Marshall & Ilsley Bank (M&I) is an independent publicly-traded financial
institution established in 1847 and based in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. In 2006,
Fortune Magazine ranked M&I as the 18th-largest commercial bank. In 2009,
forecasting future problems for the company, Bloomberg News ranked M&I Bank as
one of the top 150 U.S. lenders who owned nonperforming loans, which can leave
banks below the minimum capital levels required by regulators. Bank of Montreal/BMO
Financial Group came into an agreement to buy M&I Bank in 2010 for $4.1 billion,
after the housing bubble burst left M&I with two years of massive amounts of
defaulted loans.[1] Mark F. Furlong, M&I's Chairman and CEO, is slated to get a
combined $24 million as a part of the acquisition, fueling protests against the
bank for irresponsible lending and spending after receiving $1.7 billion from
the U.S. Treasury's Troubled Asset Relief Program (TARP). [2] It has not paid
any of the TARP debt back as of March 2011.
M&I Bank has over 350 locations in seven states. Its 2008 financial records show
that it had a revenue of $4.025 billion before it received $1.7 billion from
TARP due to over-lending to individuals and business who defaulted on their
loans.[3] In 2011, BMO Financial Group/Bank of Montreal began its acquisition of
M&I Bank, all stocks and its TARP debt for $4.1 billion.[4] M&I had $51.9
billion in assets at the time of acquisition.[5] The Bank of Montreal operates
out of Harris Bank in Chicago, IL and is looking to expand its Midwest business
with M&I Bank's assets. Marshall and Ilsley Corp. and its executives have also
been very active in making partisan political donations, predominantly in favor
of Republicans. This company, has invested significant funds in elections in
Wisconsin, and its PAC was a major spender in the election of Wisconsin Governor
Scott Walker.
Marshall & Ilsley Corp. has the following subsidiaries: Marshall & Ilsley
Corporation, M&I Marshall & Ilsley Bank, M&I Bank FSB, Marshall & Ilsley Trust
Company N.A., Cedar Street Advisors®, North Star Deferred Exchange Corp., M&I
Brokerage Services, Inc., M&I Equipment Finance Company and M&I Investment
Management Corp. Teachers, firefighters and policemen called for union members
to discontinue use of the financial institution for their support of Walker's
bill that strips unions of all bargaining rights and make severe cuts to public
programs like public schools and state-provided health care.
After Wisconsin Governor Scott Walker's controversial budget repair bill passed
on March 10, 2011, attention turned to the Governor's campaign donors. M&I Bank
and its Executives were Walker's second-biggest collective supporters, giving
$46,308.[6] In early March, several hundred protesters showed up in front of the
main downtown M&I location in Wisconsin's capital, Madison. Teachers,
firefighters and policemen called for union members to discontinue use of the
financial institution for their support of Walker's bill that strips unions of
all bargaining rights and make severe cuts to public programs like public
schools and state-provided health care.[7] The Nation reported that "several
hundred protesters surrounded an M&I Bank across the street from the Wisconsin
State Capitol shouting “You Got Bailed Out, We Got Sold Out.” International
Association of Fire Fighters Local 311 President Joe Conway Jr. told [me] two
union members marched in and pulled a combined $192,000 dollars out of the bank.
“Hopefully this sends a message to the bank,” says Conway. “We wanted to
illustrate how serious our threat is by having just two of our members pull
their money out.“ The union said it plans to escalate actions and will soon
begin handing out fliers at protests asking people to move their money. A senior
union researcher estimates that unions have at least $1 billion invested in M&I
Bank, mostly through pension funds. Discussions are going on at the highest
levels of the labor movement about how exactly to leverage this financial clout
in the political debate in Wisconsin. Since the Bank of Montreal is in process
of purchasing M&I Bank, U.S. unions have reached out to the Canadian Labour
Congress to urge their involvement in a disinvestment campaign."
Many are speculating on what benefits M&I may be gaining in Governor Walker's
budget bill, some contend that the bank will benefit from proposed changes in
the Combined or Consolidated Reporting Act. In 2009, Wisconsin joined 22 other
states in closing its "Las Vegas Loophole" with a consolidated reporting law.
Prior to 2009, corporations with subsidiaries in other states only had to pay
income taxes on what was physically present in Wisconsin. This led to many
"paper subsidiaries" in states with no corporate taxes, like Nevada. In theory,
this allowed large corporations to form subsidiaries in other states to avoid
taxation. The changes in the law allow Walker to keep his promise of not
repealing the consolidated reporting law, but the changes are essentially making
the law null and void.
