National Post (National Edition)
U.S. CEOs get biggest pay raise in three years
NEW STUDY
Rutledge to collect the full amount, Charter’s share price will need to rise 155 per cent over six years.
CEOs typically got more than half their total compensation from stock and option grants last year.
The lesson from the rest of the top five: How lucrative the entertainment business can be.
No. 2 on the survey was Leslie Moonves at CBS, who made US$68.6 million. That included US$63.9 million in bonus and stock awards the company’s board said he received for presiding over a 36.6 per cent return for CBS shares in 2016 and for keeping CBS the top-rated network in the 2015-16 season, among other performance measures.
No. 3 was Walt Disney’s Robert Iger, at US$41 million. That was 6 per cent less than the year before, as slowing growth resulted in a bonus cut.
Fourth-highest at US$37.2 million was David Zaslav of Discovery Communications, whose networks include TLC and Animal Planet. Roughly 70 per cent of that was from stock and option awards.
No. 5 was Activision Blizzard’s Robert Kotick, whose compensation surged 358 per cent to US$33.1 million. That was almost entirely due to US$24.9 million in stock awards he received as part of a new five-year employment agreement. To get them, the company’s earnings per share must hit a certain level, among other financial targets.
Kotick may not make the top five this year. His 2017 salary was cut by 26 per cent to US$1.8 million after many shareholders said they were upset about how much Activision Blizzard executives were making.
The company also eliminated his guarantee for an annual salary increase.
Kotick’s salary cut demonstrates how companies will revamp pay structures in response to complaints from shareholders.
When the shareholders of Exelon met in Philadelphia for their annual meeting last spring, the energy company asked what they thought about how much CEO Christopher Crane and other executives made in the prior year. Exelon shares had lost 22 per cent in 2015.
Shareholders made their displeasure known. Of shares voted, 62 per cent were against the compensation or abstained. That’s the highest “Say on Pay” percentage in this year’s survey.
After the meeting, Exelon made several changes, including capping how much executives can receive in incentive payments if the stock loses money over the year.
Auto supplier BorgWarner had last year’s second-lowest passing rate on “Say on Pay,” with 60 per cent of voting shares saying no or abstaining. The company made changes to its compensation program and cut a 2016 incentive award by US$2.4 million to US$950,000 for CEO James Verrier. His total compensation dropped 29 per cent to US$12.3 million last year.
At Chevron, which had the seventh-lowest “Say on Pay” passing rate, CEO John Watson’s compensation fell 2 per cent to US$18.8 million. After talking with shareholders, the company said it will cap some bonus awards and make other changes for 2017 compensation.
Boards of directors know they have to pay CEOs similar to what their rivals are making, if not more, compensation experts say.
“They’re very aware of what their peers are doing,” said John Wood, vice chairman of Heidrick & Struggles, a search firm that corporate boards hire to find their next CEO.
The AP’s CEO compensation study includes pay data for 346 executives at S&P 500 companies who have served two full consecutive fiscal years at their respective companies, who filed proxy statements between January 1 and May 1.