Top US CEOs reaped billions from stock gains in recent years
BOSTON–CEOs at large U.S. companies collectively realized at least $6 billion more in compensation than initially estimated in annual disclosures in the five years after the financial crisis first hit, according to a Reuters analysis. The reason for the windfall: the soaring value of their stock awards.
About 300 CEOs who served throughout the 2009-2013 period at S&P 500 companies together realized about $22 billion in compensation in the form of pay, bonuses and share and option grants, or an average of $73 million each, figures provided by executive compensation data firm Equilar show.
That compares to about $16 billion initially reported in annual company summary compensation tables, which include estimates for the value of stock grants based on the price of shares at the time of awards.
The comparison does not include pensions and perks such as country club memberships and use of corporate jets for private use. The study also excludes rewards reaped by other top executives, such as chief financial officers and chief operating officers, and compensation for CEOs who did not serve the full five years.
Further gains in share prices in 2014 and so far this year will only have increased the gap between the annual disclosures and the amount actually derived from the awards, with the full picture for last year only becoming clear over the next couple of months. The S&P 500’s total return, including dividends, was 166 percent from the end of 2008 through Monday of this week, according to S&P Dow Jones Indices.
The impact of the stock market gains on executive pay illustrated in the study will strengthen concerns about how much of an impact the U.S. Federal Reserve’s easy money policies have had on income inequality. Critics say that by raising the value of assets, such as stocks, the Fed’s stimulus has helped those who are already wealthy even as median household income declined 4 percent between 2009-2013.
The bull market also has some investors re-evaluating how they judge compensation plans. In some cases, they say CEOs may be benefiting greatly from a rising tide even when their performance might be weak.
“You’re seeing overpayment, or outsized payments, for what is market performance or mediocre performance,” said Aeisha Mastagni, an investment officer for the $191 billion California State Teachers’ Retirement System, who helps oversee its votes on executive pay proposals at company annual meetings. “Directors can’t ignore the issue of pay inequality or rising executive pay.”
However, more companies are disclosing their realized pay figures and some are eager to defend the supercharged rewards if shareholders have also benefited. Some of the highest paid executives also often appear in top CEO lists compiled by investors and others because they have run companies so successfully that their share prices have gone through the roof.
An example is John Martin, the CEO of drug maker Gilead Sciences Inc, who has become the best compensated executive of a major U.S. company since the crisis, when factoring in stock and options. He realized $400.6 million in total compensation from 2009 to 2013, according to the Reuters analysis of the nearly 300 CEOs tracked by Equilar. That is poised to top $600 million by this summer, mostly because of additional exercises of stock options. Their value has surged well beyond the estimates in annual disclosures.
Gilead had estimated Martin’s compensation totaled only $75 million over the five years from 2009 to 2013. But Gilead’s shares have climbed nearly 300 percent since the end of 2008 while net income almost quadrupled to $12.1 billion in 2014, fueled by sales of its hepatitis C drug Sovaldi. The company declined to comment for this story.
The second highest-paid CEO over the period was Starbucks Corp’s Howard Schultz who realized $366 million, or more than three times the $97 million reported in summary compensation tables. That upside is largely the result of the cafe chain’s shares climbing 931 percent since the end of 2008 as earnings surged.
“When the company performs well and the stock price increases, our executives, partners (employees) and shareholders are all rewarded,” a Starbucks spokeswoman said.
The equity-oriented pay structure is good for CEOs of high-growth companies, but also bites those who don’t show big growth. Larry Ellison, CEO of Oracle Corp, realized $282 million during the five-year period analyzed by Reuters. That was $100 million below the value reported in Oracle’s summary compensation tables.
The software giant’s total stock return since 2008 has been several percentage points better than the S&P 500 Index, according to FactSet. But off a large base, profit growth has been relatively slow. Operating income has increased by 8 percent to $14.8 billion over its past three fiscal years. Oracle declined comment.
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