National Post

Calgary executive suite feels the heat

‘House cleaning,’ salary cuts for energy top brass

- By Yadullah Hussain

A handful of executives in Calgary’s downtown towers have been casualties of the severe downturn hitting the oilpatch, but current corner-office occupants should be able to keep their jobs — for now.

“The downturn is where a C-suite’s true mettle will come in — were you just a positive and upmarket CEO and CFO, or were you really able to deliver value when the chips were down,” said Arden Dalik, managing partner at Global Governance Advisors, a Calgary-based compensati­on advisory firm.

“We will see a bit of houseclean­ing.”

Adam Pekarsky, founding partner at executive research firm Pekarsky Stein in Calgary, says while senior executives may be able to ride out low commodity prices during the next six months, “if we are in December, with oil sitting at US$43 per barrel, I think it will be a different story.”

There have been some departures already as oil prices plummet.

Calgar y-based oilfield services company Savanna Energy Service Corp. saw its founding chief executive Ken Mullen and chief operating officer John Cooper depart within the space of a month in the first quarter, as the company took on an impairment charge of $384 million and worked through elevated debt levels.

Calgary-based Gran Tierra Energy Inc. also let go its CEO, Dana Coffield, as the South America-focused company announced several cost-cutting measures including significan­tly reducing full-time employees. Its stock fell 26.2% during the first quarter, as its Peru developmen­t was put on hold.

In late March, Legacy Oil + Gas Inc. said its CFO Matt Janisch was resigning as the company struggled to get around debt covenant issues. Athabasca Oil Corp.’s former CEO Sveinung Svarte also resigned from its board of directors, as the company hoped to turn over a new leaf after a long drawn-out oilsands deal with PetroChina Co. Ltd last year.

Larger players such as Suncor Energy Inc. and Cenovus Energy Inc. have announced across-theboard wage freezes and reduced headcounts.

“This is my third wave of volatility and historical­ly C-suite is not where you see companies cutting,” said Koula Vasilopoul­os, Calgary-based senior regional manager at recruitmen­t firm Robert Half. “If anything, they would really wrap their arms around them and retain their strongest people and their leadership infrastruc­ture in this downturn.”

Human resources department­s at companies have already initiated a number of measures including unpaid Friday leaves, unpaid summer holidays and even temporary cuts in executive salaries.

“I have some clients who are freezing their staff salaries and they are actually rolling back their executive salaries,” Ms. Dalik noted. “I don’t know what their motives are, but honestly, they are acting very responsibl­y — for the most part.”

Senior management across the North American oil and gas space saw their compensati­on shrink 13% in the 2008-09 downturn, according to Alliance-Bernstein LP, and the investment bank expects at least a 5% pullback this year across the sector.

“More companies are expecting flat salaries or slight decrease in salaries this year,” said Jim Fearon, regional director at Hays Canada, noting that half the oil and gas companies in Alberta the recruitmen­t firm surveyed recently expect to reduce overall headcount by 50% this year. A new round of mergers and acquisitio­ns will also see some top executives and entire divisions get the dreaded axe, as was evident in Repsol SA’s takeover of Talisman Energy Inc. in February.

Meanwhile, the industry is facing a “retirement bubble” which may compel many boards to persevere with their top brass.

“Some companies are forced into [letting go senior management] if profits and revenues drop to untenable levels, but to hasten the speed at which knowledge gets lost without new talent coming through is unwise for the industry,” Mr. Fearon said.

But even as they hunker down, many companies remain in a selective hiring mode, especially at the top. Natural gas giant Encana Corp. recently recruited a new general counsel in the midst of the severe downturn.

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