Co-head

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Co-head
kəʊ-hɛd (n.)

To appoint a co-head is to convey the impression one has overdone managerial responsibility whilst creating a vacuum of it. To be a co-head is to claim credit for the cake that is kept, and blame someone else for all the cake that is eaten.

The co-head is a staple mis-management[1] technique of the multinational, the co-head speaks to every conceivable weakness in upper management.

Co-head is no head

To appoint co-leaders of a division, or the firm itself is to settle a petulant inter-personal dispute that is, at best, only adjacent to the institution’s interest — but in all likelihood is positively hostile to it — by undermining the one thing such an appointment is meant to achieve: direct personal accountability. A sole head of business who presides over catastrophic loss may blame inclement weather, Brexit, or regulatory head-winds, but cannot evade the retort that managing external factors is just the job she was empowered to do.

If you share a hot-seat with someone else, and something goes wrong, there’s always a reason it wasn’t you. The greatest, most glaring example of this is at our old friends Credit Suisse, who found to their cost what happens when you have co-heads of prime services. For those without the stomach for a deep foray into hedge fund financing, you need to know only this: prime services business generally splits into physical and synthetic components; both Europe and the US are centres for prime services businesses, and Credit Suisse appointed co-heads of their business, one in the US and one in Europe. A hedge fund blew up trading synthetic prime services in the Americas. The co-heads were summoned to the executive board. The one based in America explained that he was responsible onky for physical prime services. The one based in London said he was only responsible for European prime brokerage.

Goldman and the fight to the death

The only way a co-head arrangement could work is one that few investment bankers would entertain for a moment: that of partnership: joint and several liability, and therefore individual responsibility for the totality of any loss, and proportional sharing of any profit. This is, of course, to increase one’s vulnerability to one’s comrades in the service of the firm’s interests, and is not how the professional managerial class like to go about things.


See also

References