1. Remember the Neediest Executives!
Imagine you're in control of a company that, after years of defending the safety of one of its key products, decides to withdraw it from the market, citing safety concerns.| Merck's Needy Cases Fund Executive sweets from the makers of Vioxx |
Imagine that your stock has dropped 38% as a result, erasing $39 billion from the company's market capitalization.
What do you do next?
Why, make sure your executives are well compensated in the event of a sale, of course!
At least that's what Merck (MRK Quote), the manufacturer of no-longer-sold pain reliever Vioxx, said it did this week.
In an SEC filing Monday, Merck said it had adopted what's called a "Change in Control Separation Benefits Plan" for 230 top executives.
Should these executives be let go within two years of any merger or acquisition of Merck, the lucky folks would win up to three years' of salary, bonus and health care benefits, among other goodies.
No word on what goodies Merck's 63,000 other employees would receive. Merck's board says it adopted the plan "in recognition of the importance to the Company and its shareholders of avoiding the distraction and loss of key management personnel that may occur in connection with rumored or actual fundamental corporate changes." To which we respond, because it was key management personnel that got Merck into its latest mess, why is it important to shareholders to keep them around?
2. Meaner Than a Junkyard Fax
You know, we used to think of Canada, Our Friendly Neighbor to the North, simply as a place where we could invest in blue-chip stocks like Biovail (BVF Quote), Nortel (NT Quote), Hollinger (HLR Quote) and Corel. But that's changed. Now we think of Canada simply the next-best-thing to Switzerland, as far as banking privacy is concerned. As we learned from The Globe and Mail last week, the Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce -- better known as CIBC (BCM Quote) -- has had an odd system in place for what to do with paperwork associated with transferring certain investments of certain customers. It faxes a copy of those customers' sensitive personal information -- stuff like bank account numbers, home address and social insurance number -- to a junkyard owner in West Virginia. Seriously. Yes. Thanks to a phone number mixup, CIBC in 2001 started faxing copies of certain investment transfer requests to one Wade Peer in West Virginia, the G&M reported. The number of customers who suffered a privacy breach is unclear; CIBC acknowledges that 29 customers were affected, while Peer, according to the G&M, says he's received hundreds of misdirected CIBC faxes. (Peer's lawyer declined to speak with TheStreet.com or make her client available for comment.)| Debits, Credits, Hubcaps CIBC's Appalachian division |
- Loading Comments...
- Loading Comments...
Recent Comments
Featured Photo Galleries
| Dow Jones | S&P 500 | NASDAQ | 10-Year Note | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 10,318.16 | 1,091.38 | 2,146.04 | 33.56 |
Oil *
77.53
|
|
DOWN
14.28
|
DOWN
3.52
|
DOWN
10.78
|
UP
0.07
|
10 Yr
3.36%
SPDR Gold
112.94
|
|
-0.14%
|
-0.32%
|
-0.50%
|
+0.21%
|
Data delayed 20 minutes |














