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Registered Rep. January 22, 2003 Will Leitch |
Busting a CAP Opponents of Salomon Smith Barney's Capital Accumulation Plan to get a day in court |
Registered Rep. July 9, 2003 David A. Gaffen |
Score One For Smith Barney In Cap Plan Hearings A superior court judge in California has ruled for Smith Barney in a case related to a deferred compensation plan that has been the subject of several lawsuits from brokers who formerly worked for the firm. The court said the CAP is not unlawful and does not violate labor laws. |
Registered Rep. December 20, 2002 Will Leitch |
Judge Says CAP Plan Violates Wage Laws Opponents of Salomon Smith Barney's CAP Plan, an unusual deferred compensation plan, have been shot down repeatedly in their attempts to fight the policy on the grounds that it is an illegal withholding of wages. But they might have caught a break. |
Registered Rep. June 21, 2007 Christina Mucciolo |
Smith Barney Golden Handcuffs Hard to Crack A New Jersey Appellate Court's reversal of a lower court's decision is another notch in Smith Barney's belt. |
Registered Rep. October 1, 2002 William A. Jacobson |
Deferred Compensation. Whose Money Is It? Deferred compensation plans offer incentives or income tax deferral while motivating the employee to remain at the company. However, the Citigroup Capital Accumulation Plan is facing legal challenges from class action suits in several states. |
Registered Rep. September 1, 2004 John Churchill |
Handcuffs Made of Gold Deferred-Comp Plans Can be an Advisor's Lucrative Friend... Should I Stay or Should I go?... |
Registered Rep. October 1, 2006 John Churchill |
Crackberry Addicts Fight Back Run afoul of the law while tapping or yapping into your Blackberry and you may have a case-against your employer. |
Registered Rep. March 1, 2006 John Churchill |
To the Bitter End How a veteran Smith Barney broker is fighting to keep deferred compensation after leaving the firm to become an independent RIA. |
Registered Rep. December 4, 2002 Rick Weinberg |
Weill Postpones Elimination of Salomon Name Sandy Weill, the chairman of Salomon Smith Barney's parent Citigroup, has informed brokers and other employees that plans to eliminate the Salomon name, a Wall Street hallmark for nearly a century, have been postponed, according to sources. |
Registered Rep. November 1, 2002 Gaffen & Weinberg |
Brokers React to Citi's Research Move Sallie Krawcheck, former head of independent research firm Sanford C. Bernstein, will head a new business unit of Citigroup that will operate under the name Smith Barney, and include the private client group. Smith Barney brokers are skeptical, though. |
Registered Rep. September 24, 2002 David A. Gaffen |
Former Brokers Sue SSB, Grubman, Even Sandy Weill Want $100 Million Each for Wrongful Termination, Defamation Spartis and Elias claim that they were wrongfully fired from their positions in February of this year after the firm, in their eyes, did not adequately represent them in complaints filed by customers related to WorldCom. |
Investment Advisor July 2006 Kathleen M. McBride |
B/d Briefing: Two Faces of Wall Street Few financial professionals expect to work a 40-hour week on Wall Street. So it was surprising to see the extent of rep participation in class-action lawsuits over broker overtime, and the astounding settlements that have been awarded. |
Registered Rep. February 23, 2007 Kevin Burke |
Disgruntled Smith Barney Brokers Are Voting with Their Feet Sixty-nine brokers left Smith Barney, just ahead of a three-day weekend. Fridays before a long weekend are historically prime times for unhappy brokers to make a clean break, but the large number of brokers taking off on a single day is alarming. |
Registered Rep. November 1, 2002 David A. Geracioti |
Spartis, Elias Each Seek $100M From Smith Barney Spartis and Elias claim they were wrongfully fired in February. They claim that Smith Barney did not adequately represent them in WorldCom-related customer complaints. |
Registered Rep. March 1, 2006 Kristen French |
Broker Fights for His Reputation--and Wins (Some of It Back) Philip Spartis, a former highflying Salomon Smith Barney broker, last week won a $1 million defamation judgment against lawyer Stuart Goldberg in an Arizona court. |
Registered Rep. December 12, 2006 Halah Touryalai |
Smith Barney Pay Package: Perks Balance Cuts? This week, Smith Barney will become the first firm to make a change to its payout grid as a result of the securities industry's recent battle over broker overtime pay and so-called chargebacks. |
