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Saturday, 09/07/2002 12:42:35 PM

Saturday, September 07, 2002 12:42:35 PM

Post# of 28831
They should have their money taken away. Given back to the tax payer backed fund. The nerve of these .............


NextCard CEO Quits, SEC Probes Co.
Friday, September 6, 2002
Last updated at 3:08:34 p.m. PT

By MICHAEL LIEDTKE
AP BUSINESS WRITER

SAN FRANCISCO -- Failed online credit card issuer NextCard Inc. disclosed Friday that federal securities regulators are investigating the company's downfall, which could cost a taxpayer-backed insurance fund as much as $400 million.

The San Francisco-based company also revealed that its chief executive, John Hashman, resigned earlier this week. Hashman oversaw NextCard's rise and fall as the Internet's biggest credit card issuer.

After distributing more than 1 million credit cards, NextCard last year sank in a morass of bad loans that prompted banking regulators to seize control of the operations.

The Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. has estimated the failure of NextCard's credit card business will result in a loss ranging from $300 million to $400 million.

In a government filing Friday, NextCard didn't provide any specifics about the Securities and Exchange Commission's probe. The SEC's San Francisco office declined to comment.

Federal banking regulators opened investigations into NextCard's failure seven months ago. In May, the FDIC notified NextCard that it might take legal action against several unnamed company executives and directors.

A shareholder suit filed in Delaware alleges NextCard insiders illegally sold stock to lock in profits before the company's credit card portfolio imploded.

Like many other Internet companies, NextCard stock once was a hot commodity on Wall Street. The company's shares peaked at $53.12 in late 1999. The Nasdaq Stock Market delisted the shares six months ago.

Before the company's shares crashed, NextCard's five highest-paid executives made $29.2 million by cashing in a combined 1.47 million stock options during 1999 and 2000, according to SEC filings.

Timothy J. Coltrell, formerly NextCard's chief operating officer, collected the biggest windfall by selling 715,499 options for $14.5 million in 1999 and 2000.

Hashman pocketed $3.6 million by selling 305,000 stock options in 1999 and 2000.

NextCard helped its executives pay for their tax and stock brokerage expenses by giving them loans at an 8 percent interest rate, according to SEC records. As of June 2002, the company said all the insider loans had been repaid except $120,000 owed by Hashman.

The company's demise has hurt its employees and customers. More than 800 NextCard workers have lost their jobs in the meltdown. About 800,000 NextCard customers abruptly lost their credit cards in July after federal regulators could not find a buyer for the accounts.

NextCard continues to run a skeletal operation as its remaining management team contemplates a bankruptcy filing. The company's chief counsel didn't immediately return phone messages left Friday.

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Excel

People don't run out of dreams
They just run out of time.
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