Posts Tagged ‘Executive compensation’

The “Typical” Examples Aren’t So Typical

by Michael Dennis Graham 

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Expert Perspective by Grahall’s OmniMedia Editorial Board

In his April, 2010 article for The New York Times Dealbook (“Bargain Rates for a C.E.O.?“) Devin Leonard writes: “As the country settled into the worst recession in decades, the government became unusually involved in corporate pay practices. The Obama administration appointed Kenneth Feinberg — a k a the pay czar — to scrutinize compensation at corporate behemoths like Citigroup, the American International Group, Bank of America, General Motors and Chrysler, all of which taxpayers propped up with billions upon billions of dollars in bailouts.”  Leonard continues: “Equilar, a compensation research firm in Redwood Shores, Calif., recently prepared a report for The New York Times analyzing the pay of 200 chief executives at 199 public companies with revenue of at least $5.78 billion that filed their proxies by March 26. (Only 199 companies are on the list because Motorola has two co-C.E.O.’s.)

Equilar says [that] the median [CEO] pay package — the midpoint where half of the compensation packages on that list are lower and half are higher — declined by 13 percent last year, to $7.7 million. The average total pay tumbled by 15 percent, to $9.5 million.”

In the face of our stubborn “Great Recession”, many Americans might have a hard time conceiving of having to take a “pay cut” to a mere $9.5 million.  For most people, this is more than they’ll make in a lifetime.  But the important and more interesting question not addressed in the article is how representative are these compensation levels of pay at US companies?  

Let’s take a closer look at that Equilar research (you can find an interactive table of the 200 companies in the April 3, 2010 New York Times article “Pay at the Top”)  and the methodology used to select their study sample of 200 companies.  Equilar’s “detailed description of methodology” includes the following as criteria for inclusion in the research: “The data includes information for 200 executives at 199 companies with annual revenue of at least $5.78 billion. To be included in the study, a company must be incorporated in the United States and have filed a preliminary or definitive proxy statement by March 26.”  (From April 2, 2010 New York Times article “Calculating the Pay Figures“.)

Is the provocative comment around CEO pay “tumbling” to $9 million plus typical of the broader group of publically traded companies? 

We think not.  There are 10,000 publically traded companies in the US, and probably another 10,000 or so that are private.  Pay levels at the egregious “outliers” such as the “Big 5” TARP companies and those in Equilar’s 200 list may look nothing like the other 9,800 public companies. It is at best difficult and at worst dangerous to draw broad conclusions from a sample that is clearly skewed by information totally unrelated to pay (such as the date of proxy submission) and tilted toward companies that would deliver CEOs far higher pay than at a typical US company (which is often the situation found in companies with larger revenue).     Maybe these flashy pay levels stir the masses and sell papers – or advertising – but it doesn’t provide intelligent insight into the state of CEO pay.

So where do we think you can get a thoughtful and insightful perspective on the state of CEO and other executive pay?  You guessed it – at Grahall. Our Executive Compensation Research Report Series examines the level and mix of executive pay at publically traded companies. Because we wanted to report on the market as a whole, we followed a methodology that would allow us to reflect the true state of executive pay in US publically traded companies.  Compensation information was collected on a managed sample that accurately reflects the majority of publically traded companies in the US.  The result of our selection process is a group of 1,020 companies with median revenue of $1 billion, nearly 80% lower than Equilar’s Top 200. For more information on our sampling approach, download the first, free report in our series on executive compensation.

Our research asserts that “executive compensation should be considered within a strategic framework that includes many factors such as environment, stakeholders, business strategy, and people strategy. Not only does this more expansive approach provide a rational approach to evaluating executive pay, but when fully considered as part of a pay strategy, it sends the right messages to shareholders and executives.”

As we mentioned in our blog The Hurd Locker (referencing the pay earned by HP CEO Hurd): “a guide for determining relative pay and performance is to review an unbiased research study (such as our own Grahall research series on executive compensation) and determine the performance percentile of the organization on one of all of the key performance statistics. Then determine the pay percentile that matches that relative performance. If the two percentiles generally match then the reward program is operating in a reasonable zone on a “relative pay for relative performance.” If the two percentiles don’t match (either the relative pay is too high or too low given the relative performance) then it would point to the need for a review of the executive compensation program.”

For thoughtful and relevant information on executive pay stay tuned to Grahall’s blogs!

Contact Grahall’s Editorial Board at edie.kingston@grahall.com

Filed under: Expert Perspective - Rewards



It’s a Sticky Subject

by Garry Rogers 

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Expert Perspective by Grahall’s OmniMedia Editorial Board

After all the dire predictions of the exodus of top talent from TARPS firms, Eric Dash says in his article for the Wall Street Journal March 22, 2010  (Few Fled Companies Constrained by Pay Limits): “New data… suggests the departures were more of a trickle than a flood. Of the 104 senior executives whose pay was set by the federal pay regulator in the last two years, 88 executives, or nearly 85 percent, are still with the companies even though their pay was drastically cut back, according to people briefed on the government data.”
 
One hopes that those who remain are the ones best suited to lead the company in the future.   We sincerely doubt that these 85% who remain are the “losers” who couldn’t find another job.  We think that the fear was overblown, perhaps intentionally, in the hopes that the risk of losing key talent would keep Fienberg from slicing too deeply into executives’ pay. 