As part of the budget bill in 2009, then Wisconsin Governor Jim Doyle signed a
bill that "requires corporations engaged in a unitary business to file a
combined report in determining their Wisconsin income tax, effective for tax
years beginning on or after January 1, 2009. Previously, Wisconsin had required
the use of separate company reporting."[8]
Doyle enacted the law because many corporations were taking advantage of loose
taxation laws to avoid paying Wisconsin income taxes. For example, Microsoft,
PepsiCo, McDonald's, General Electric, Merck and Apple all didn't pay income tax
to Wisconsin, even though some of their profits were made in the state.
The Milwaukee Journal Sentinel reported that, "Combined reporting ensures tax
fairness. When some large corporations eliminate their Wisconsin tax liability,
all others pay more to make up the difference. It's a slanted playing field,
rewarding big companies willing to use aggressive tax-avoidance tactics. Over
the past decade, from January 2000 through February 2010, goods-producing
industries in states with combined reporting saw a median employment decline of
27%. Among states without combined reporting, the median change was worse, a
decline of 29%. Since the recession began in December 2007, the median loss in
combined reporting states was 21%; in states without combined reporting, 23%."
Of course many corporations were unhappy about this change, some, like Harley
Davidson, even threatened leaving the state.
After 2009, when the reporting law started, a company had to file one tax return
instead of several. If they had substantial loses on an investment that
surpassed the yearly limit, they could "carry over" the rest for the next year
and the next and so on. They were also allowed to spread around the "carry over"
to other companies under the main corporation after 2009. Robert Kraig of the
Wisconsin Citizen Action said on a local radio show that after the 2009 law
passed, the Department of Revenue had the authority to investigate any
corporations and subsidiaries who it felt suspicious of avoiding taxes and
disallow them if they were found to be created for that purpose.
According to Kraig, the changes included in Governor Scott Walker's 2011 budget
would now prohibit the Department of Revenue from investigating companies and
disallowing them. Corporations can still spread the carry overs around, but they
can start adding to the total of the loss from years before 2009. This benefits
companies like M&I, who had losses starting in 1997 based on tax info obtained
by the Institute for Wisconsin's Future. Institute for Wisconsin's Future.
The proposed changes are a part of the Governor's 2011 Executive Budget Bill,
Senate Bill 27 and Assembly Bill 40, and can be found starting in section 1893.
71.255 (6) (d) of the statutes is created to read:
71.255 (6) (d) 1. Starting with the first taxable year beginning after December
31, 2011, and for each of the 20 subsequent taxable years, and subject to the
limitations provided under s. 71.26 (3) (n), for each taxable year that a
corporation that is a member of a combined group has net business loss
carry−forward as computed under s. 71.26 (4) or 71.45 (4) from a taxable year
beginning prior to January 1, 2009, the corporation may, after using such net
business loss carry−forward to offset its own income for the taxable year, use
up to 5 percent of the remaining net business loss carry−forward to offset the
income of all other members of the combined group on a proportionate basis, to
the extent such income is attributable to the unitary business. If the full 5
percent of such net business loss carry−forward cannot be fully used to offset
the income of all other members of the combined group, the remainder may be
added to the portion that may offset the income of all other members of the
combined group in the subsequent year.
2. Unless otherwise provided by the department by rule, if the corporation may
no longer be included in the combined group, as determined under this section,
the corporation’s net business loss carry−forward shall be available only to
that corporation.
State Partisan Political Activity
Marshall & Ilsley Corp. and its employees have donated to both sides of the
aisle to influence politicians' legislation to further the interests of the
banking industry. Republicans have seen the bulk of political contributions from
executives and M&I Corp.'s PAC. M&I Bank has also come under fire for its
present and past executives heavily supporting Wisconsin Governor Scott Walker.
In Wisconsin, employee and PAC contributions make M&I Walker's top supporter,
giving $57,000 in total.
