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Politics : Sioux Nation
DJT 12.21+0.2%2:29 PM EST

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To: altair19 who wrote (159701)2/4/2009 7:03:30 PM
From: stockman_scott  Read Replies (1) of 362788
 
Bank of America to Sell 3 Corporate Jets and Merrill Helicopter
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By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
February 4, 2009
Filed at 6:39 p.m. ET

CHARLOTTE, N.C. (AP) -- Bank of America Corp. said Wednesday it is selling nearly half of its corporate aircraft as the bank looks to scale back costs.

The Charlotte-based bank joins Citigroup Inc. and other companies in cutting back private jet travel.

Many financial firms are giving up the perk as scrutiny mounts over lavish spending after the companies received billions of dollars in rescue funds.

Since October, Bank of America has received $45 billion in government assistance, including a $20 billion injection last month to help with its troubled Merrill Lynch & Co. acquisition.

''As part of an ongoing cost reduction effort we have been scaling back on our use of corporate aircraft including selling three aircraft we own and the Merrill Lynch helicopter,'' Bank of America spokesman Scott Silvestri said. He declined to say how many planes the bank still owns.

Federal Aviation Administration records from last year show Bank of America is the owner of nine planes, including four Gulfstreams. The company acquired brokerage Merrill Lynch & Co. in January.

Chief Executive Ken Lewis' corporate jet use in 2007 cost $127,643, according to a March 2008 filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission. Silvestri declined to say whether the bank requires Lewis to use company jets for business and/or personal use.

On average, a cross-country trip in a midsized jet costs about $20,000 for fuel. Maintenance, storage and pilot fees put the cost far higher.

Corporate jets, in many cases, serve a very valuable purpose, said Bert Ely, a longtime banking analyst in Alexandria, Va.

''They are offices in the sky,'' Ely said. ''They all say it's for security purposes, and while true, corporate jets also represent a significant costs savings for executives. Time is money.''

Even so, the news comes as several financial firms, some under pressure from President Barack Obama and politicians, have decided to reduce their fleets.

Last month, Citigroup reversed course in taking delivery of a jet it had planned to purchase before the credit crisis unfolded. The New York-based bank was also said to be cutting the number of corporate jets in its existing fleet from five to two.

San Francisco-based Wells Fargo & Co. has also been reported to be downsizing the jet fleet it acquired from Charlotte's Wachovia Corp. Wells Fargo completed its purchase of Wachovia in December.

Shares of Bank of America fell 60 cents, or 11.3 percent, to end at $4.70 -- dropping to their lowest level in 19 years and trading as low as $4.62 earlier in the session.

Copyright 2009 The Associated Press
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