The Advisors' Blog

This blog features wisdom from respected compensation consultants and lawyers

Monthly Archives: February 2010

February 25, 2010

How Effective Is Your Clawback? Legal and Enforcement Considerations

Scott Landau and Bradley Benedict, Pillsbury Winthrop

As noted in our recent memo, regardless of the reasons for adopting a clawback policy, certain legal issues must be addressed at the outset of its implementation. A failure to take into account the legal context may undermine the company’s ability to recoup payments.

Wage laws in some states may limit the ability to recover amounts paid or owed in connection with the performance of services. Even some bonus compensation that has not yet been paid may not be forfeitable if the amount is considered “wages” that are owed to the employee. Often, the degree of employer discretion in awarding the bonus will be determinative as to whether the compensation is considered nonforfeitable. Once paid, however, even a discretionary bonus may be deemed to be wages not subject to forfeiture.

In the US, applicable state law may also limit the utility of clawbacks triggered by the breach of a restrictive covenant. Restrictive covenants may be wholly or partially unenforceable in some states. Recovery under such a clawback provision in these jurisdictions may not be possible. Multinational companies must consider applicable foreign law as well.

Relevant jurisdictions should be identified not only to determine the legal limitations to recovery, but also to ensure that appropriate steps are taken as soon as a policy is agreed upon to facilitate enforcement. At a minimum, this should include comprehensive documentation of employee communications, including acknowledgments and/or consents from the individuals subject to the clawback. The simplest enforcement mechanism, of course, is the forfeiture of prospective payments, but even these straightforward designs may be problematic if the employee may be construed as having a legal right to the compensation.

Another enforcement issue concerns the treatment of an employee who is financially unable to repay the required amount or who would suffer undue hardship by doing so. Both business and legal considerations may be implicated by the company’s actions. For example, agreeing to accept payment over an extended period of time could implicate the Sarbanes-Oxley Act’s prohibition against issuing companies granting loans or extending credit to executive officers and directors. A clawback policy that provides the company considerable discretion in application and enforcement will generally leave it with more options in such cases. Nevertheless, it may be desirable to determine default procedures to be followed in order to ensure consistent and fair implementation of the clawback.

February 24, 2010

Judge Reluctantly Approves SEC-Bank of America Settlement

Broc Romanek, CompensationStandards.com

A few weeks after the SEC announced it had settled (again) with Bank of America over its two actions against the company regarding alleged disclosure deficiencies in connection with BofA’s acquisition of Merrill Lynch (one action regarding bonus amounts; the other over operating losses), Judge Rakoff from the Southern District of New York ended his game of “will he or won’t he” and approved the settlement on Monday. As noted in this NY Times article, the Judge still expressed displeasure with the settlement – he called it “half-baked justice at best” – even as he issued this order.

Below is an excerpt from yesterday’s “Proxy Disclosure Blog” from Mark Borges that explains the changes to the SEC’s announced settlement:

As part of the Court’s order, he modified several of the remedial corporate governance and disclosure measures that BofA must follow for the next three years. Specifically, with respect to the requirements to engage an independent auditor to assess whether BofA’s accounting controls and procedures were adequate to assure proper public disclosures and to engage independent disclosure counsel to report solely to the audit committee on the adequacy of the bank’s public disclosures, the Bank’s choices must be fully acceptable to the SEC (not simply selected in consultation with the SEC), with the Court making the final selection if the parties cannot agree.

Interestingly, the Court also proposed that the selection of an independent compensation consultant to advise BofA’s compensation committee be made jointly by the compensation committee, the SEC, and the Court (rather than solely by the compensation committee) The Court gave the following reason for this suggestion:

The reason for this suggestion was the Court’s perception that too many compensation consultants have a skewed focus when it comes to executive compensation, concentrating on what they perceive is necessary to attract and keep “talent” (however defined), and more generally favoring ever larger compensation packages, while rarely taking account of limits that a reasonable shareholder might place on such expenditures.

However, in the face of BofA’s objection, the Court conceded the point, explaining that the matter should not be a “deal breaker,” especially in light of the “Say-on-Pay” vote that the Bank must conduct for the next three years.

While it’s possible that some of these remedial measures may be superseded by the legislative initiatives that are currently pending before Congress, the fate of these legislative proposals is still very much up in the air. Consequently, BofA’s disclosure practices may prove to be a very interesting “laboratory” over the next three years on the merits of these enhanced disclosure techniques.

