Northern Rock
Anger at £760,000 for ex-Rock chief
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| GOLDEN GOODBYE': Adam Applegarth |
SHAREHOLDERS voiced their fury last night that the architect of Northern Rock's £25bn demise will receive a £760,000 "golden gooodbye".
The payout to former chief executive Adam Applegarth is on top of his £2.5m pension and more than £2.6m earned from selling Northern Rock shares in the 18 months before the bank's financial meltdown.
The full scale of his settlement will be revealed in the bank's 2007 accounts, to be published today - months later than planned.
Last night, Robin Ashby, of the Northern Rock Small Shareholders' Association, said Mr Applegarth's record should mean he receives nothing. He said: "We're talking about a man whose business model ruined Northern Rock, left 18,000 shareholders with nothing and meant thousands of people lost their jobs. I cannot see how he should be entitled to anything.
North Durham MP Kevan Jones said: "I think many who are now facing possible job losses will be very angry and incredulous that a man who has already made millions out of their misery is going to be paid that amount of money."
Roger Lawson, of the UK Shareholders' Association, said: "A lot of shareholders will be unhappy he is getting anything."
Northern Rock came close to collapse in September as thousands of customers queued to withdraw their money in the first run on a British bank for more than a century.
The Newcastle-based bank was nationalised last month, after being kept afloat with emergency funding from the Bank of England. It owes the taxpayer £26bn.
About 2,000 of the bank's 6,500 workforce - 5,000 of whom are in the North-East - are expected to lose their jobs by 2011.
Mr Applegarth, 46, resigned as chief executive in December. He was paid £1.36m in 2006, including bonuses of £600,000.
Northern Rock declined to comment ahead of today's announcement, but it has previously said Mr Applegarth would receive a settlement worth "substantially less" than if his contract was being ended under normal circumstances.
Vince Cable, the Liberal Democrats' Treasury spokesman, said it was "outrageous that someone who brought the bank to the brink of destruction and subjected taxpayers to liabilities worth billions of pounds should be rewarded for failure".
Northern Rock's accounts are
also expected to reveal it paid investment
banks such as Citigroup
and Goldman Sachs millions
from public funds for advice
on a possible sale of the business.
The bank was nationalised
after Sir Richard Branson's Virgin
Group failed to agree
takeover terms with Chancellor
Alastair Darling.
Reports suggest Northern
Rock will be shown to have fallen
into the red, on the back of
huge interest payments to the
Bank of England.
Ron Sandler, the bank's new
executive chairman, is thought
to want to write off as much debt
as possible with his first set of results.
It is thought Northern
Rock's mortgage book has reduced
substantially, with many
customers being sent letters advising
them to switch to other
lenders when their present deal
runs out, because the nationalised
bank will not be willing to
offer them a new one.
However, Mr Ashby said claims
that Northern Rock was losing
money would be "entirely a
paper exercise", not reflecting
the underlying value of the business.
Mr Jones said: "The key thing
is trying to retain the business
and retain as many jobs as possible
in this region, but payouts
like this leave a bad taste in a lot
of people's mouths."
6:02am Monday 31st March 2008
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