M&I's top recipients in Wisconsin are all pro-big business Republicans. Maplight
compiled data for the past four years (Oct. 2006 - Oct. 2010) of the state's
legislators. Below is a list of the top recipients of M&I contributions:
1. Alberta Darling - $11,600 - Senate Republican (Menomonee Falls)
2. Terry Moultan - $7,175 - Senate Republican (Chippewa Falls)
3. Dan Kapanke - $6,600 - Senate Republican (La Crosse)
4. Scott Fitzgerald - $4,400 - Senate Republican (Juneau)
5. Travis Tranel - $3,250 - Assembly Republican (Dickeyville)
6. John Murtha - $3,000 - Assembly Republican (Baldwin)
7. Mary Williams - $2,500 - Assembly Republican (Medford)
Protests and bans against the bank began after Governor Walker passed his 2011
budget that called for an end to bargaining rights of unions and major cuts to
public programs, such as public education and state-provided health care.[9]
$85,099 was given by people who filed contributions under M&I Bank[10] Dennis
Kuester, the former CEO and Board Chairman became a backer for the Koch
brother's Wisconsin Prosperity Network, which is an off-shoot of Americans for
Prosperity after leaving the company.
Federal Political Action Committee Contributions
Marshall & Ilsley's PAC has dropped its activity level off sharply since 2008.
Open Secrets.org shows M&I's PAC contributions from 1998.
In 2004, $19,154 was spent on lobbying efforts. Senate candidates who were given
money: Russ Darrow (R-WI) received $5,000 and Richard C. Shelby (R-AL) received
$1,000. George W. Bush (R) received $5,000. Financial Services Roundtable PAC
received $7,500.
In 2006, $26,296 was spent on lobbying efforts. House candidates who were
donated to: Vernon Buchanan (R-FL) received $2,000; Deborah Pryce (R-OH)
received $1,000. PACs that were donated to: Financial Services Roundtable
received $10,000; The Republican National Committee received $3,000; And The
Republican Party of Wisconsin received $1,000.
In 2008, $57,082 was spent on lobbying efforts. The National Republican
Congressional Committee received $15,000; Financial Services Roundtable PAC
received $10,000; The Democratic Party of Wisconsin received $5,000; And McCain
Victory 2008 received $4,500. House candidates who were donated to: Vernon
Buchanan (R-FL) received $3,500; Kathy Castor (D-FL) received $1,000; Gwen Moore
(D-WI) received $7,500; And James F. Sensenbrenner (R-WI) received $500. Senate
candidates were: John Cornyn (R-TX) received $3,500; Chris Dodd (D-CT) received
$1,000; And Mark Warner (D-VA) received $2,000.
In 2010, $35,647 was spent on lobbying efforts. Vernon Buchanan (R-FL) received
$1,000; Andre Carson (D-IN) received $500; Gwen Moore (D-WI) $3,500; Financial
Services Roundtable received $10,000; Democratic Party of Wisconsin received
$2,000; And Minnesota Bankers received $1,000.
Executive Political Contributions
Executives have been very generous in their political contributions, the bulk of
which has gone to Republican candidates and PACs.
Below is a list of the top M&I Bank contributors:
CEO and Chairman Mark F. Furlong - $24,655 in Wisconsin since 2001[11] Furlong
gave $3,000 to Scott Walker's campaign.[12]
President and Director Thomas R. Ellis - $11,770 in Wisconsin since 2001.[13]
Chairman of the Board and CEO of M&I Investment Management Corp. Kenneth Charles
Krei - $7,800 in Wisconsin since 2004.[14]
Former CEO Dennis Kuester - $62,200 in Wisconsin since 2001.[15] $20,000 was
donated to Scott Walker's campaign.[16]
Executive Vice President and Chief Credit Officer, M&I Marshall & Ilsley Bank
Mark R. Hogan - $19,600 in Wisconsin since 2002.[17] $7,000 to Scott Walker.[18]
Former CEO James Wigdale - $33,475 in Wisconsin since 2002.[19] $8,100 to Scott
Walker.[20]
Eye On Wisconsin reported that non-executive employees "at the bank were giving
in what appears to have been coordinated bundles. For example a total of 6
people from M&I Bank gave to Walker on March 25, 2009. A total of 15 gave to
Walker on December 12, 2008. A total of 14 gave to Walker on August 22, 2007."
