And Jeff Immelt retired a wealthy man
/(one of) the symbols of corporate America’s decline
As GE Breaks Up, Future of CT Employees Remains Uncertain
Duck Duck “How Jeff Immelt destroyed GE”, as I did, and you’ll find enough links to keep you happy all day.
And search “Jeff Immelt golden parachute” and you’ll see that he struck the mother lode:
Jeff Immelt took over as CEO of just four days before the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, 2001. Since then, Immelt has presided over a 30% decline in GE’s stock price, costing GE some $150 billion in market value. Still, while GE has no plans to pay its former executive a severance package when he retires at the end of this year, Immelt’s net worth is likely to get a much bigger boost when he leaves than the company would make it seem.
GE has long prided itself, dating back to the days of former CEO Jack Welch, on its lack of severance agreements with its executives and its decision to eschew controversial golden parachute arrangements that pay out windfalls when CEOs leave the company under certain circumstances. That said, GE endured its own controversy shortly after Welch’s retirement, when divorce filings revealed in 2002 that the ex-CEO was still receiving a salary and other perks reportedly worth as much as $417 million.
Though GE has since instituted policies designed to increase transparency for such rich packages, Immelt himself still stands to make at least half that much--and likely a lot more. When he leaves GE, Immelt is set to take home nearly $211 million, on top of the salary and bonuses he has accumulated in his more than 35 years there.
While GE does not explicitly pay out severance packages, it does allow executives to receive most of their stock and stock option grants in full upon their retirement, even if they would otherwise be required to keep working at the company to receive them. That will allow Immelt to collect more than $39 million when he retires, on top of the nearly $82 million in pension benefits to which he is also entitled. Add to that the more than $75 million in GE stock that Immelt owns and will now be able to sell as he pleases, plus some other retirement benefits and pay GE still owes him, and the total adds up to almost $211 million.
Still, if Immelt gets a retirement deal anything like the one his predecessor received, he may also be eligible for “continued lifetime access to company facilities and services,” as the company provided to Welch when he retired. On top of his $3.8 million salary and $4.3 million bonus in 2016, Immelt received nearly $1.2 million in miscellaneous compensation, including $257,639 for his use of GE’s private jet.