Softechie:" Wendt built GE Capital into a .giant..& the MAIN
MAIN GROWTH ENGINE behind one of the world's most profitable companies."
Can we say.... CONSECO back to $ 50/share ?,..............soon? <vbg>.
TA
REUTERS :
New Conseco CEO famous for GE record, divorce case
moneycentral.msn.com
June 29, 2000 11:43 AM By Matthew Lewis
HARTFORD, Conn., June 29 (Reuters) - Gary Wendt, the new chief executive of troubled life insurer Conseco Inc. CNC , made his name building the financial services unit at General Electric Co GE but is equally famous for one of the most highly publicised, high-stakes divorce trials in recent memory.
Analysts describe Wendt, who was appointed as Conseco's new chief executive on Thursday, as a brilliant, hard-driving strategist with a sometimes cantankerous personality,
who
will give Conseco a much-needed shot of GE's famously focused, results-oriented culture.
However, Wendt, 58 this year, is also known for paying $20 million to his former wife, Lorna Wendt, in a drawn-out divorce case which analysts say embarrassed General Electric and sparked a national debate on the value of corporate wives.
"He clearly won't stand for businesses that are underperformers," said Larry Mayewski, analyst at rating agency A.M. Best Co., which earlier this month downgraded 14 Conseco insurance units due to doubts about the intended sale of its Conseco Finance consumer-lending unit and weak operating results at the insurance units.
During his 24-year career at Fairfield, Conn.-based GE, from 1975 to 1998, Wendt built GE Capital into a diversified, financial-services giant -- though one that is largely invisible to the public -- and the main growth engine behind one of the world's most profitable companies.
In his 15 years running GE Capital, from 1984 to 1998, profits rose from about $300 million to nearly $4 billion. GE Capital operates in a range of businesses including real estate, auto leasing, reinsurance and personal insurance and savings products.
Wendt, a native of Rio, Wis., and a Harvard Business School graduate, was perceived by analysts as a possible successor to Jack Welch, GE's venerated chairman and chief executive, until he left GE in December of 1998 to form his own investment fund.
"He built GE Capital into one of America's largest financial institutions over his tenure, which was very impressive," Mayewski said.
Wendt's departure from GE came a year after his wife, Lorna Wendt, dragged him through a sensational divorce trial, at which she argued that by sacrificing her own career to take on the full-time job of raising a family, her contributions to the marriagewere as great as the paychecks brought home by her husband.
She claimed she was entitled to half of her husband's total worth, which she estimated at $100 million. Wendt claimed his total worth was far less. In December 1997, a Connecticut court awarded her $20 million. Connecticut's appellate court has yet to rule on her claim to a part of Wendt's pensions, stock options and restricted stock.
Wendt takes over the job of permanent chief executive of Conseco from the six-times married Stephen Hilbert, who resigned in April, saying he had lost the confidence of Conseco investors. David Harkins,president of investment firm Thomas H. Lee Partners,a minority Conseco shareholder, acted as interim chief executive. |