Role in the Financial Crisis
This example can be seen with the loss of share value and profit that M&I
experienced, starting at the end of 2007. Bloomberg BusinessWeek reported that
"the bundling of the riskiest type of mortgages into securities played a role in
turning the U.S. housing slump into a global recession as foreclosures deflated
bond values and toppled Wall Street firms including Lehman Brothers Holdings
Inc."[21] M&I had eight straight quarterly losses as of the end of the fourth
quarter in 2010. After M&I expanded out of the Midwest in the 1990's and early
2000's to places like Arizona and Florida, which were some of the hardest hit
areas during the housing mortgage crisis, their increase of subprime housing and
construction loans caused a crippling effect on profit as huge numbers of those
loans were defaulted.[22]
TARP Bailout Funds
On October 28, 2008 the Treasury Department started the Capital Purchase
Program. Marshall & Ilsley was among the eight large U.S. banks to receive the
Treasury Department's initial round of capital investments and received $25
billion of Troubled Asset Relief Program (TARP) funds. Propublica reports that
M&I is among those who have not paid back any amount of the $1.7 billion loaned
to them from the government.
Golden Parachutes for M&I Executives
Federal law prohibits executive raises while TARP money is still owed to the
government. The Bank of Montreal will pay the $1.7 billion owed and pay the
executives contingent on the finalization of the acquisition.
The Milwaukee Journal Sentinel reported in February 2011 that CEO and Chairman
Mark F. Furlong, who is being retained by BMO as president and chief executive
of Harris Bank, will $18 million upfront and also "receive a $6 million
"transition completion payment" on the first anniversary of the merger if he
still is with the company. Under a three-year contract with BMO, Furlong will
receive a base salary of $600,000, be eligible for an incentive payment of up to
$800,000 and be in line for stock awards. According to the document, M&I
executives to receive "deferred compensation" after the merger is complete are:
Gregory A. Smith, chief financial officer, $5.5 million; Thomas R. Ellis, senior
vice president, $4.1 million; Kenneth C. Krei, chairman and CEO of M&I Trust
Co., $5.5 million; and Thomas J. O'Neill, senior vice president, $5.1 million.
Another $26.7 million will be distributed among 12 other executive officers."
In a response these publicly-dubbed "golden parachute" payouts, CtW Investment
Group released a report in conjunction with a Bank of Montreal shareholders
meeting in March 2011. The report, entitled “Why is Bank of Montreal Making
‘Golden Parachute’ Payments to Failed Executives at M&I Corporation?” was given
to BMO directors.
The report address the following:
• The over $18 million award Mr. Furlong will receive substantially exceeds the
$5.3 million M&I estimated Mr. Furlong was entitled to in 2009. • BMO has
promised these benefits regardless of whether the recipients’ positions are
terminated as a result of the merger. BMO has set up a special deferred
compensation account to hold “severance” funds that executives will receive when
they leave the company, even if such a departure is on the basis of an ordinary
retirement twenty years in the future. • BMO has further agreed to pay any tax
liabilities generated by these payments to Furlong or other top executives.
Hundreds of companies that once offered such provisions have eliminated them as
a wasteful and inappropriate use of shareholder assets. Even companies that
still provide them generally offer them only to a few executives. All told, BMO
will pay these taxes for up to 17 executives. • The severance packages include
other unusual and arcane provisions, including making payments of three times
taxable employer-provided car-related expenses and club dues. Many companies
have eliminated perquisites such as club dues even for current executives.
“Canadian shareholders have good reason to be troubled by these payments,” says
Rosanna Weaver, an analyst for the Office of Investment. “When Toronto-Dominion
Bank purchased South Financial Group, employment agreements were amended to
eliminate severance and other benefits. Why was the Bank of Montreal board
unable or unwilling to make similar demands?”[23]
Lawsuits and Controversies
Ten lawsuits by shareholders seeking to stop the transaction have been filed
against M&I after the acquisition was announced. The lawsuits allege M&I's board
breached its fiduciary duty by agreeing to sell the company to BMO.[24]
Lawsuits and Fines
2011 - "Another investor from Bellerose Manor, N.Y. in Marshall & Ilsley (NYSE:MI)
filed another lawsuit also against directors of Marshall & Ilsley Corporation
alleging breaches of fiduciary duties arising out of their attempt to sell
Marshall & Ilsley Corporation too cheaply through an unfair process to the BMO
Financial Group (Bank of Montreal)." The Milwaukee Journal Sentinel reported
that "The lawsuit, which seeks class-action status, contends the price of $7.75
a share "substantially undervalues M&I and is merely an attempt by BMO to
acquire M&I for a bargain price following the dramatic recession and
unprecedented decline in real estate values of the past few years." The deal
does not represent the true value of M&I shares, the lawsuit asserts. The
lawsuit notes that M&I stock traded for as much as $10.66 a share as recently as
April 21, and that one analyst had set the price target for M&I stock at $9.50 a
share."[25]
"Brower Piven, A Professional Corporation announced that a class action lawsuit
has been commenced in the United States District Court for the Eastern District
of Wisconsin on behalf of all shareholders of Marshall & Ilsley Corp. The
complaint alleges that the acquisition is the product of a fundamentally flawed
process that is designed to ensure the acquisition of Marshall & Ilsley by Bank
of Montreal on terms preferential to BMO, but detrimental to plaintiff and the
other shareholders of Marshall & Ilsley. According to the complaint, the
acquisition was negotiated by and designed to benefit Marshall & Ilsley's
leadership team, who have been promised continuing roles in the combined entity
going forward. The complaint alleges that upon closing of the proposed
transaction, the Company's Chairman and Chief Executive Officer, Mark F.
