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Pay under pressure: in a down market, the spotlight always shines on CEO compensation. But will the scrutiny actually drive change this time--or is this yet another passing storm? (Compensation).


The outrage was impossible to miss. "We are appalled and just disgusted," said John Ward, president of the Association of Professional Flight Attendants The Association of Professional Flight Attendants (APFA) represents the 19,900 US-based flight attendants of American Airlines. APFA union headquarters is located in Euless, Texas. , at an April 17 press conference. "It's the equivalent of an obscene gesture from management." Ward was referring to the discovery that while American Airlines American Airlines

Major U.S. airline. American was created through a merger of several smaller U.S. airlines and incorporated in 1934. It continued to buy the routes of other airlines, becoming an international carrier in the 1970s; its routes include South America, the
 was asking its employees for a massive pay cut to avoid bankruptcy, it hadn't disclosed that top executives were being paid up to twice their base salary in retention bonuses and having their own pensions put in a bankruptcy-protected trust. Chastened chas·ten  
tr.v. chas·tened, chas·ten·ing, chas·tens
1. To correct by punishment or reproof; take to task.

2. To restrain; subdue: chasten a proud spirit.

3.
, Donald Carty, CEO (1) (Chief Executive Officer) The highest individual in command of an organization. Typically the president of the company, the CEO reports to the Chairman of the Board.  of American's parent company AMR (1) (Adaptive Multi-Rate) A variable rate speech codec selected by the 3GPP for the 3G evolution of the GSM cellphone system (WCDMA). Using the Algebraic CELP (ACELP) compression technology, AMR provides toll quality sound at transmission rates from 4.75 to 12. , agreed to drop the bonuses, but the damage was done, and he later was forced to resign.

Time was when Carty and his colleagues in the corner office could do no wrong, when the admittedly sky-high compensation of the CEO was seen as just reward for an equally high return to shareholders. But now, a litany of financial scandals and a sagging stock market have punctured CEOs' once-unassailable armor, changing their image from a group of brilliant leaders to a class of plundering plutocrats. As inaccurate as both extremes may be, the perception pendulum has swung hard and fast. CEOs are now cast as villains, not heroes. To wit, a CNN/USA Today/Gallup Poll in 2002 ranked CEOs of large corporations just above car dealers in trustworthiness, with 73 percent of respondents agreeing that you "can't be too careful with them."

All of this mistrust means that the system by which executives are paid is coming under extreme scrutiny. Once monitored by a small group of hard-core activists, today shareholders, directors, journalists and legislators are deeply focused on how much CEOs are paid--and whether they deserve it. Although the attention to executive pay has traditionally waxed and waned according to according to
prep.
1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians.

2. In keeping with: according to instructions.

3.
 the economic cycle, this time people are wondering whether the process itself is broken. "The stock market bubble A stock market bubble is a type of economic bubble taking place in stock markets when price of stocks rise and become overvalued by any measure of stock valuation.

The existence of stock market bubbles is at odds with the assumptions of efficient market theory which assumes
 has burst, the economy is in recession, and there are a number of layoffs and restructuring," says James Rogers For the mathematician see Leonard James Rogers.

For the United States Representative, see James Rogers (congressman).
James Rogers VC (June 2, 1875 - October 28,1961) was an Australian recipient of the Victoria Cross, the highest and most prestigious award for gallantry
, CEO of Cincinnati energy company Cinergy. "As a consequence, there is greater emphasis on the disparity in earnings [between workers and executives]. For CEOs, the pressure is greater than it's ever been."

To each their own numbers

The pressure may be greater, but what a bout the money itself? Despite a huge amount of publicly available information on the subject, it's hard to find any consensus on whether pay is up, down or sideways overall. There are a wide variety of different methods by which annual compensation is measured, and each publication that covers the issue, eager to stake out its own turf, jumps to a different conclusion. Says Judith Fischer, managing director of ECAS ECAS Electronically Controlled Air Suspension
ECAS Environmental Compliance Assessment System
ECAS Eight Color Asteroid Survey
ECAS Emergency Close Air Support
ECAS European Center of Adaptive Systems
ECAS Euro-Citizens' Action Service
, a unit of Towers Perrin Towers Perrin is a global professional services firm.

