News

Sanford and Joan Weill will not be donating $20 million to Paul Smith's College after a judge said the school couldn't be renamed after her.
News about Sanford I. Weill, including commentary and archival articles published in The New York Times.
Sanford Weill, the former chairman and CEO of Citigroup, is optimistic about the government's $250 billion investment in banks, saying taxpayers are going to make money on this.
Citigroup Chairman Sanford Weill and former star telecom analyst Jack Grubman are headed for court. A federal judge in Manhattan will allow a lawsuit to proceed that claims Citigroup’s brokerage ...
2003-07-17 04:00:00 PDT New York-- Sanford Weill, the legendary head of Citigroup Inc. whose reputation was dented by the recent stock-analyst scandal, said Wednesday he will step down in January ...
With its fortunes crumbling, Citigroup has received a helping hand from a figure from the past. The banking giant’s former chairman and CEO, Sanford Weill, has agreed to give up millions of ...
Billionaires Sanford and Joan Weill announced Tuesday they are providing $106 million to bring together neuroscientists and researchers working in engineering, computer science, physics, chemistry, ...
What the heck was Sanford Weill thinking when he broke the Augusta National Golf Club code of omerta and publicly supported the National Council of Women's Organizations' call for the club to ...
Sanford Weill, the architect of Citigroup Inc., is considering a plan to profit from the same turmoil that has clobbered the banking giant. Mr. Weill, who pulled off the deal that created ...
Joan Weill, wife of Citigroup creator Sandy Weill, donated $20 million to a college in upstate New York to rename it Joan Weill-Paul Smith's College.
Weill once led the campaign to shatter laws that separated commercial banking and risky investment banks. He's singing a different tune today.