Furlong, will become Chief Executive Officer of BMO's combined U.S. personal and
commercial banking business. The complaint also alleges Bank of Montreal is
merely attempting to acquire Marshall & Ilsley for a bargain price following the
dramatic recession and unprecedented decline in real estate values of the past
few years."[26]
"Pomerantz Haudek Grossman & Gross LLP announced that it has filed a shareholder
class action lawsuit in the United States District Court, Eastern District of
Wisconsin, against Marshall & Ilsley Corporation ("M&I" or the "Company"),
certain officers and/or directors of the Company, and Bank of Montreal Financial
Group (BMO). The Complaint alleges that Defendants breached their fiduciary duty
and/or aided and abetted such breaches of fiduciary duty by undertaking an
unfair process in connection with their agreement to enter into a merger
transaction whereby the Company will be acquired by BMO for an unfair price in a
proposed stock-for-stock transaction. Under the terms of the definitive
agreement, each outstanding share of M&I will be exchanged for 0.1257 shares of
BMO upon closing. Based on the closing share price of BMO on the Toronto Stock
Exchange of CAD62.05 on December 16, 2010, the transaction values each share of
M&I at USD7.75."[27]
2010: In conjunction with the "clawback" lawsuits as a result of the Tom Petters
Ponzi scheme, Marshall & Ilsley Bank was sued for $3.7 million. M&I "handled
billions of dollars for Tom Petters' businesses and is the first financial
institution that didn't invest with Petters to find itself the target of a
clawback lawsuit from Doug Kelley, the bankruptcy trustee who is trying to round
up assets for creditors. Between 2004 and 2009, the lawsuit says, $70 billion
worth of deposits and withdrawals flowed through an account Petters Co. Inc. had
at MI. PCI was the engine that drove the entire $3.5 billion Ponzi scheme at the
Minnetonka-based Petters Group Worldwide. The $3.7 million the bankruptcy
trustee wants back from MI Bank is categorized as "fraudulent transfers" -- made
up of four sizable overdrafts on the PCI account MI covered for the company in
2008. In each case, the overdraft created a loan relationship, and PCI made a
payment to MI the next business day to cover the overdraft on the account."[28]
John Paulson of Paulson & Co. was one of the largest shareholders in Marshall &
Ilsley before it was sold to Bank of Montreal. "Paulson’s 22 million shares in
Marshall and Ilsley are valued at roughly $171 million. He acquired the stock in
two big slugs of stock buying starting in the second quarter of 2009. By back of
the envelope math, Paulson forked over roughly $130 million for his stake."[29]
2009: An investment unit of Marshall & Ilsley Corp. was fined $150,000 in a
settlement over how some securities it sold to investors had been portrayed. "FINRA
said Thursday that its investigation found M&I Financial Advisors and the other
three firms it fined had sold auction-rate securities using advertising,
marketing materials or other internal communications with its sales force that
were not fair and balanced and didn't provide a sound basis for investors to
evaluate the risks and rewards. In particular, the firms failed to adequately
disclose to customers the potential for auctions of the securities to fail."[30]
Racial and sex discrimination cases were also found:
Alex F. BEAMON, Plaintiff-Appellant v. MARSHALL & ILSLEY TRUST COMPANY,
Defendant-Appellee
"Alex Beamon began working as an accountant at Marshall & Ilsley Trust Company
("M & I") in Milwaukee in 1992. Nine years later, Beamon, who is
African-American, filed this lawsuit\alleging that a dozen discrete job-related
actions by M & I amounted to racial discrimination and retaliation for
complaining about discrimination and created a hostile work environment, all in
violation of Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, 42 U.S.C. §§ 2000e et
seq. The district court granted M & I's motion for summary judgment and Beamon
appeals. Beamon also appeals the amount of costs awarded to M & I by the
district court as the prevailing party below. We affirm in all respects."[31]
