Anyone wanting to experience at first hand the different styles of Sandy Weill, chairman of Travelers, and John Reed, chairman of Citicorp, could have done worse than attend the annual stockholders' meetings of the two companies, held on consecutive days in late April in New York: their last before the two companies merge later this year to become Citigroup.
Citicorp held its meeting in an auditorium in its own headquarters at 399 Park Avenue. It was a low-key, almost dull, affair for a company that had just surprised the financial world by announcing the largest merger in history. Reed himself conducted the formalities with confidence and polish enough, introducing the board directors up for re-election who were seated in the front rows of the auditorium and who stood and turned briefly to the audience.
For most of the meeting, he deflected with politeness, restraint...
This is archived content. Your current settings does not currently allow access to the archive. To gain access visit the subscription page or call our hotline on +44 (0)207 779 8999.
If you are a trialist or subscriber, please enter your username and password at the top right-hand side of euromoney.com
Subscribers to Euromoney benefit from:
Level 1:
- Online access to the past 12 months content
- Tailored RSS news feeds direct to your desktop
- News delivered directly to your mobile device or PC
- Personalised email newsfeed of 'Top stories' and 'Breaking news'
Level 2:
- Exclusive access to euromoney.com - Read the latest issue early online, search for specific developments by region or sector, interrogate the results of Euromoney's benchmark polls, and view the archive dating back to 2000
- 12 monthly issues of Euromoney magazine
- More than 30 specialist research guides free
- The results of Euromoneys polls and surveys
- Tailored RSS news feeds direct to your desktop
- News delivered directly to your mobile device or PC
- Personalised email newsfeed of 'Top stories' and 'Breaking news'
Click here to subscribe