Obama hints that missteps by Thain will haunt banksJohn Thain may have just made life harder for every banker -- and bank shareholder -- in America.
From Bloomberg News:
President Barack Obama took aim at Wall Street for using taxpayer money on bonuses and office remodeling, vowing to attach more strings to any future bailout money.

There?s been a lack of accountability and transparency in how we're managing some of these programs to stabilize the financial system, Obama said before a meeting with congressional leaders at the White House.
Obama cited the reports that we?ve seen over the last couple of days about companies that have received taxpayer assistance then going out and renovating bathrooms or offices or in other ways not managing those dollars appropriately.
While Obama didn?t mention any individuals or companies, his comments followed reports that John Thain, the former Merrill Lynch Co. chief executive officer ousted yesterday, spent $1.2 million redecorating his downtown Manhattan office last year as the company was firing employees.
But Thain's spending apparently was early in 2008, well before Merrill got government help.

More to Obama's point, Thain sped up bonus payments to Merrill employees in December, even as the brokerage?s finances deteriorated and the firm's soon-to-be parent company, Bank of America Corp., was negotiating another capital infusion from the government.
Obama?s top aides, including economic advisor Larry Summers, had previously made clear that the new administration would demand more concessions from banks in return for new federal aid.
The revelations about Thain, however, remind me of the sequence of corporate scandals after the Enron Corp. accounting debacle broke open late in 2001. Each new scandal in 2002 (WorldCom, Tyco, Adelphia, etc.) emboldened those in Congress who wanted to bring the hammer down on corporate executives.
From Bloomberg:
Obama?s press secretary, Robert Gibbs, said the president has directed his economic team to come up with new restrictions on the second half of the $700 billion financial-rescue plan, saying the money won?t go to line the pockets of people who?ve gotten financial assistance.
The American people need to be greatly assured that their hard-earned money isn't going to the bonuses or the remodeling of an office at a bank that?s in trouble, Gibbs said at a briefing.
For banks, the handwriting is on the remodeled wall.
-- Tom Petruno
Top pic: President Obama meeting with congressional leaders today. Credit: Charles Dharapak/Associated Press
Bottom pic: John Thain. Credit: Bebeto Matthews / Associated Press
Nissan's loss seen to top $1.7bTOKYO - JAN'S Nissan Motor Co is likely to post an operating loss of more than 100 billion yen (S$1.69 billion) for the fiscal year to March, due to a global auto slump and a stronger yen, a daily reported on Saturday.
It will be Nissan's first dip into the red in 14 years and is in marked contrast to its operating profit of 790.8 billion yen the previous year, the Nikkei business daily said.
Merrill owner ousts ex-chief
Bank of America angered by Thain's silence on losses, late-year bonuses br/br/ John A. Thain (left) resigned under pressure from Bank of America after reports he rushed billions in bonuses to Merrill Lynch Co. employees in his final days as chief executive there, while the brokerage was suffering losses and just before Bank of America took it over.img src="http://feeds2.feedburner.com/~r/baltimoresun/business/rss2/~4/B8HZeLYCWpo" height="1" width="1"/
Qutab Minar in Delhi tilting due to seepage: Experts
Is Qutab Minar going the way of the Leaning Tower of Pisa? Experts are understood to have expressed concern that the monument, which Qutab Minar already has a tilt of 25 inches to the southwest, is in danger of leaning further in that direction due to a weak foundation being further weakened by rainwater seepage.
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