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Google paid ‘most powerful woman on Wall St’ £47m to move Google paid 'most powerful woman on Wall St' £47m to move
(about 1 hour later)
Ruth Porat will make £47 million ($70 million) for her first year as chief financial officer of Google when she moves from Wall Street bank Morgan Stanley in May.Ruth Porat will make £47 million ($70 million) for her first year as chief financial officer of Google when she moves from Wall Street bank Morgan Stanley in May.
Porat has been hailed as the most powerful woman on Wall St this week after it was announced that she would leave her position as CFO of Morgan Stanley to take up the same position at Google. Now government filings show that she will receive a cash and stock package of £47 million ($70 million) for the move.Porat has been hailed as the most powerful woman on Wall St this week after it was announced that she would leave her position as CFO of Morgan Stanley to take up the same position at Google. Now government filings show that she will receive a cash and stock package of £47 million ($70 million) for the move.
The package is split between £17 million ($25 million) in stocks in the first year and a second package of $40 million in stocks the following. She will also get a £3 million ($5 million) signing bonus to supplement her starting salary of $650,000.The package is split between £17 million ($25 million) in stocks in the first year and a second package of $40 million in stocks the following. She will also get a £3 million ($5 million) signing bonus to supplement her starting salary of $650,000.
This far eclipses the £7 million ($10 million) a year she made on Wall Street and the amount paid to Google’s outgoing chief financial officer, Patrick Pichette.This far eclipses the £7 million ($10 million) a year she made on Wall Street and the amount paid to Google’s outgoing chief financial officer, Patrick Pichette.
Patrick Pichette left Google this year after seven years as CFO Pichette’s departure after seven years in charge of the tech giant’s accounts came with an unusually frank and poignant note in which he declared that he had no good answer to his wife Tamar’s question about when it would be time for him to leave:Patrick Pichette left Google this year after seven years as CFO Pichette’s departure after seven years in charge of the tech giant’s accounts came with an unusually frank and poignant note in which he declared that he had no good answer to his wife Tamar’s question about when it would be time for him to leave:
“I could not find a good argument to tell Tamar we should wait any longer for us to grab our backpacks and hit the road - celebrate our last 25 years together by turning the page and enjoy a perfectly fine mid life crisis full of bliss and beauty.”“I could not find a good argument to tell Tamar we should wait any longer for us to grab our backpacks and hit the road - celebrate our last 25 years together by turning the page and enjoy a perfectly fine mid life crisis full of bliss and beauty.”
The timing of Porat’s hire co-incides with a moment when the spotlight is on the treatment of women in Silicon Valley firms, after claims of systemic sexual discrimination in court.The timing of Porat’s hire co-incides with a moment when the spotlight is on the treatment of women in Silicon Valley firms, after claims of systemic sexual discrimination in court.