Below is an excerpt from the NY Times’ article, noting that BofA still faces a battle with the New York Attorney General:

“The bank still faces a complaint filed last month by Andrew Cuomo, the attorney general of New York. The judge, after studying some of the evidence in Mr. Cuomo’s case, left room for that case to reach a different conclusion than the SEC’s.

In particular, the judge said the SEC had substantial evidence to support the bank’s claim that the dismissal of its general counsel, Timothy Mayopoulos, “was unrelated to the nondisclosures or to his increasing knowledge of Merrill’s losses.” That is the position the bank and its executives have argued since last spring, but Mr. Cuomo’s office asserts that the firing was related to advice from Mr. Mayopoulos.

Judge Rakoff said he had not determined which was right, but he said he was comfortable that the SEC’s conclusion was reasonable. “It is important to emphasize, with respect not just to the Mayopoulos termination but with respect to all the events that the attorney general interprets so very differently from the SEC, that the court is not here making any determination as to which of the two competing versions of the events is the correct one,” the judge wrote.

Mr. Cuomo’s complaint differs from the SEC’s in that it charges the bank as well as its former chief financial officer, Joe Price, and the chief executive, Kenneth Lewis, who retired early in part because of the mounting investigations into the merger.”

February 23, 2010

Another Burn Rate Commitment RiskMetrics Should Consider

Ed Hauder, Exequity

Well, as expected, RiskMetrics Research Group is being a little flexible when it comes to companies’ burn rate commitments for 2010 (for the full details, read this prior blog entry). But, as I indicated, given the speculative nature of two of the new allowable options, I don’t think many companies will easily undertake such commitments.

After giving this some thought, it seems to me that what RiskMetrics needs to do is provide an interim commitment equal to their current 3-year average burn rate or the applicable cap for their GICS under the 2010 caps, which would apply until either (1) the 2011 Burn Rate caps are typically produced and released, or (2) the 2011 Burn Rates and caps are produced on an accelerated basis, say by June 30, 2010, or September 1, 2010.

This would allow companies to commit to maintaining the burn rate at a reasonable level for a short period of time (no more than 1 year) until such time that RiskMetrics can pull, clean and assemble the 2011 Burn Rate Data. At that point, companies could then commit to either (1) maintaining their Burn Rate for the remaining portion of the 3 year period to the new 2011 Burn Rate cap, or (2) one of the other alternatives already set forth. This would enable companies to be in a better position to evaluate what they were committing to before obligating themselves. If not, and companies need RiskMetrics approval, I foresee a greater number of companies utilizing cash-settled equity vehicles such as cash-settled SARs and cash-settled RSUs, which don’t count towards burn rate as calculated by RiskMetrics.

February 22, 2010

Study: Committee Member and Chair Pay Trends

David Chun, Equilar

Recently, we wrapped up a research report using last year’s pay data to study board committee and chair pay trends. In this report, we segmented our annual Committee Member and Chair Compensation Trends report by S&P 600 (for companies under $500M in revenues), S&P 400 (for companies from $500M to $2B in revenues) and S&P 500 (for companies over $2B in revenues).

Among the key trends we found were:

– Median board level comp (cash retainer, equity awards, and total meeting fees) ranged from $107,564 at S&P 600 companies to $190,129 at S&P 500 companies (excludes payment for committee service)
– Compensation committee chair pay at large organizations rose 13.3% from 2006 to 2008 and compensation committee member pay at small organizations increased by 20%
– Across all committees, Governance members had the most tenure
– Audit committees also met most frequently

Here is where you can request a copy of the full report.

February 18, 2010

Proxy Season Preview of Compensation-Related Issues

Broc Romanek, CompensationStandards.com

Below is an excerpt from the transcript of a recent webcast on TheCorporateCounsel.net that I held with RiskMetrics’ Pat McGurn on the upcoming proxy season:

McGurn: We’re going to go through a couple of straight frames now on compensation-related issues.

The first one is the growing focus on compensation risk. This was obviously a huge issue at some of the financial services firms who were required by TARP to make voluminous disclosures last year. The SEC has now brought this requirement to the larger corporate community, and in particular, has spread it beyond just looking at pay for the named executive officers to include looking at other potentially significant risks created for employees downstream.

The tweaks that the SEC made in their final rules are going to have an impact this year. They did weaken the proposal a little bit when they changed the standard for disclosure to risks “reasonably likely to have a material adverse effect.” By making that change, the SEC scaled down the size of the disclosures that companies would have to make. In fact, we’re hearing a lot of advisers telling boards that after they go through this analysis they may end up disclosing little or nothing about riskiness in the system if they don’t find any material adverse effects.

From the investor perspective, we would hope that most boards would go well beyond that compliance notion, to provide more detail about the process they went through in looking at pay riskiness and also, very importantly, what sorts of provisions they have in place to mitigate excessive risk – things like a hold-till-retirement or through-retirement policy, strong clawback provisions, bonus banks or hold back provisions.

We’ve been asked how we will view silence on the part of issuers in the next season. From our perspective, we’re looking to provide our clients with some disclosure about what companies say about their compensation risk analysis process. To the extent that a company’s disclosures are non-existent, we’re going to have to say that the company didn’t say much of anything about this issue.

That’s why I advise issuers to provide at least some detail. If you say nothing, that’s the same disclosure as companies that did nothing. If you say nothing, I don’t think people are going to assume there was a robust process for determining that there was nothing material to disclose.

That information we provide to our clients is not necessarily going to become a determinant of the recommendation that we make for a particular board of directors. When we revamped our policy during the off season, we raised the profile of compensation risk issues. We are continuing to look at them, and we hope that the boards can help us in that process by having their own robust disclosure in that area.

So we’ll have to wait and see on how this issue plays out during the season. I think the best approach here is to provide as much transparency into the company’s processes as possible.

Romanek: From what I’ve heard, there is a wide variety of different advice being given by outside law firms to in-house folks. The warning, even for companies for whom the disclosure might feel like boilerplate, is that investors are going to be scrutinizing disclosure more closely than people would think.

McGurn: I have never been an advocate of the absolute statements that some of the TARP participants made last year that, “There’s no pay risk at our company whatsoever.” I know some issuers are fearful that making those sorts of broad generalizations could come back to haunt them at some future date.

But there’s a huge middle ground between avoiding making broad general statements that there are no risks and providing zero disclosure. I think you can provide a great deal of confidence to investors by detailing the process that the board went through and, as I mentioned before, pointing out what sort of mitigators that the company has baked into its compensation structure to provide that the risks don’t ripen into excessive risks at some point in the future.

Our second frame on compensation issues goes to poor pay practices and in particular, looking at the election of directors, which is going to be the battlefield for most companies when it comes to executive compensation this year.

Many of the issues that drove our negative recommendations and, in some instances, some high “no” votes against members of the board of directors last year, are back again this year. I’ve already seen a number of companies putting new gross-up provisions in place, excessive perquisites, large severance pay-for-failure packages, and the like. Even though there have been moves towards reform made by a number of boards over the last year or so, we are going to continue to see over the next couple of years companies that haven’t got the message yet coming forward.

As far as shareholder proposals go, we’re expecting to see repeats of the campaigns related to gross-ups, golden coffins, hold-till-retirement or through-retirement programs, and bonus banks. But we are going to see some new pay-related proposals this year as well.

One novel proposal basically asks companies to have no sitting CEOs on their pay panels. It will be interesting to see how that issue resonates with investors. I think the ban there may cost them some support in the long run. But it will be an interesting debate over membership on pay panels.

There are a couple of other interesting proposals. One looks to tie pay levels to succession planning at companies. Another looks to eliminate accelerated vesting under the various equity programs at firms. There’s also a resolution that seeks to prohibit hedging and pledging by senior executives of their shares. One new proposal that crossed over into the employment union realm is tying pay to pension funding.

Finally, there is a trio of proposal types, which I call the “TARPie Harpies,” that look to hold some of the companies that had gotten out from under the TARP program to the TARP structures, seeking limits on asymmetric pay practices by forcing disclosure of non-deductible pay, or seeking to force companies to have their award recipients hold the bulk of their variable pay for five years.

It will be fascinating to see if we continue to see more and more traction for pay-related “no” vote campaigns. They jumped from being almost a non-factor in a director election to an issue last year, when about 10% of the S&P 500 firms led to opposition of 10% or greater. So it is an issue that seems to getting a lot of traction these days.

The final pay issue is the 800-pound gorilla of “say on pay.” We’ve seen a delay in the federal mandate, but we still expect that legislation to be in place for 2011. I think for this year, we’re already seeing a substantial number of companies – most recently, Edison International – announce that they would voluntarily subject themselves to” say on pay” votes on the management side of the equation.

Before all is said and done, I’m guessing there will be well over 50 companies voluntarily putting it on the ballot this year, in addition to the several hundred TARP companies that aren’t out from under the TARP, who will have it on their ballot as well. So we will see a substantial number of “say on pay” resolutions on the management side.

But since the mandate isn’t in place yet, we’ll also see a bumper crop of shareholder resolutions on the topic. We’ve been hearing from proponents that upwards of 100 proposals, or about the same amount that have been offered in each of the last several years, would likely come through the hoppers at corporate offices this year. Again, we would expect some issuers to front run these proposals by putting their own management proposal in the ballot.

Looking at the “say on pay” world going forward, we asked our clients what their approach would be to the election of directors and management-proposed say on pay resolutions, if and when both items are on the ballot.

Pretty much a straight majority, 52% of the respondents, said they would adopt with what’s been called the “yellow card, red card” approach, borrowing the terminology from soccer. In the first year, if an MSOP resolution is on the ballot, investors would use that to raise the yellow card, that is to say, a caution, as a way of addressing those issues, rather than voting against members of compensation committees or board. Only if that yellow card was ignored would they, in the next year, play the red card, which would be a negative vote against members of compensation committees or full boards.

Interestingly about 42% of the respondents to our survey indicated they would consider votes against both MSOP and compensation committee members in the same year. I think this is probably largely reflective of the fact that there still are a lot of skeptics in the investor community to the whole concept of say on pay. They question whether it is as strong a statement as simply making a vote against members of boards of directors, which they see as having a greater impact. We’ll see how that debate plays out and, ultimately, whether issuers and investors embrace the “yellow card, red card” approach rather than simply doing it belt and suspenders.

The management proposals that were on the ballot in ’09 passed with overwhelming support, by and large; the typical resolution received about 90% of the votes cast in favor. Given the fact that broker votes are still in the mix on those management say on pay resolutions, we look for the vote support level to remain pretty high.

Will we see the first-ever majority “no” vote on a management-proposed say on pay in the U.S. market place? I think that’s an open question. If I had to guess right now, given the number and type of companies that have it on their ballot, it is probably unlikely, but it isn’t beyond the realm of possibility. We’ll keep an eye on that as the year goes on.

February 17, 2010

More Samples: Companies Complying with the SEC’s New Rules

Broc Romanek, CompensationStandards.com

Last Thursday’s blog listing companies that have filed proxy materials under the SEC’s new rules was popular – here are some more samples that either members informed me about or that I dug up myself:

Weyerhauser Company
Synovus Financial Corp.
AGL Resources
Huntington Bancshares
Signature Eyewear
NetSol Technologies
Champion Industries
Frederick’s of Hollywood
Schlumberger Ltd.
MDU Resources Group
Covidien Public Limited Company
Eli Lilly

Thanks to Ken Wagner of Peabody Energy Corp. and Matt Tolland of Wilson Sonsini for pointing some of these new ones out! We should be seeing a lot more proxy statements filed going forward. One member notes that in reading the first batch of filers, it is interesting how companies define “diversity.” Some don’t include gender in that definition, some do. I’m sure we will see surveys on this point at the end of the proxy season.

In his “Proxy Disclosure Blog,” Mark Borges continues to provide detailed analysis of the new proxy statements as they roll in.

CDIs: Corp Fin Issues Six More on the SEC’s New Rules

With the federal government finally open yesterday (albeit two hours late) in DC, Corp Fin issued six more Compliance & Disclosure Interpretations on the SEC’s new rules. They include:

Item 401 – New Question 116.07
Item 402(a) – New Question 117.05
Item 402(c) – New Question 119.21
Item 402(c) – New Question 119.22
Item 402(c) – New Question 119.23
Form 8-K’s Item 5.07 – New Question 121A.01

February 16, 2010

FINRA’s Board Reviews Allegations of Its Own Excessive Compensation – Including Mary Schapiro!

Broc Romanek, CompensationStandards.com

According to this article, FINRA’s Board of Governors will review allegations that senior executives – including SEC Chair and former FINRA head Mary Schapiro – received excessive compensation in 2008, despite the organization’s operating losses. FINRA is conducting the review in response to a lawsuit brought by Amerivet Securities.

February 11, 2010

Much Ado About Banking: When is a Trend not a Trend?

Fred Whittlesey, Hay Group

We continue to be inundated with daily media coverage, articles, and blogs about the shifting landscape for executive pay in the banking sector. Many are asking if these changes will spread to other industries. A while back, a WSJ story talked about a “range of firms” altering their executive pay policies cited six non-banking companies (yes, six) which have changed some aspect of their executive pay for a variety of reasons. These six companies range from $4 billion to $39 billion in market cap and are in six industry sectors as diverse as apparel, mining, and pharmaceuticals. That certainly is a range of firms, both a wide and a narrow one.

The article stated “Among the changes: more stock-based compensation, with longer waiting periods before it can be sold; higher performance hurdles for bonuses; and limits on perks, severance and supplemental pensions.” Yet the article goes on to say “The shifts are far from universal. Some experts say bank-pay limits are having little impact elsewhere in corporate America.” One consultant cited in the article agrees by saying “I don’t see any trend in that direction.” Like Seinfeld, is this a story about nothing?

If you don’t want to read the entire article, you have the crux of it. Huge changes in banking dominate the headlines, but I think many, perhaps most, companies in the US are reading those headlines and stories, and shrugging. Smaller and mid-sized companies, particularly those in the technology and life sciences sectors, reaction range from yawns to smirks. Supplemental pension? They don’t even have a pension to supplement. More stock-based compensation? Given the overhang and run rate constraints and the all-employee equity compensation philosophies of these companies that is not likely to happen. Perks, you mean like the company-subsidized (or company-paid) cafeteria for all employees? You get my point.

So what about the looming question? What if they (the government) extend similar rules to all companies? In some ways they did, and are, via regulation, legislation, and the ripple effect on proxy advisors and institutional shareholders’ policies. It is unfortunate that successful innovative firms who apparently have had the “right” pay model for many decades are subject to increasing disclosure requirements and the associated media scrutiny triggered by those with the “wrong” pay model. The challenge for executive pay advisors is to help clients who are doing it right not get caught up in the frenzy about those doing it wrong, particularly since the “right” and “wrong” columns keep changing. The answer to “what are other companies doing?” is about more than just peer group construction at a time like this.

Remember when restricted stock was wrong – then after Enron and the Breeden Report, it was right? Then after the spread of RSUs without performance contingencies it became wrong again, and now right once again thanks to TARP. Many of us are having trouble understanding how large increases in fixed compensation and restricted stock are reconciled with the “pay for performance” mantra of the past few decades. These high-fixed low-variable models almost look like something a governmental organization would use to pay their employees, and probably do not represent a nascent trend for thousands of US companies.

I think it’s time for the business media to return to reporting news rather than concocting theories and then seeking a few data points that support a headline about nothing.

February 10, 2010

Compensation Consultants: Following in the Footsteps of Auditors?

Paul Hodgson, The Corporate Library

Below is something I recently blogged on The Corporate Library’s blog:

The news that Hewitt has spun off its compensation consultancy business, the news that Ira Kay left Watson Wyatt to start his own compensation boutique seem to be at odds with the fact that Towers Perrin and Watson Wyatt have joined forces to form some kind of super-consultancy. One thing is sure. This is all a reaction to the news that fees will have to be disclosed in many instances. Not only that but “other work” performed by a consultant beyond its executive compensation work for the board will also have to be disclosed. See this blog post for details.

With this in mind one would have expected all the comp consultants to be divesting like mad, just like the auditors did when consultancy work for the companies they audited was banned in Sox. Unless of course, the merger of Towers Perrin and Watson Wyatt into Towers Watson is prequel to divesting the now super-comp-consultancy.

What’s it going to be called?

Perrin Wyatt?

February 9, 2010

The League Table: Compensation Consultant Market Shares

David Chun, Equilar

In our “2010 Consultant League Report,” we took a look at annual reports and proxy filings of public companies to determine which consulting firms had the largest, most profitable clients, and which had the best market share in various indices, sectors, and geographic locations. Although large consulting firms consistently have a bigger presence in the market, we found some smaller firms gaining market share in certain industries and regions. Our data was featured in a recent Wall Street Journal article on current consulting trends, “More Boards Opting for Independent Pay Advisers.”

Below is a sample table from the report, detailing the market share of firms engaged by the Russell 3000 (in comparison, here are last year’s numbers):

1. Towers Watson – 22.3%
2. Frederic W. Cook & Co. – 13.0%
3. Mercer – 10.5%
4. Hewitt Associates – 9.3%
5. Pearl Meyer & Partners – 7.2%
6. Compensia – 4.3%
7. Radford – 4.2%
8. Hay Group – 3.2%
9. Semler Brossy Consulting – 2.2%
10. Longnecker & Associates – 1.4%

Other charts in the 2010 Consultant League Report include:

– Financial Data: Firms’ client base ranked by revenue, net income, year-end market capitalization, total assets, and one- and three-year total shareholder return
– Indices: The firms with the most market share in the Fortune 1000, S&P 1500, and more
– Sectors: Eight different industry categories, from Healthcare to Financial Services
– Geography: The firms with the most market share in each of four U.S. regions
– Engagement: The market share of firms engaged by management

The complete report is provided to all Equilar Knowledge Center subscribers. Non-subscribers can request a copy of the report.