1 / 15

Ten Ways to Restore Investor Confidence In Compensation

Ten Ways to Restore Investor Confidence In Compensation. By: Patti Stiger, Kayla Shadley, Sean Simon, and Josh Smith. Problem. Shareholders outraged by executive compensation. Securities and Exchange Commission established new proxy disclosure rules.

duscha
Download Presentation

Ten Ways to Restore Investor Confidence In Compensation

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Ten Ways to RestoreInvestor ConfidenceIn Compensation By: Patti Stiger, Kayla Shadley, Sean Simon, and Josh Smith

  2. Problem • Shareholders outraged by executive compensation. • Securities and Exchange Commission established new proxy disclosure rules. • Overall the rules help investors know where their money is going. • Investors submitted 281 complaints through April 4, 2007, compared to just 173 for all of 2006.

  3. Top Ten Tips for Executive Hiring • Advice comes from activists, compensation experts and a handful of daring directors. • Ease Shareholder anger over executive pay packages.

  4. Tip #1 • Make sure the board's pay consultants don't also work for management. • Executives give themselves raises and benefits through hired consultants. • Morgan Stanley replaced Hewitt Associates. • Verizon Communications and Wal-Mart Stores face similar problems.

  5. Tip #2 • During outside CEO hunts, set limits on the projected compensation, hire a savvy negotiator and find a back-up candidate. • The Boards set a pay range before starting to search for new executives. • Gateway hired J. Edward Coleman when his package fell in the middle of the Boards range (1.95 Million Dollars.)

  6. Tip #3 • Skip severance for anyone with a sizable stock stake and deferred-compensation account. • Rich people do not need severance packages. • Home Depot’s CEO Frank Blake insisted on a more modest pay package than his predecessor. • Northern Trust CEO William A. Osborn terminated his employment-security agreement.

  7. Tip #4 • Retreat from "pay for failure" by making it easier to fire for cause. • Executives receive extravagant departure deals no matter how successful they were. • Walt Disney Co. can terminate CEO Robert Iger if he does not give testimony or cooperate in investigations. • Not a popular trend with CEOs.

  8. Tip #5 • Take a skeptical view of "peer group" comparisons. • Management frequently persuades board pay panels to pick competitors that will justify juicier deals. • Eli Lilly & Co. recently judged its pay packages against eight larger and more complicated companies including Johnson & Johnson.

  9. Tip #6 • Kill unjustifiable perquisites. • Companies have trimmed extras ranging from personal flights on the corporate jet to financial counseling. • Gannet Co. got rid of allowances for home security systems and club membership fees. • New proxy rules reduced the $50,000 disclosure limit to $10,000.

  10. Tip #7 • Link all long-term incentives to performance goals. • Executives pay is directly tied to their cash flow and stock performance. • General Electric Co. replaced CEO Jeffery R. Immelt’s options with performance share units.

  11. Tip #8 • Divulge precise measures that shape payouts for performance-based awards, and set hurdles high. • Investors should be able to figure out whether generous bonuses reflect good performance or poorly set targets, says Lucian Bebchuk, co-author of the book "Pay Without Performance.“ • Many businesses conceal performance goals for competitive reasons, even though it would be easier to set more stringent guidelines.

  12. Tip #9 • Conduct regular checkups about pay practices. • Boards are seeking second opinions about their pay plans and their advisers from rival consultancies. • Gateway might perform internal audits of option grants and similar long-term awards. • Conoco Phillips is considering rotating pay consultants every five years.

  13. Tip #10 • Give investors a voice about executive-pay packages, a right that exists in four countries. • "Say-on-pay" proponents hope investor censure -- or the threat of it -- will encourage directors to trim excessive awards and better link pay with performance. • In 2009 Aflac Inc. will allow investors to vote on pay.

  14. Final Thoughts • Securities and Exchange Commission are making new rules for the future. • Overall the executives and the Board will want to restore investor confidence any way possible.

More Related