Registered Rep. April 5, 2006 John Churchill |
UBS Wins Prominent Black Rep From Smith Barney In what can be considered a coup of sorts for the firm, UBS hired a prominent black Smith Barney broker this past winter -- while it was under fire from a lawsuit brought by former brokers alleging a pattern and practice of racial discrimination. |
Registered Rep. May 1, 2006 John Churchill |
Score One for Diversity UBS has hired a prominent black Smith Barney broker. |
Registered Rep. November 1, 2006 Angela Covo |
Skirts Vs. Smith Barney Less than 10 years after they settled the infamous "boom-boom room" case, Smith Barney is being sued for gender discrimination again. |
Registered Rep. September 13, 2007 Halah Touryalai |
Overtime Finally Pays Off Smith Barney brokers may be the first to cash in on overtime lawsuits that have been all the rage over the last two years. |
Registered Rep. October 4, 2006 John Churchill |
Citigroup Wins Long, Strange CAP Battle After going two for three in a unique tug of war involving both the arbitration and court systems, former Smith Barney broker James McCarthy is likely throwing in the towel in his three-year fight for the money left in his deferred-compensation plan. |
Registered Rep. April 18, 2007 Halah Touryalai |
Chuck Prince: Smith Barney Goin' Nowhere Citigroup's CEO has been at the center of company news recently with his plans to cut costs including last week's announcement of about 17,000 job cuts. That cut may affect over 100 Smith Barney employees and about 30 advisors. |
Registered Rep. October 1, 2002 Betsy Riley |
...Especially if They Foot the Bill It's not unusual for firms that settle arbitration cases to make the broker involved in the accusations pay part of the bill, even if the rep isn't specifically named in the case. What options does the broker have? |
Registered Rep. May 30, 2003 David A. Gaffen |
The New Smith Barney CEO Sallie Krawcheck was recruited to restore the credibility of Smith Barney and lead the business through its toughest slump in a generation. Krawcheck wants Smith Barney advisors to more than double their average annual production to $1 million. |
Registered Rep. December 1, 2005 Halah Touryalai |
Smith Barney: New Focus On the Horizon While most Smith Barney advisor respondents were generally unimpressed by the acquisition of Legg advisors, it'll be interesting to see if Smith Barney's jettisoning of its asset management group -- and resulting new focus on retail distribution -- will rejuvenate the firm. |
Registered Rep. July 1, 2006 Halah Touryalai |
Ready to Punch the Clock? Most registered reps compare themselves to professionals, such as doctors and lawyers. However, it seems that according to an interpretation of federal law, financial advisors may be held to the same labor law standards as an hourly employee. |
Registered Rep. May 1, 2005 John Churchill |
Class-Action Threat Smith Barney is facing a new round of sex-discrimination suits. |
Registered Rep. September 27, 2006 Angela Covo |
Women on Wall Street Still Fighting Discrimination Less than 10 years after they settled the infamous "boom-boom room" case, Smith Barney is being sued for discrimination again. The new lawsuit doesn't include sexual-harassment charges, but does address the economics of gender discrimination. |
Registered Rep. September 9, 2002 Rick Weinberg |
Acknowledging Some "Inappropriate Behavior," Sandy Weill Defends Solly Sandy Weill, chairman of Salomon Smith Barney's parent Citigroup, acknowledged that his firm may have engaged in some inappropriate behavior during the bull market and said that Citigroup would have to make "amends" to regain respect. |
Registered Rep. March 1, 2007 John Churchill |
Sallie's Back At first glance, this second coming of Sallie Krawcheck probably looks like a cakewalk compared to her first adventure in 2002. But, make no mistake: Smith Barney is not the awesome brokerage it appears to be on paper. |
Registered Rep. December 1, 2002 Ross Tucker |
Happy Holidays! You're Fired. The ax will fall at year's end for some 700 of 13,500 Morgan Stanley brokers. Some branches will be closed entirely. |
Registered Rep. November 18, 2005 Kristen French |
Smith Barney Cuts Pay for Smaller Brokers The new pay scale was announced to brokers internally in October and will take effect in January. |
Registered Rep. August 12, 2003 David A. Gaffen |
Building a Better Separate-Account Mousetrap Separately managed accounts can be confusing, but the paperwork and operations behind them need not be -- or at least that's the thrust of a new effort by Smith Barney Consulting Group. |
