How Use - and Misuse - of Executive Compensation Surveys Leads to Upward
Escalation of CEO Compensation*
By Frederic W. Cook, Chair of Frederic W. Cook & Co.
- Setting target pay levels at, e.g., 75th percentile,
without justification of relative size and performance, thereby creating a
ratchet effect.
- Biased survey sample – selecting companies that are larger, better
performing, or higher paying than your company.
- Using surveys for pay comparisons without taking account of
relative size and/or performance.
- When doing size and performance comparisons, selecting only those
metrics that show the company favorably, and rejecting those that do not.
-
Using survey results more frequently when pay is going up than
when it is going down.
- Making the case, selectively, that certain of your executive
positions are more responsible/important to your company than the survey
benchmarks, without giving equal consideration to those of your positions that
may be less responsible or important.
- Setting target bonus and LTI amounts based on actual payouts at
others – particularly egregious practice when the economy is improving.
- Selectively disclosing to the Compensation Committee only those
surveys that support what the company wants to do.
– Burying the others
- Misuse of statistics, for example, focusing on pay averages rather
than medians, and disregarding zeros when computing averages and medians.
– For example, if five of 10 companies grant time-based restricted
stock and the average of these five is $500,000, it is not right to say that the
average company grants restricted stock worth $500,000
- Selectively surveying individual compensation elements without
considering total compensation.
- Including one-time recruitment or buy-out awards in total
compensation comparisons.
- Implying greater prevalence to highly questionable practices to
encourage adoption.
– For example, benefits advocates are notorious for lumping ERISA
Excess Plans, which only treat executives equitably, with SERPs, which treat
executives better than other salaried employees, and calling them all SERPs
- Including high Black-Scholes option values in surveys and then
using such values to justify large grants of less risky equity compensation,
such as restricted stock.
– All pay types are not fungible
- Using new, lower accounting-based binomial stock option values to
derive new stock option grant amounts based on surveys that contain stock option
grant values based on high Black-Scholes values.
– This is complicated but very important
– In anticipation of stock option expensing, companies are adopting
stock option valuation techniques that produce lower values for expensing
purposes than earlier Black-Scholes option values, e.g., 20% of option price vs.
30%
– And currently lower stock market volatility is contributing to this
downward pressure on stock option grant values per share
– Compensation surveys, however, have not adopted these newer
techniques and are including in total compensation stock option grant values
based on the higher Black-Scholes results from prior years
– Using the newer formulas with lower values, to recommend stock
option grants to the compensation committee that match survey amounts based on
higher values would be duplicitous and could warrant termination for cause if
done intentionally
– Committees should insist that recommendations based on surveys use
the same assumptions as were used in the survey
- Combining several of the above abuses in such a fashion that any
high-paying company could show date to its Compensation Committee that proves its
executives are underpaid.
* This
Reference Paper A accompanies a speech delivered by Frederic W. Cook to the
Stanford Directors' College on June 20, 2005, and webcast on June 21, 2005 to
members of CompensationStandards.com
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