The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Pulte Group CEO takes home less pay after difficult year

Compensati­on of $12.5 million lower than in 2021, 2022.

- By Michael E. Kanell michael.kanell@ajc.com

Ryan Marshall, Pulte Group’s president and chief executive officer, took home $12.5 million last year, less than previous years because of how interest rates damp- ened growth among home- builders, according to the company’s annual proxy statement.

Marshall had compensati­on of $14.5 million in 2022 and $16.1 million the previous year, according to the proxy filed by the Atlanta-based builder.

Marshall, who has held those positions at the home- building giant since Sep- tember 2016, was paid a base salary of $1 million, which was supplement­ed by stock awards and other incentives.

His compensati­on was higher in previous years because in those years, Pulte profit growth was robust, while in 2023, the headwind of higher inter- est rates held back the busi- ness. Pulte Group last year had revenues of $16.1 billion, up marginally from 2022 and reflected in more mod- est stock and incentive pay, company officials said.

The other current execu- tives whose compensati­on was listed in the proxy:

■ Robert T. O’Shaugh- nessy, executive vice presi- dent and chief financial offi- cer, who had a base salary of $750,000 and total com- pensation of $4.9 million.

■ Matthew Koart, execu- tive vice president and chief operating officer, who had a base salary of $467,308 and total compensati­on of $4.2 million.

■ Todd Sheldon, execu- tive vice president and gen- eral counsel, who had a base salary of $550,000 and total compensati­on of $2.7 million.

■ Kevin Henry, executive vice president and chief people officer, who had a base salary of $294,039 and total compensati­on of $1.6 million.

U.S. securities regulation­s now require that companies calculate the ratio between CEO pay and the compen- sation for the median pay- check of an employee.

In 2022, American CEOs were paid 344 times as much as a typical worker, according to the Economic Policy Insti- tute. The left-leaning group has criticized the growth of executive pay in recent years, comparing the ratio to that in 1965 when pay for a top executive was 21 times that of a typical worker, accord- ing to EPI.

Pulte Group has about 6,500 employees and the median pay for a Pulte employee is $103,517 a year, making Marshall’s compen- sation 121 times that of the median, according to the proxy.

Among the company’s homebuildi­ng peers are a number who pay their top executives more.

At D.R. Horton, Chairman Donald Horton was paid $32.7 million last year, according to the company’s recent proxy statement. Executive Vice Chair David Auld was paid $32.1 million.

The Texas-based company paid CEO and president Paul Romanowski $14.2 million, according to the proxy.

KB Home paid Jeffrey Metzger, its chairman and CEO, $15.7 million last year, according to the Califor- nia-based company’s recent proxy statement.

Toll Brothers paid Douglas Yearly, president and CEO of the Pennsylvan­ia-based com- pany, $15.2 million.

Florida-based Lennar Corp. has not yet released its 2024 proxy statement. But in last year’s, the company said it paid Stuart Miller, executive chair and co-CEO, $34.3 million. Jonathan Jaffe, co-chief CEO and president of Lennar, was paid $29.1 million.

Pulte Group includes a number of brands, among them Pulte Homes, Centex, Del Webb, DiVosta Homes and John Wieland Homes and Neighborho­ods.

The proxy is the com- pany’s preliminar­y filing and will be finalized in the next few days, the company said.

 ?? COURTESY ?? Atlanta-based Pulte Group’s president and CEO, Ryan Marshall, made $2 million less last year than in 2022 and more than $3.5 million less than in 2021, according to the company’s annual proxy statements.
COURTESY Atlanta-based Pulte Group’s president and CEO, Ryan Marshall, made $2 million less last year than in 2022 and more than $3.5 million less than in 2021, according to the company’s annual proxy statements.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States