It was established 1 March 1934 as Towers, Perrin, Forster & Crosby. The umbrella name of Towers Perrin was adopted in 1987.
: "[The level of] executive compensation is in the eye of the beholder."

According to BusinessWeek, which counts salary, bonus, exercised options, restricted shares and long-term incentive payments, but not the value of unexercised options, total average pay for 365 executives of the largest public companies fell by 33 percent to an average take of $7.4 million. It was the second double-digit decline in a row. Yet Fortune, which featured an oinking pig in a suit on its cover, looked at the median pay for 100 large public companies and drew the opposite conclusion--that pay actually rose 14 percent in a year of economic devastation. It is worth noting that Equilar, which compiled the Fortune research, published results from its own broader study of 473 S&P 500 companies, and found total compensation had fallen by 10 percent.

The Wall Street Journal had median numbers similar to Fortune's, but took the perspective that the tide has turned, and executives will soon be getting a dose of much needed fiscal discipline. Towers Perrin offered up evidence that salaries and bonuses of those who had been CEOs in both 2001 and 2002 were up 6 percent and 10 percent, respectively--but interpreted it as a sign of moderation because the percentages were lower.

On the individual level, there are certainly high-profile cases of abuse. The press happily hoisted executives such as Tenet Healthcare's Jeffrey Barbakow--who exercised stock options worth $111 million in a year when the company was being investigated for Medicare abuse--upon their own petards. Still other CEOs, such as Tyco's Dennis Kozlowski Leo Dennis Kozlowski (born November 16 1946, Newark, New Jersey) is a former CEO of Tyco International, convicted of misappropriating more than $400 million of the company's funds. He is currently serving at least eight years and four months in prison.  and HealthSouth's Richard Scrushy, cashed in consistently over the past few years--and then found themselves under criminal indictment.

Combined with the loss of thousands of jobs, it made for ugly, often embarrassing reading. A study released last year by United for a Fair Economy showed that CEOs involved accounting or financial scandals had earned 70 percent more than CEOs of other companies between 1999 and 2001, while their companies' shares lost 73 percent of their value. "It's not healthy if the world out there thinks that CEOs and top people are getting outrageous compensation compared to the workers," says Corning Chairman and CEO James R. Houghton James R. Houghton is the Retired Chairman of the Board of Corning Incorporated. Houghton has Bachelor of Arts and master of business administration degrees from Harvard University (A.B., 1958, MBA, 1962). .

Whatever the perception, one thing is dear: There are major changes afoot in the way executives are paid. "Compensation committees are going to be much more intense about reviewing pay-for-performance-based systems," says Larry Hirsch, chairman and CEO of Centrex.

Start with the fact that the main instrument of pay over the past few years--the stock option--has ceased its upward trajectory, at least for now. For most of the bull market, options were viewed as an easy way to link the shareholder to the executive. If the stock went up, everyone won. If it fell, the executive's options were worthless. "Some executives thought that options could bring world peace and solve cancer," quips Paula Todd Paula Todd (born 1959) is a Canadian journalist, lawyer and author, best known as host of THE VERDICT with PAULA TODD, the nightly, live, prime-time legal and justice affairs program on CTV Newsnet. , a principal at Towers Perrin. Yet despite better corporate governance Corporate Governance

The relationship between all the stakeholders in a company. This includes the shareholders, directors, and management of a company, as defined by the corporate charter, bylaws, formal policy, and rule of law.
 and more involved boards, the sheer numbers of option grants still allowed many heads of slumping companies to take home hundreds of millions--while others who managed to outperform their competitors found themselves with worthless packages.

Now, with the S&P 500 dropping 13 percent in 2001 and another 23 percent in 2002, many options granted in prior years are entirely underwater, and unlikely to surface soon. Because options make up as much as two-thirds of the value of total compensation packages, this fact alone has reduced CEO pay considerably. And while plenty of boards are still happy to grant piles of options at a much lower price, Todd says the actual number of shares granted hasn't risen--so the value of option grants has dropped in this terrible market.