OLSEN v. MARSHALL ILSLEY CORPORATION
"Olsen filed charges with the EEOC claiming sex discrimination [*4] and
retaliation in violation of Title VII. The EEOC issued a right to sue letter and
he filed suit in federal court. The district court granted the defendants'
motion for summary judgment on the sex discrimination and retaliation claims as
well as Marshall & Ilsley's summary judgment motion requesting dismissal from
the suit. Olsen appeals both of the district court's determinations. "[32]
Controversies and Lender Problems
2008: In January 2008, The New York City Comptroller William Thompson Jr., The
LGBT Community Center and the New York City Pension Funds called on more than
two dozen of America's largest companies to ban discrimination based on
orientation and gender identity. "The resolution, filed on behalf of the New
York City Employee's Retirement System, New York City Police Pension Fund, New
York City Fire Department Pension Fund, New York City Teacher's Retirement
System and the New York City Board of Education Retirement System, demands that
orientation and gender identity be protected in the workplace. "Equal treatment
in the workplace is a right, not a privilege, and no one should face
discrimination based on sexual orientation or gender identity," said New York
City public advocate Betsy Gotbaum. The new resolution builds on the 10-year
effort by the Pension Funds to encourage companies to adopt antidiscrimination
policies. According to the Human Rights Campaign, 439 Fortune 500 companies now
ban discrimination based on orientation and 152 ban discrimination based on
gender identity."You can go to Diversity Inc. to see a complete list of
companies listed.
2009: M&I extended a moratorium on home foreclosures after over-lending to
individuals and subsequently being hit with a huge amount of delinquent
loans.[33]
Marshall & Ilsley Corp. sold $775 million in common stock in an effort to raise
its capital after millions of dollars of unpaid loans in Arizona lowered the
companies stock 80 percent in two years.[34]
In December, Top executives of Marshall & Ilsley Corp. received a "stock salary"
and restricted stock in addition to their cash salaries instead of cash bonuses.
"M&I, like other banks that received Troubled Asset Relief Program capital from
the U.S. Treasury, is limited in how it can compensate its highest-paid leaders.
Under M&I's modified pay plan, Chief Executive Mark F. Furlong will be paid a
cash salary of $875,000, which is unchanged from this year, and a stock salary
of more than $2.1 million. Like the other key M&I executives, he also will
receive restricted shares of stock amounting to half of his total base
salary."[35]
2010: M&I's credit rating was lowered again by Standard & Poor's, saying
continued losses could put pressure on capital levels. "The New York-based firm
dropped M&I's rating to BB+ from BBB-. A lower credit rating generally makes it
more expensive for companies to borrow money. Milwaukee's M&I reported a loss of
$169.2 million, or 32 cents a share, for the third quarter. That compared with a
loss of $248.4 million, or 68 cents, a year earlier."[36]
2011: In January 2011, M&I reported its 9th straight quarterly loss. "M&I has
struggled with losses stemming from bad loans tied to real estate, many of them
in its Arizona market."[37]
Revenue and Profits
2010[38]
Total Revenues: $653.7 million
Gross Profit: $653.7 million
Net Income: $-515.9 million
2009[39]
Total Revenues: $71.6 million
Gross Profit: $71.6 million
Net Income: $-758.6 million
2008[40]
Total Revenues: $468.7 million
Gross Profit: $468.7 million
Net Income: $-2.04 billion
2007[41]
Total Revenues: $2.02 billion
Gross Profit: $2.02 billion
Net Income: $1.2 billion
Executives and Salaries
Mark F. Furlong: Chairman of the Board and CEO - $1.7 million in 2009 - Furlong
has been Chairman of the Board since October 2010, CEO since April 2007 and
President since April 2005. He is also the Director and Vice President of M&I
Private Equity Group LLC; Director, Vice President and Treasurer of M&I Ventures
L.L.C.; Director of Marshall & Ilsley Trust Company National Association and
