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John Thain's $87,000 Rug
Andrew Harrer, Bloomberg News / Landov
UPDATE: In a Daily Beast/CNBC exclusive, Charlie Gasparino reveals how CIT’s new CEO, John Thain, spent over $1 million and hired the Obamas' decorator to redecorate his office at Merrill Lynch in 2008—even as the firm faced a financial crisis. After this story was originally posted last January, he announced plans to repay Merrill for the renovations.
In early 2008, just as Merrill Lynch CEO John Thain was preparing to slash expenses, cut thousands of jobs and exit businesses to fix the ailing securities firm, he was also spending company money on himself, senior people at the firm say.
According to documents reviewed by The Daily Beast, Thain spent $1.22 million of company money to refurbish his office at Merrill Lynch headquarters in lower Manhattan. The biggest piece of the spending spree: $800,000 to hire famed celebrity designer Michael Smith, who is currently redesigning the White House for the Obama family for just $100,000.
Big ticket items included $87,000 for an area rug, four pairs of curtains for $28,000, a pair of guest chairs for $87,000 and fabric for a "Roman Shade" for $11,000.
The other big ticket items Thain purchased include: $87,000 for an area rug in Thain's conference room and another area rug for $44,000; a "mahogany pedestal table" for $25,000; a "19th Century Credenza" in Thain's office for $68,000; a sofa for $15,000; four pairs of curtains for $28,000; a pair of guest chairs for $87,000; a "George IV Desk" for $18,000; six wall sconces for $2,700; six chairs in his private dining room for $37,000; a mirror in his private dining room for $5,000; a chandelier in the private dining room for $13,000; fabric for a "Roman Shade" for $11,000; a "custom coffee table" for $16,000; something called a "commode on legs" for $35,000; a "Regency Chairs" for $24,000; "40 yards of fabric for wall panels," for $5,000 and a "parchment waste can" for $1,400.
The documents also show that Thain signed off on the purchases personally. "Labor to relamp the six wall sconces" cost $3,000, and Thain authorized the payment of another $30,000 to pay the expenses Smith incurred in doing the work. Thain has hired Smith—whose celebrity client list includes Steven Spielberg, Michelle Pfeiffer, Cindy Crawford and Sir Evelyn de Rothschild—to design and decorate his private residences. They include a Manhattan apartment at 740 Park Avenue, and his 10-acre mansion in Rye, NY.
Click Here to See Thain’s Top 16 Outrages
Thain was tapped to run Merrill Lynch as the firm suffered massive losses from investments tied to the depressed real estate market under his predecessor Stan O'Neal, who was ousted in late 2007. Those losses continued through 2008, forcing Thain and his management team to sell the brokerage firm to Bank of America in mid-September or face near certain liquidation as investors fearing further losses began pulling lines of credit and other financing.
Just last week, Bank of America announced that Merrill has suffered an unexpected loss of $1.79 billion for the fourth quarter of 2008, nearly collapsing BofA's purchase. Bank of America CEO Ken Lewis said that without $138 billion in government assistance, including the infusion of $20 billion from the federal government he would have pulled out of the Merrill deal, which was approved by BofA shareholders in early December.
Thain has come under pressure in recent weeks after several top executives at Merrill, including brokerage chief Bob McCann and investment banking head Greg Fleming, abruptly resigned from the firm citing differences with Thain. People close to Lewis say his relationship with Thain was further strained by the recent massive loss. Lewis himself has faced withering criticism for rushing the buy Merrill for $28 billion after less than two days of due diligence.







citivas
Even as we speak B of A is spending $4 million in completely discretionary "upgrades" to their private suite at the new Yankee Stadium, before the paint is even dry on the multi-million dollar suite they just acquired. In essense, we the taxpayers are paying for all this. I wonder if that means we all get to take turns using it? $4M, on top of the existing lavish finish, for a room that gets used a few hours at a time a couple dozen times a year and has no legitimate (client smoozing, yeah, right) business purpose... Sure, that's great stewardship of our tax dollars, Ken...
marmitelover
Speechless. They really don't live on the same planet as the rest of us.
KateTheGreat
It always amuses (and annoys) me mightily when I see someone spend just a hair more than my entire years' take-home pay (after taxes) on 4 curtains...The words disgusting, bloated, and vulgar come to mind.
sharonsj
I'd like to add that the one Roman curtain equals my Social Security for a single year. I have nothing against people who earn more than I do--it's how they spend it that makes me wonder about their awareness of other people's reality. I doubt Thain has any clue. He's the CEO equivalent of Marie Antoinette.
isaac1
Perhaps Mr. Lewis should sign for any future expenditures Mr. Thain thinks important. Or call in Sotheby's.
queensplate
go figure it...$128 k overtime pay for his driver......whew.....what were they up to ?
mikehattan
Does the phrase.."Let them eat cake" come to mind?
And we all know what happened next....I yearn for the sound of tumbrils rumbling down Wall Street.
bored2tears
The best thing about this piece is being able to read it here, and not have to tune into the on-air cesspool of uselessness that is CNBC. Otherwise, where is the real news interest? Thain is slime. That much we have known for ages.
wrywriter
Isn't it time that a teeny, tiny bit of the bailout/recovery fund be set aside for the construction of a gallows? Purely symbolic, of course, but a reminder to the masters of the universe that paying more for your office rug than an average family makes in a year at a time that the economy is in the tank should be a crime.
If the banking meltdown had happened in China, people would have been shot. In Japan, they would have resigned in disgrace. But here the bankers whine about no bonuses and redecorate. It's a disgrace.
missbike
Not to nitpick, but I think you mean guillotine? Gallowsis for common criminals so it would work, but the guillotine was invented for "Let them Eat Cake"...
Just a style point.
Slicyman
Charlie---I don't know how you deal with the screeching clucking talking-hens at CNBC. Tell 'em to STFU.
citivas
My personal favorite BTW is the $1,400 trash can with the $34,000 toilet ("commode on legs" which technically can be a peice of furniture too but I choose to interpret it as a fancy john...) as a close second...
andrew585
Pigs at the trough... when will this madness end?
mikehattan
Maybe tumbrils and gallows are a little too extreme how which to punish these people but I would call for the return of the pillory and stocks. Being under "Penthouse arrest' for stealing millions and just the arrogance of these people feeling they are above the law justifies their spending a couple of days subject to the public humilation that they so well deserve.
sippewissett
DISGUSTING. While it's true that a lot of projects, like interior design where custom pieces have been ordered, probably originated before the Crash, it is also true that there were PLENTY of warning signs of a weakening economy and a weakening financial industry so Thain should be hanged by his thumbs. How come he's still around? ML/BofA should drum him out of there.
BLUEBIRDFARM
Hotel Gitmo will have occupancies soon. Put him and the rest of them in there. No maid service available.
Upperleftcoast
Great minds think alike: Guantanamo needs to be put to some use. You might get a chuckle (or high blood pressure) out of a song I wrote about just this topic:
http://www.youtube.com/rantcaster#p/a/u/0/juywAoQvMm8
onedirector
Lock the SOB up. Sell the stuff and distribute it amomg the poor slobs he laid off.
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