There was another clear reason for options' popularity: They were not counted on a company's income statement as a compensation expense. Yet they did have a major cost. They diluted the value of existing shareholders' shares, causing a hangover that has now made it impossible for some smaller companies to grant any new shares even if they wanted to.

With so many options floating around, boards lost control and relied on "competitive data" to determine who made what. Says Brian Hall

For other people named Brian Hall, see Brian Hall (disambiguation).
Brian Hall (born Glasgow, 22 November 1946) was a compact and hard-working midfield player in the hugely successful Liverpool team of the 1970s.
, professor of business administration at Harvard Business School Harvard Business School, officially named the Harvard Business School: George F. Baker Foundation, and also known as HBS, is one of the graduate schools of Harvard University. : "If you're going to put that much fuel in the rocket, you better make sure your internal controls are sufficient to withstand that pressure so you don't have explosions." But the controls weren't good enough. And the ensuing en·sue  
intr.v. en·sued, en·su·ing, en·sues
1. To follow as a consequence or result. See Synonyms at follow.

2. To take place subsequently.
 scandals at traditionally high-paying, options-oriented companies such as Enron, WorldCom, Tyco and others left many people convinced that there was a linkage between outsize out·size  
n.
1. An unusual size, especially a very large size.

2. A garment of unusual size.

adj. also out·sized
Unusually large, weighty, or extensive.
 compensation and cooking the books.

That's why board compensation committees--and some CEOs as well--are now trying to limit the damage. More than 200 companies have volunteered to account for options on their income statements, and the Financial Accounting Standards Board Financial Accounting Standards Board (FASB)

Board composed of independent members who create and interpret Generally Accepted Accounting Principles (GAAP).
 is planning to take up the issue later this year. If it becomes mandatory, it would mean a major hit to earnings for heavy users, primarily technology companies, and a change in their appeal relative to other types of pay. Says Hirsch, whose company began expensing options in April: "Once you expense the option and it can be compared to other forms of long-term compensation, we'll see some rational decisions about pay."

A harsh take on options

Some people have even gone so far as to question whether stock options are an effective motivational tool for top executives. "Options are terribly capricious capricious adv., adj. unpredictable and subject to whim, often used to refer to judges and judicial decisions which do not follow the law, logic or proper trial procedure. A semi-polite way of saying a judge is inconsistent or erratic. ," says John Biggs For other persons named John Biggs, see John Biggs (disambiguation).

John Biggs is a Labour Party politician and member of the London Assembly representing City and East London. He is a former leader of the London Borough of Tower Hamlets.
, former CEO of giant pension fund TIAA-CREF TIAA-CREF Teachers Insurance and Annuity Association - College Retirement Equities Fund , and a director at Boeing and JP Morgan Chase. Biggs sees three major downsides to options, starting with the fact that they focus attention more on the day-to-day fluctuations of the stock than on the long-term running of the business. "They create an obsessive interest in the current price," he says. Biggs also believes that options don't increase long-term stock ownership, a critical objective for CEOs, and that they encourage executives to leverage their company and not pay dividends, which can be as harmful for investors as the obvious hit to the stock price.

As a replacement--or, in some cases, an add-on--many companies are turning to grants of restricted stock. Unlike options, which have value only when the stock price rises, restricted stock is always worth something, even if it falls by 99 percent. Like options, it must be held for a period of time, often at least five years. The idea is to provide an incentive that isn't quite as arbitrary as options seem to be--and also, say some critics, to find a way to pay executives in a flat market. "There s definitely been a shift from options to restricted stock," says Don Delves, president of Chicago pay consultancy The Delves Group. "But if it's just a straight shift from plain vanilla Refers to the bare minimum of functions that are known to be available in an application or system. Contrast with bells and whistles.  options to plain vanilla restricted stock, you've gone from a gamble to a guarantee, and that accomplishes nothing."