Milease, LLC. Furlong is also a director of Kforce Inc., a professional staffing
firm, Wisconsin Manufacturers & Commerce, Greater Milwaukee Committee,
Metropolitan Milwaukee Association of Commerce, United Performing Arts Fund and
Junior Achievement of Wisconsin.[42]
Gregory A. Smith: Senior Vice President and CFO & CFO of M&I Bank - $1.7 million
in 2009 - Smith has been the Senior Vice President and CFO of Marshall & Ilsley
Corporation since June 2006 and CFO of M&I Bank since June 2006. He is also the
Director and President of TCH MI Holding Company, Inc.; Director of M&I
Insurance Services, Inc., Marshall & Ilsley Trust Company National Association,
M&I Financial Advisors, Inc., and Milease, LLC; CFO of M&I Bank of Mayville and
M&I Bank FSB; He was the Managing Director, Investment Banking, Credit Suisse
from October 2004 to June 2006.[43]
Ann M. Benschoter: Senior Vice President, EVP, Senior Vice President and Vice
President of M&I Bank - Benschoter has been the Senior Vice President since
December 2008 of Marshall & Ilsley Corporation, the Executive Vice President
since December 2008 the Senior Vice President since December 2001 and the Vice
President since August 1998 of M&I Bank. She was also the Director and Vice
President of SWB Holdings, Inc.; Director of Marshall & Ilsley Trust Company
National Association, M&I Bank of Mayville, M&I Equipment Finance Company, M&I
Business Credit, LLC, M&I Private Equity Group II, LLC and Water Street Land,
LLC.[44]
Kenneth C. Krei: Senior Vice President - $666,322 in 2009 - Krei has been the
Senior Vice President of Marshall & Ilsley Corporation since July 2003. He
became the Chairman of the Board in 2005 and has been the President and CEO of
Marshall & Ilsley Trust Company National Association since July 2003. He is also
the Director and Vice President of M&I Realty Advisors, Inc. and a Management
Committee Member of Taplin, Canida & Habacht, LLC.[45]
Thomas R. Ellis: Executive Vice President of the Company & Executive Vice
President of M&I Bank - $718,797 in 2009 - Ellis has been the Executive Vice
President since October 2010 and the President since October 2010. He was the
Senior Vice President from February 2005 to October 2010 of Marshall & Ilsley
Corporation; Executive Vice President from February 2005 to October 2010, Senior
Vice President from 1998 to February 2005 of M&I Marshall & Ilsley Bank;
Director of Marshall & Ilsley Trust Company National Association, M&I Equipment
Finance Company, M&I Financial Advisors, Inc. and M&I Insurance Services,
Inc.[46]
Dennis J. Kuester: Former Chairman of the Board - $5.2 million in 2007 - Kuester
has was the CEO from January 2002 to April 2007 and President from 1987 to 2005.
He is also the Chairman of the Board and Director of Metavante Technologies,
Inc, a director of the Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago, Modine Manufacturing
Company, Wausau Paper Corp., Krueger International, Inc., Super Steel Products
Corp. and the Lynde and Harry Bradley Foundation. Kuester became a backer for
the Koch brother's Wisconsin Prosperity Network, which is an off-shoot of
Americans for Prosperity. Michael Grebe, also with WPN, is the Bradley
Foundation President.[47]
Contact Information
Toll Free Number 1-888-464-5463
Corporate Headquarters
770 N Water Street
Milwaukee, WI 53202-3509
Milwaukee Number
(414) 765-7700
Marshall & Ilsley Corporation Web site
External Resources
Wisconsin Democracy Campaign
Milwaukee Journal Sentinel M&I articles
Bloomberg BusinessWeek
The Nation
Wisconsin State Journal
The Capital Times
References
Jump up ↑ Sale expected to boost troubled institution, but Milwaukee could lose
jobs,"Milwaukee Journal Sentinel. Dec. 17, 2010."
Jump up ↑ M&I sale drew competition,"Milwaukee Journal Sentinel. Feb. 2, 2011."
Jump up ↑ M&I sale drew competition, Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, Feb. 2, 2011.
Jump up ↑ M&I sale drew competition, Milwaukee Journal Sentinel. February 2,
2011."
Jump up ↑ M&I being sold to Canadian bank group,"LaCrosse Tribune. December 18,
2010."
Jump up ↑ Mike Elk Walker's Big Bank Donors Take a Hit, The Nation, March 11,
2011."
