The Advisors' Blog

This blog features wisdom from respected compensation consultants and lawyers

October 25, 2013

ISS Releases Draft 2014 Policy Updates for Comment

Broc Romanek, CompensationStandards.com

On Wednesday, ISS posted its draft 2014 Policy Updates, with a comment deadline of November 4th. That’s just two weeks – so no time to procrastinate. There are two proposed changes – changes to the pay-for-performance quantitative screen and board responsiveness to majority-supported shareholder proposals, as noted in Ning Chiu’s blog and Gibson Dunn’s blog. And here’s an excerpt from this Sullivan & Cromwell memo:

Board Responsiveness to Shareholder Proposals

– In determining whether to recommend withhold votes against directors, ISS would take a case-by-case approach in assessing whether a company has adequately implemented a shareholder proposal that received majority support in a prior year. ISS would take into consideration (among other things) the company’s disclosure on shareholder outreach efforts and the rationale for its level of implementation, as well as the level of support the proposal received.

– This potential broadening of what it means for a board to be “responsive” should be viewed together with last year’s change to lower the threshold for when the board needs to be responsive – beginning in 2014, the ISS responsiveness analysis will be triggered for directors if a proposal received the support of a majority of votes cast (not majority of shares outstanding) in the prior year.

Elimination of One-Year TSR from Pay-for-Performance Analysis

– The second proposed change relates to the pay-for-performance assessment used by ISS to formulate a say-on-pay recommendation. The ISS assessment begins with a quantitative analysis with three components, one of which measures the difference between (a) the percentile rank within the ISS-selected peer group of a company’s total shareholder return (or TSR) and (b) the percentile rank within that peer group of a company’s CEO pay.

– Under current policies, this metric is calculated on both one-year and three-year bases, weighed 40% and 60%, respectively. The proposed change would eliminate the one-year measurement, and base this aspect of the component solely on three-year TSR, on the theory that this removes volatility and improves comparability of sustained long-term performance.