Lethbridge Herald

CEO-employee pay gap widens

Top U.S. bosses average $12.3M

- Stan Choe THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

The typical pay package for CEOs at the biggest U.S. companies topped $12.3 million last year, and the gap between the boss and their workforces widened further, according to AP’s annual survey of executive compensati­on.

Median pay for CEOs in the survey climbed 4.1 per cent last year. For the typical worker at their companies, it rose 3.2 per cent. It would take two lifetimes for the typical employee at most S&P 500 companies to make what their CEO did, or 169 years, according to data analyzed by Equilar for The AP.

For the first time since the AP’s annual pay survey began in 2011, a woman is at the top of the list: Lisa Su of Advanced Micro Devices. She had compensati­on valued at $58.5 million after guiding her company’s stock to the best performanc­e in the S&P 500 for two straight years.

Otherwise, the top of the pay rankings again includes several familiar names from the media and entertainm­ent industries, such as Walt Disney’s Robert Iger and Netflix’s Reed Hastings.

CEOs such as Alphabet’s Sundar Pichai and Intel’s Robert Swan had packages that were valued even higher that Su’s, but were excluded because the AP’s survey looks only at S&P 500 bosses who have been in the job for at least two years, in part to avoid distortion­s caused by sign-on bonuses.

Of course, the survey’s results are from before the coronaviru­s pandemic upended everything. Now, there’s a chance the outbreak will do what rising anger about income inequality has not in recent years: pull executive compensati­on lower.

Hundreds of CEOs across the country have already said they’ll forgo some or all of their salary. And the turmoil in the stock market and the global economy could make it tougher for CEOs to meet performanc­e targets and threaten the stock awards and bonuses that make up the majority of their pay.

Boards of directors could make changes to compensati­on plans to help shield CEOs from the damage caused by a recession that no one saw coming. Consultant­s and investors say such adjustment­s are already being considered in some boardrooms.

Executive pay was already under greater scrutiny among those ultimately in charge of how much CEOs get paid: investors who own the company’s stock and elect the directors to the board.

“I think there has been a growing sense — not by all, but a growing portion of institutio­nal investors — that CEOs are overpaid,” said Amy Borrus, deputy director of the Council of Institutio­nal Investors. “It’s not so much that they’re overpaid but that it’s out of whack with corporate performanc­e”

She said pay packages are often built on goals set by boards that are difficult for investors to understand and that don’t always incentiviz­e performanc­e.

The AP’s compensati­on study included pay data for 329 CEOs at S&P 500 companies who have served at least two full fiscal years at their companies, which filed proxy statements between Jan. 1 and April 30.

CEOs in the AP’s survey had a median compensati­on valued at $12.3 million last year, which means half made more

and half made less.

Besides salary and cash bonuses, that includes stock awards and option grants that CEOs will get the full value of only if the company’s stock price rises in the future.

In many cases, big chunks of the compensati­on were for stock and options that companies granted their CEOs in 2019 for their performanc­e in 2018 and earlier years.

The 4.1 per cent rise in median pay was a slowdown for S&P 500 CEOs, who had seen their pay jump 7.2 per cdent the year before and by even more in earlier years. Much of the slowdown was because of a drop in how much cash the CEOs got for hitting various performanc­e targets.

At Eastman Chemical, for example, the value of CEO Mark Costa’s compensati­on dropped 11 per cent to $14 million last year, according to the survey, in part because he fell short in some performanc­e metrics set by the board of directors.

Eastman’s board said Costa exceeded the goals set for “growth and innovation” in 2019, but he only partially met the targets for how much cash the company generated, as well as for employee safety and other measures. He received $377,000 in what the company calls its “unit performanc­e plan,” down from the $1.5 million he got from the plan a year earlier.

The slowdown in CEO pay across the S&P 500 is partly due to the increased voice investors have gotten on the subject, shareholde­r advocates say. It’s been nearly a decade since the U.S. government began requiring companies give their investors a “Say on Pay” at annual meetings, allowing them a nonbinding up-or-down vote on executive compensati­on.

 ?? Associated Press file photo ?? Lisa T. Su, head of Advanced Micro Devices, topped U.S. CEOs with 2019 pay of $58.5 million.
Associated Press file photo Lisa T. Su, head of Advanced Micro Devices, topped U.S. CEOs with 2019 pay of $58.5 million.

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