Tag Archives: COB

Why JPMorgan Needs Jamie Dimon in Both Roles

By John Grgurich, The Motley Fool

Filed under:

Over the weekend, news got out that JPMorgan Chase‘s board of directors was actively lobbying its largest shareholders to keep Jamie Dimon in his dual roles of chief executive officer and chairman: This in the wake of growing discontent over how Dimon handled last year’s London Whale trading incident, and in response to a shareholder proposal to separate the roles of CEO and COB.

Though I normally argue the opposite, in this situation, the board is absolutely right, and is on the side of investors.

The case against the same person as CEO and COB
The pitch I’m used to making goes something like this: CEOs in any business are the top dogs, essentially dictators. Their word is typically the final word on all things.

Ideally, of course, these dictators are open-minded people whose egos are in enough natural check to not only hire smart people to advise them, but to actually listen to them, as well. This is the “benevolent king” model. But because absolute power can corrupt absolutely, this model doesn’t always work out.

So, corporations have boards of directors, which are headed by chairmen. Because chairmen of the board (COBs) — in concert with the boards — have the power to hire and fire CEOs, they’re in the ideal position to check the absolute power of CEOs who have run amok.

On a less menacing note, an independent chair can also offer CEOs unfiltered and perhaps even uncomfortable advice on running the business they might not get from underlings who fear that speaking their minds may cost them their jobs.

Theoretically, then, separating the roles of CEO and COB should make a business healthier and more profitable.

The case for Jamie Dimon in both roles
It’s an old argument, and possibly a dangerous one, but I’m going to make it anyway: Jamie Dimon is so good at what he does, that the benefits of him simultaneously occupying the positions of CEO and COB outweigh the potential dangers.

Dimon became president and chief operating officer at JPMorgan Chase when the superbank merged with Bank One in 2004, where Dimon had been also been CEO and COB. He became CEO at JPMorgan in 2005, and COB in 2006. It was those middle years of the 2000s — when the most dangerous part of the housing bubble formed — that Dimon proved his mettle as the bank’s leader.

As qualified homebuyers began to run out, banks turned to unqualified applicants — or subprime borrowers — to keep the mortgage-securitization machine humming and big profits rolling in. But Jamie Dimon was (and still is) a risk control freak, and he kept the bank’s subprime shenanigans to a minimum. This kept JPMorgan not only solvent during the financial crisis, but actually strong — strong enough to be able to buy Bear Stearns as it was collapsing under the weight of its own toxic mortgage debt in March of 2008.

And JPMorgan has generally been on a roll ever …read more

Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance

Global-Tech Advanced Innovations Reports Third Quarter Results for Fiscal 2013; Makes Significant In

By Business Wirevia The Motley Fool

Filed under:

Global-Tech Advanced Innovations Reports Third Quarter Results for Fiscal 2013; Makes Significant Investment

to Expand CCM Business

HONG KONG–(BUSINESS WIRE)– Global-Tech Advanced Innovations Inc. (NAS: GAI) today announced its financial results for the fiscal quarter ended December 31, 2012 (the Company’s third quarter of fiscal 2013).

Net sales for the third quarter of fiscal 2013 were $20.6 million, compared to $22.3 million for the corresponding quarter in fiscal 2012. Net income for the third quarter of fiscal 2013 was $0.06 million, or $0.01 per share, compared to a net income of $3.3 million, or $1.09 per share, for the third quarter of fiscal 2012, which included $1.7 million in income from discontinued operations, net of taxes. As a result of the discontinued operation of our home appliance segment in January 2012, proper accounting treatment requires that net sales for the third quarter of fiscal 2012 exclude approximately $21.9 million in sales of home appliances.

Net sales for the nine months ended December 31, 2012 were $67.2 million, up approximately 24% when compared to $54.2 million in the corresponding nine-month period in fiscal 2012. Net income for the first nine months of fiscal 2013 was $0.3 million, or $0.10 per share, compared to a net income of $2.9 million, or $0.97 per share, for the first nine months of fiscal 2012. As a result of the discontinued operation of our home appliance segment in January 2012, proper accounting treatment requires that net sales for the first nine months of fiscal 2012 exclude approximately $49.0 million in sales of home appliances.

John C.K. Sham, the Company’s President and Chief Executive Officer, said: “The growth momentum of our CCM business was slowed in the third quarter of fiscal 2013 by the unanticipated placement of purchase orders by some of our key customers for lower cost, lower pixel CCMs rather than higher pixel CCMs. The slowing momentum in our CCM business, together with rapidly rising labor costs in our electronic manufacturing service (EMS) business, adversely impacted our financial results for the third quarter of fiscal 2013.”

Mr. Sham continued, “As discussed in prior releases and filings, opportunity remains for growth of our CCM business. To that end, significant investments were recently made towards the installation of two chip-on-board (COB) production lines and a COB sampling line, both of which we anticipate will expand and enhance our production capacity. A Class 10 clean room has …read more

Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance