The Advisors' Blog

This blog features wisdom from respected compensation consultants and lawyers

Monthly Archives: December 2011

December 5, 2011

It’s Done! 2012 Executive Compensation Disclosure Treatise

Broc Romanek, CompensationStandards.com

Dave Lynn and Mark Borges just wrapped up the Lynn, Borges & Romanek’s “2012 Executive Compensation Disclosure Treatise & Reporting Guide.” For those that want to access it online, it’s now posted on this site. For those that like a hard copy, it will be finished being printed in a few weeks.

How to Order a Hard-Copy: Remember that a hard copy of the 2012 Treatise is not part of a CompensationStandards.com membership so it must be purchased separately – however, CompensationStandards.com members can obtain a 40% discount by trying a no-risk trial now. This will ensure delivery of this 1200-plus page comprehensive Treatise as soon as it’s done being printed.

December 2, 2011

New ISS Paper on Pay Disparity

Broc Romanek, CompensationStandards.com

Subodh Mishra of ISS blogged this a few days ago:

ISS Corporate Services recently released a white paper, “Bridging the Pay Divide: Trends in C-Suite Pay Disparities.” This white paper examined the total direct compensation for the top five highest-paid executives at Russell 3000 companies in fiscal years 2008, 2009, and 2010. Total direct compensation is defined as the sum of pay received from: base salary, bonus, non-equity incentive plan compensation, stock awards, option awards, change in pension value and nonqualified deferred compensation earnings, and all other compensation, such as perquisites.

Here are some of the paper’s key takeaways:

– The gap between total direct compensation of the CEO and next highest paid named executive officers has closed dramatically since fiscal 2008.

– As of fiscal 2010 and where the CEO is the top paid executive, the pay gap is most pronounced at large-cap companies, where CEOs received, on average, 2.4 times the pay of the next highest paid executive officer. By comparison, the multiple is 2.1 times at Russell 3000 companies below the S&P 1500.

– Across sectors, companies in the materials sector saw the largest pay spread with an average multiple of 2.4 in fiscal 2010, while, conversely, telecommunications firms had an average multiple of just 1.9.

– The prevalence of “excessive” multiples between the CEO and next highest paid executive, defined here as three or more, declined markedly from fiscal 2008 when evidenced at more than half of all Russell 3000 companies.

– Across indices, the CEO’s share of total compensation of the top five earning officers dropped radically from fiscal 2008 to 2009, though has held steady into 2010 with CEOs claiming 42.2 percent of the total pay pie across the full Russell 3000 universe.

December 1, 2011

The True Costs of Being Public: More Than You Think

Broc Romanek, CompensationStandards.com

This recent CFO.com article notes how going public can be costly for shareholders, particularly the hike in executive pay. Here is an excerpt:

Being public adds about $2.5 million, on average, to a company’s cost structure, with $1.5 million of that devoted to higher compensation for CEOs, CFOs, and others in the finance function, such as investor-relations professionals, according to the survey. That figure also covers increased board costs, as more than 80% of companies had either added new members to their boards of directors or increased director compensation prior to their IPO.

Indeed, Angie’s List, which went public this week, notes in its S-1 filing that it boosted executive cash compensation to hit the 75th percentile, based on a study of other pre-IPO companies, in advance of its offering. “As part of the compensation committee’s comprehensive review of executive compensation levels during July 2010, we found that our base salaries generally fell significantly below the median in both of our pre-IPO and public companies studies,” according to the S-1. As a result, Angie’s List made “significant increases in recognition of both the growth of our company over the last few years and the efforts that would be required of all our executive officers as we began to move toward becoming a public company.”