It is important to remember that the question “should I stay or should I go?” is influenced by many factors. 
Continue reading “It’s a Sticky Subject” »

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An Uneasy Alliance

by Garry Rogers 

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Expert Perspective by Grahall’s OmniMedia Editorial Board

In his March 22, 2010 article for Dealbook (Feinberg to Examine Past Pay at 419 Firms in TARP) Eric Dash discloses that “..Kenneth R. Feinberg is planning to examine past executive payouts at 419 firms that received government bailout money in fall 2008… Mr. Feinberg will look at whether any of the 25 top executives at any of these firms received more than $500,000 from October 2008, when money from the Troubled Asset Relief Program was given out, until Feb. 17, when federal law limited executive pay at firms receiving TARP money…”

Let’s compare the political climate then and now.
Continue reading “An Uneasy Alliance” »

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Those Who Can, DO!

by Garry Rogers 

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Expert Perspective by Grahall’s OmniMedia Editorial Board
 
Recently, The Kellogg School of Management at Northwestern University’s Camelia Kuhnen addressed several pressing issues in executive compensation.  Grahall’s editorial Board thought it would be interesting to canvas our team of Top Consultants to provide our thoughts in addressing the same questions posed by Bloomberg BusinessWeek.com’s Patricia O’Connell on the subject of “Executive Compensation and Public Outrage” (Business Week February 24, 2009). 

The questions below have been selected from O’Connell’s interview with Ms. Kuhnen, but the answers are from Grahall consultants with a total of combined experience of more than 200 years designing executive compensation programs for literally thousands of public and private U.S. companies in various stages of development. 

Q – “What do you think about the state of exec comp? It was a big issue a year ago, and people were expecting a lot of reform.”

In our authoritative research of top named officers in 1,000 public companies there is a significant correlation of pay to the size of the company and to performance measured over seven different variables in 95% of companies. This strongly suggests what we’ve long suspected – that typically, executive compensation programs are generally very effective and appropriately linked to financial performance.
Continue reading “Those Who Can, DO!” »

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Executive Compensation and Public Outrage

by News Monitor 

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Published in Business Week February 25, 2010

What fueled public outrage wasn’t how much execs got but how little the rest of us did, says Camelia Kuhnen of the Kellogg School of Management. The upside: increased shareholder activism Bonus season is well under way, and the public outrage that last year boiled over into protests at execs’ homes, criticism from the President, and demand for reform from an angry public seems to be at a low simmer now.

Link to full article

Filed under: Newsfeeds



Can Financial Firms Get Executives to Give Back Pay?

by News Monitor 

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Published in Time January 27, 2010 by Stephen Gandel

In the past few months, a number of financial firms have instituted or beefed up rules that would allow them to force employees to return year-end bonuses. So-called clawbacks would be triggered by subsequently discovered misconduct and some firms say they may even apply in cases where employees made trades that looked profitable at first, but go sour.

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SEC To Scrutinize Executive-Compensation Disclosures

by News Monitor 

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The Securities and Exchange Commission will be on the lookout for clear analysis from companies in this year’s proxy statements about how their board directors and senior executives are compensated, including the use of performance targets, a senior SEC staffer said Friday.

Filed under: Newsfeeds



IRS Peers Into Executive Compensation

by News Monitor 

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Published in ABC News January 23, 2010 by Kim Dixon
As the Obama Administration seeks backing for a tax on banks’ lucrative pay packages, the Internal Revenue Service has been stepping up its oversight of executive pay through its auditing and other powers.  President Barack Obama needs the U.S. Congress to help him pass the 10-year $90 billion tax on bank executive compensation, but the tax agency had already been bearing down on lavish pay and perks across industries on several fronts.

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Banks stung by criticism over pay despite recent changes

by News Monitor 

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Wall Street banks thought they had made big concessions to populist anger over large year-end bonuses. On Tuesday, Citigroup said its compensation pool for 2009 had shrunk 20 percent from the prior year. On Wednesday, Morgan Stanley announced its top executives would receive 75 percent of their pay in deferred compensation.

Filed under: Newsfeeds



What’s a Bailed-Out Banker Really Worth?

by News Monitor 

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Published in The New York Times, January 3, 2010 by Steve Brill 

Last August, as midnight approached on a Friday, two Treasury Department staff members sat in a cramped basement office in the Treasury Building next to the White House and watched as their e-mail in-boxes filled up. The aides worked for Kenneth Feinberg, the government’s special master for executive compensation, and they were awaiting submissions from companies that had received (and not yet paid back) billions in what federal regulations call “exceptional assistance” from the government’s Troubled Asset Relief Program, or TARP. The government had the authority to set compensation levels at those seven TARP recipients, and this was the companies’ opportunity to plead for salaries and bonuses for each of its top 25 executives. Chrysler Financial and General Motors submitted their proposals — about 2,000-plus pages each — a few days before. Now, like college kids crashing a term paper, the other five — A.I.G., Bank of America, Chrysler, Citigroup and General Motors Acceptance Corporation — were frantically trying to get their pitches into Treasury’s digital in-box by the Aug. 14 deadline.

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Filed under: Newsfeeds