief Executive Officer Herbert Allison and Chief Financial Officer David Johnson, did not receive the awards because they were new to the company last year. Allison is taking no salary, while Johnson is receiving a base salary of $625,000 and no bonus.
So do a lousy job boys, and we'll take care of you next year...
Posted by:tu3031

#4  I can't argue with performance bonuses - sort of like piecework pay for manual labor - but retention bonuses bother me. If they are such high-value (to you) employees, pay them. If not, let them go to where they are that valued. The track record of a lot of these people clearly shows they were NOT such high value employees after all.
That said, I do hope FM doesn't fold up - darling daughter is currently trying to stimulate the economy by buying a house with FM 'money' and marginal income (with a somewhat higher income co-signer.)
Posted by: Glenmore   2009-03-19 20:09  

#3  I don't know the details of the Fannie setup.

But generally in industry the way retention bonuses work is that you accept a *lower then normal* salary base in exchange for a bonus at the end of the retention period. That incents you to stay, since the salary + bonus are generally a bit higher than you would make in straight salary elsewhere. It also benefits the organization, which avoids the hidden costs of a new employee search and training or integrating a new hire.

Keep in mind too that the FMs were run by ex-Clintonites at the top who, together with Congress, demanded that the pursestrings be opened and that risk be ignored. Quite likely some of those getting these bonuses a) earned them by staying while working during a turbulent, tense time and b) unlike the political appointees at the top, did their best to make the stupid decisions imposed politically work out as best as could be managed.
Posted by: lotp   2009-03-19 15:12  

#2  Notice they didn't lose as much as AIG so they get paid less bonus money. They are doing to good a job in reversing the bleeding - why pay a retention bonus. What Fanny and Freddie should be doing is hiring those guys from AIG that quit once they got their bonus. Then they could turn them into the direction Barney Frank prefers - from the rear.
Posted by: Jack is Back!   2009-03-19 12:37  

#1  Fannie Mae plans to pay retention bonuses of at least $1 million...

Does anyone believe it makes any difference whether these clowns are retained? TVA has paid bonuses for years--I don't recall that they were specifically called retention bonuses--just bonuses. Maybe they should be called "boneuses" since we all end up getting boned by the govmint.
Posted by: JohnQC   2009-03-19 12:33  

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