At Exxon Mobil, the compensation committee decided not to award any stock options to CEO Lee Raymond Lee R. Raymond (born August 13, 1938) was the Chief Executive Officer and Chairman of ExxonMobil from 1999 to 2005. He had previously been the CEO of Exxon since 1993. He joined the company in 1963 and has been president since 1987 and a director since 1984.  in 2002, instead granting him $17 million in restricted stock. According to the proxy: "The Committee concluded that, at this time, in this industry, and in this Company, restricted stock is more effective in aligning executives' interests with those of shareholders and in achieving the objective of retention." And at Apple Computer, the board allowed founder and CEO Steve Jobs Steve Jobs - Stephen Jobs  to turn in his 27.5 million underwater options-which he accepted with great fanfare, instead of salary or bonus-for 5 million shares of restricted stock, which at the time were worth $72 million. Apple's share price had plummeted, sending an odd message.

Yet some boards have decided to give restricted stock more teeth, either by attaching performance conditions or by forbidding executives from selling it for their entire tenure at the company. That's the situation at Cinergy, where as of 2002, CEO Rogers and his top team must hold any exercised options and restricted stock until 90 days after they leave the company or retire. "That's the long, long, long term," says Rogers. "I'm 55. If I stay until I'm 65, I have to make decisions that are good decisions, that create lasting value."

Wherever executives come off on the pay scale, they are now being monitored more publicly on not only their salaries and bonuses, but also their perks perk 1  
v. perked, perk·ing, perks

v.intr.
1. To stick up or jut out: dogs' ears that perk.

2. To carry oneself in a lively and jaunty manner.
, retirement packages and retention bonuses. At Hewlett-Packard, shareholders approved a non-binding proposal that would require directors to get investor approval for any executive severance package A severance package is pay and benefits an employee receives when they leave employment at a company. In addition to the employee's remaining regular pay, it may include some of the following:
  • An additional payment based on months of service
 worth more than three times salary and bonus. It seemed a pointed rebuke to the company, coming on the heels of the $14.4 million severance package of Michael Capellas Michael David Capellas (born August 19, 1955 in Warren, Ohio) is on the Board of Directors for Cisco Systems and Senior Advisor for Silver Lake Partners.

Past Executive Roles:
, the former CEO of Compaq who merged with HP. Carly Fiorina Cara Carleton "Carly" Fiorina (born Cara Carleton Sneed; September 61954 in Austin, Texas) is an American business executive, best known as former CEO (1999–2005) and Chairman of the Board (2000–2005) of Hewlett-Packard (HP). , HP'S CEO, had argued that such packages were necessary to recruit the best executives, but Capellas seemed to have little trouble-he went on to take the reins to take the guidance or government; to assume control.

See also: Rein
 at WorldCom, where he was guaranteed $3 million in salary and bonus simply for taking the job and will be eligible for an additional $18 million m restricted stock once the company emerges from bankruptcy "I was particularly unimpressed" with both deals, says Paul Hodgson Paul Hodgson, born 25th April, 1982 in Epsom, Surrey is an English rugby union player.

Hodgson plays for London Irish in the Guinness Premiership.

Paul Hodgson's position of choice is as a Scrum-half

Hodgson is an England Sevens international.
, senior rese arch associate at The Corporate Library a governance research organization based in Portland, Maine Portland is the largest city in the U.S. state of Maine, with a 2004 population of 63,882. Portland is Maine's cultural, social and economic capital. Tourists are drawn to Portland's historic Old Port district along Portland Harbor, which is at the mouth of the Fore River and part .

Such golden hellos and parachutes are difficult to justify when regular workers' job security is virtually nonexistent--a lesson AMR's Carty learned. Experts say what ultimately will restore the reputations of CEOs and faith in the markets is a system in which good guys can prosper while others feel financial pain. "The best compensation system serves its objectives irrespective of irrespective of
prep.
Without consideration of; regardless of.

irrespective of
preposition despite 
 whether the stock market has been mean to us," says Dan Ryterband, managing director at pay consultancy Frederic W Cook & Co. To him, that means a carefully measured combination of stock options, cash and restricted stock, tied closely to company performance.