Jump up ↑ Patrick Marley Teachers, firefighters, cops target M&I with boycott,
Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, March 10, 2011.
Jump up ↑ Wisconsin adopts mandatory combined reporting,"Highbeam Business."
March 1, 2009.
Jump up ↑ Controversial budget bill passes committee, moves to Senate,"Wisconsin
State Journal. February 17, 2011"
Jump up ↑ Wisconsin Democracy Campaign Finance Lookup
Jump up ↑ Wisconsin Democracy Campaign Political Donor Lookup
Jump up ↑ Wisconsin Democracy Campaign
Jump up ↑ Wisconsin Democracy Campaign Political Donor Lookup
Jump up ↑ Wisconsin Democracy Campaign Political Donor Lookup
Jump up ↑ Wisconsin Democracy Campaign Political Donor Lookup
Jump up ↑ Balance of Power: Walker's union proposal could be major setback for
State's Democratic Party,"Wisconsin State Journal. Monday, March 7, 2011"
Jump up ↑ Wisconsin Democracy Campaign
Jump up ↑ Wisconsin Democracy Campaign
Jump up ↑ Wisconsin Democracy Campaign
Jump up ↑ Wisconsin Democracy Campaign
Jump up ↑ Goldman Sachs, Citigroup Sued Over Subprime Loans,"Bloomberg Business
Week. July 12, 2010."
Jump up ↑ Montreal bank buying M&I,"Minneapolis Star Tribune/Bloomberg Business
Week. December 18, 2010."
Jump up ↑ CtW Investment Group Report Highlights Concerns RE: M&I Golden
Parachutes at BMO Annual Meeting,"Tuesday, March 22, 2011."
Jump up ↑ M&I sale drew competition, CEO Furlong to receive $18 million
payout,"Milwaukee Journal Sentinel. Feb. 2, 2011"
Jump up ↑ Marshall & Ilsley Corporation Investors File Second Lawsuit Against
Buyout,"The Open Press News Wire. January 13, 2011."
Jump up ↑ Brower Piven Announces Class Action Lawsuit In Connection With
Acquisition Of Marshall & Ilsley Corp.,"Reuters.com. Wednesday, 5 Jan 2011."
Jump up ↑ Pomerantz Haudek Grossman & Gross LLP Files Shareholder Class Action
Against Marshall & Ilsley Corp. Alleging Breaches of Fiduciary Duty,"Reuters.com.
Thursday, 23 Dec 2010."
Jump up ↑ 'Clawback' lawsuit targets M&I Bank in Petters case,"Pioneer Press -
McClatchy-Tribune Information Services via COMTEX. Oct 09, 2010"
Jump up ↑ John Paulson Wins Again, in Marshall & Ilsley Deal,"The Wall Street
Journal. December 17, 2010"
Jump up ↑ M&I fined $150,000 over securities sales,"Milwaukee Journal Sentinel.
May 7, 2009"
Jump up ↑ Court Records
Jump up ↑ LexisOne Court Records,"September 25, 2001."
Jump up ↑ M&I extends moratorium on home foreclosures,"Milwaukee Journal
Sentinel. June 26, 2009"
Jump up ↑ M&I posts loss, to sell $775 million in stock,"Milwaukee Journal
Sentinel. Oct. 20, 2009."
Jump up ↑ M&I cuts bonuses, awards stock to executives,"Milwaukee Journal
Sentinel. Dec. 29, 2009."
Jump up ↑ Standard & Poor's lowers M&I credit rating,"Milwaukee Journal
Sentinel. Oct. 21, 2010"
Jump up ↑ M&I reports 9th straight quarterly loss,"Milwaukee Journal Sentinel.
Jan. 20, 2011"
Jump up ↑ BusinessWeek Marshall & Ilsley Annuals
Jump up ↑ BusinessWeek Marshall & Ilsley Annuals
Jump up ↑ BusinessWeek Marshall & Ilsley Annuals
Jump up ↑ BusinessWeek Marshall & Ilsley Annuals
Jump up ↑ Forbes Furlong Bio
Jump up ↑ Forbes Smith Bio
Jump up ↑ Forbes Benschoter Bio
Jump up ↑ Forbes Krei Bio
Jump up ↑ Forbes Ellis Bio
Jump up ↑ Forbes Kuester Bio
Category: Real Economy Project
http://www.sourcewatch.org/index.php/Marshall_and_Ilsley_Bank