Registered Rep. December 1, 2004 David A. Gaffen |
Sallie Krawcheck Has Left the Building In a move that presages future Citigroup plans, Smith Barney CEO Sallie Krawcheck and Citigroup's CFO Todd Thomson have switched offices. |
Registered Rep. August 26, 2003 David A. Gaffen |
Smith Barney Settles On WorldCom; Spartis, Elias Continue Fighting A million dollars. That's the amount brokerage firm Smith Barney agreed to pay in a settlement with the New York Stock Exchange in an investigation of improper conduct at an Atlanta branch of the firm related to WorldCom employee/shareholders. |
Registered Rep. December 1, 2002 David A. Gaffen |
Light A Candle, or Curse the Darkness For brokers and financial advisors, 2002 may be remembered as the year in which those who knew they had the right stuff redoubled their efforts to elevate their skills and become the kind of advisors who could survive the bear market and build a 21st century practice. |
Registered Rep. March 7, 2011 Jerry Gleeson |
Morgan Stanley May Drop "Smith Barney" From Name Will the Smith Barney name go the way of A.G. Edwards, Bear Stearns, and other brokerages whose historic identities were sublimated following acquisitions by larger firms? |
Registered Rep. January 1, 2007 Kristen French |
More or Less? Smith Barney overhauled its pay package -- just in time for the new year. Some of the changes it made were pretty radical -- especially for an industry in which any pay change, no matter how minor, is often a source of uproar. |
Registered Rep. May 29, 2007 Kevin Burke |
Smith Barney's Krawcheck to Smooth Out Comp. Plan The brokerage giant's top executive is set to tweak the firm's compensation plan in an attempt to address financial advisors' repeated complaints over pay complexities and claims of unfairness. |
Registered Rep. April 17, 2009 Halah Touryalai |
Smith Barney Losing Advisors, Client Assets But while Smith Barney is losing reps, it also appears to be recruiting heavily. |
Registered Rep. May 7, 2007 Christina Mucciolo |
Smith Barney Closes a Few Offices, Prepares to Consolidate Others The firm prepares to consolidate as part of a larger cost-cutting program in the works at parent Citigroup. |
Registered Rep. July 14, 2008 Halah Touryalai |
Morgan Stanley Offers $50 million In Overtime Settlement The settlement covers all financial advisors, trainees, producing branch managers, assistant branch managers and sales managers who live outside of California and were employed with the New York-based firm between Sept. 1, 2002, and April 21, 2008. |
Registered Rep. November 29, 2006 Halah Touryalai |
Merrill Lynch to Pay National Overtime Settlement The financial firm has decided to consolidate the numerous overtime lawsuits that have been filed against the firm and settle nationally with its brokers. |
Registered Rep. September 3, 2003 David A. Gaffen |
Two Smith Barney Reps Deny NYSE Allegations Two former Smith Barney employees have denied WorldCom-related allegations brought against them by the NYSE. |
Registered Rep. October 1, 2002 Rick Weinberg |
Brokers Fear Arbitration... With arbitration cases on the rise, many brokers are worried about the prospect of being dragged through a legal process that, because of the current environment, some believe is heavily slanted toward the client. |
Registered Rep. April 1, 2003 David A. Gaffen |
Your Book or Your Life! What would you do if you lost your book? Where would you turn for new customers? Where could you be hired? Those are questions that keep many advisors up at night. |
Registered Rep. September 1, 2005 Kristen French |
Ready to Punch a Time Clock Merrill Lynch paid $37 million to settle claims that it owes thousands of former brokers overtime pay. Now, class-action attorneys smell blood. |
Registered Rep. April 29, 2008 |
Citi Hedge Fund Blow Up Hurts Clients--And Sends Advisors Packing While Smith Barney tries its darnedest to hold on to the money of its wealthy clients, it's also having a hard time keeping some of its best brokers. |
Registered Rep. December 11, 2003 David A. Gaffen |
Smith Barney Changes Payout Grid Smith Barney is altering its compensation system for 2004, with the main goal being to simplify its payouts and make them more product-neutral. |
Registered Rep. August 10, 2004 David A. Gaffen |
Fleeing Brokers Can Take Some Client Info Three of the nation's largest brokerage firms have agreed to make it easier for registered reps to take clients with them when they change firms, eliminating a lot of the cloak-and-dagger antics that brokers often suffer when making a move. |