Less pay, more pressure, bad press, higher penalties for messing up. Will some CEOs simply throw in the towel, creating a talent vacuum in the executive suite? No way, says Ryterband. "That is such utter B.S.," he says. "I spend my whole life talking to Noun 1. talking to - a lengthy rebuke; "a good lecture was my father's idea of discipline"; "the teacher gave him a talking to"
lecture, speech

rebuke, reprehension, reprimand, reproof, reproval - an act or expression of criticism and censure; "he had to
 CEOs and that is not what's happening. Being the CEO of a major publicly-traded company is about a lot more than dollars and cents. It's about power and the ability to impact things like society and their communities."

It does appear that short-term pay may decline along with options values. But it won't be known for some time whether the current hunger for a system in which pay is more closely tied to performance will be forgotten once the stock market rises. Charles Elson, director of the Weinberg Center for Corporate Governance at the University of Delaware [3] The student body at the University of Delaware is largely an undergraduate population. Delaware students have a great deal of access to work and internship opportunities. , is hopeful that tougher compensation committees combined with the Sarbanes-Oxley Act See SOX.  will help, but cautions that it will take many years for a new, more watchful mentality to take hold. "Pay is not back in control and will not be back in control until boards change," he says, "not until independent directors with a lot of skin in the game dominate the board."

A look back through the archives shows that over time, executive pay has only moved in one direction-up. But if reform measures actually stick, there is a chance that it will be only those honest, value-creating executives who will cash in at the end of the day.
While Cash Compensation is Beginning to Rise Again ...

Median Salary and Bonus

$ MILLION

2000  1.8
2001  1.6
2002  1.8

Note: Table made from bar graph

...the Declining Value of Options

$ MILLIONS

      Median Value of Stock  Median Gains on Option

         Options Granted *         Exercises
2000           3.1                    1.9
2001           4.3                    2.1
2002           3.8                    1.7

Note: Table made from bar graph

...Means Smaller CEO Paychecks Across the Board

Median Expected Total Direct Compensation **

$ MILLIONS

2000  5.2
2001  7.0
2002  6.1

* Option values are calculated using a binomial option-pricing model
with the following inputs: stock pirce at grant date; exercise price of
ption; term of option; risk-free rate of return at grant date, which
represents the yield on US Treasury Strips with a maturity date
corresponding to the term of the option; expected dividend yield
calculated using the annual dividend rate in effect atgrant date; and
expected volatility, calculated using monthly closing stock prices over
36 trading months prior to grant date.

* Expected total direct compensation - base salry, annual bonus, the
binomial value of stock options, restricted stock, and other target
long-term incentives

Source: Mercer Human Resource Consulting survey of 350 public companies

Note: Table made from bar graph


RELATED ARTICLE: Eye of the Beholder

HIGHLIGHTING THE COMPLEXITY of evaluating CEO compensation, three business publications studied the numbers and each came to a different conclusion.

* BusinessWeek counts salary, bonus, exercised options, restricted shares and long-term incentive payments, but not the value of unexercised options. It does its own analysis and highlights the average compensation of 360 large company CEOs. The result: Pay dropped 33%

* Fortune, working with Equilar, counts salary, bonus, long-term incentive payments, restricted stock and the present value of stock options using the Black-Scholes method, but not previously granted options exercised in 2002. It focuses on median numbers for 100 large company CEOs. The result: Pay rose 15%

* The Wall Street journal, working with Mercer Human Resource Consulting Mercer Human Resource Consulting is a human resource consulting firm that publishes the oft-quoted "Worldwide Cost of Living Survey." External links
  • The Worldwide Cost of Living Survey
, includes salary, bonus, long-term incentives, restricted stock and options exercises, using the median of 350 large company CEOs as its benchmark. The result: Pay rose 15%
COPYRIGHT 2003 Chief Executive Publishing
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2003, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Title Annotation:Eye of the beholder
Author:Reingold, Jennifer
Publication:Chief Executive (U.S.)
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Jun 1, 2003
Words:2706
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