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Money winners of 2008: Alan Fishman, WaMu's final CEO

This post is part of our feature on Money Winners of 2008. See all 20.

Many of the names on our list of 2008 Money Winners are entertainers, athletes, or businessmen who are on the top of their game. Michael Phelps, Tina Fey, and subprime profiteer Bill Ackman are all examples of this kind of winner. JPMorgan Chase (NYSE: JPM) CEO Jamie Dimon has gotten credit as being one of the few executives to keep a large financial institution from feeling too much pain in our current financial meltdown. However, Alan Fishman, who gained notoriety as the last CEO of Washington Mutual, is not any of those kinds of winner.

Instead, he wears his crown as a result of being in the right place at the right time. He replaced longtime WaMu CEO Kerry Killinger during the first week of September of this year. WaMu was seized by federal regulators just three weeks later and the banking assets were sold off to JPMorgan. Thus ended the less-than-spectacular reign of Mr. Fishman.

Fishman was paid just under $20,000 a week before taxes, which is a nice salary if you can get it, but is not nearly enough to land you on our list. However, he also got a massive signing bonus of $7.5M, plus 612,500 shares of WM. Since that stock is worthless now, we will only count the cash. He also had a golden parachute attached to his back and, unless he was fired for cause or voluntarily resigned, he was due to get another $6.15 million. Things get fuzzy when you look at his target annual bonus, which was set at $3.65 million. Since the company disappeared under his watch, I would hope he got none of that bonus, but I can't find any concrete evidence for how that matter turned out. When you total it all out, Mr. Fishman pocketed somewhere between $11 million and $18 million for his three weeks on the job. Wow.

Continue reading Money winners of 2008: Alan Fishman, WaMu's final CEO

AIG's former chief to get $47 million

There ought to be a law. That would be legislation which limits what public company CEOs get when they are fired. Maybe the limit should be $1 million. How much is failure really worth?

The departing head of American International Group (NYSE: AIG), Martin Sullivan, will pick up $47 million as he hits that door. According to the FT, "Mr Sullivan's departure was deemed a resignation for "good reason", according to AIG." His "good reason" was that the board would not allow him to stay in the building. What better excuse can a man get?

Sullivan can hardly be blamed for taking the money and retiring about his yacht to hit golf balls into the ocean. The AIG board shoulders that burden. The chairman of that board, Robert Willumstad, took Sullivan's job. Maybe it was easier to move up to CEO with Sullivan fat and happy.

But, there ought to be a law.

Douglas A. McIntyre is an editor at 247wallst.com.

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Last updated: November 12, 2009: 04:09 PM

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