Retirement plan scrutiny heightened.The furor furor /fu·ror/ (fu´ror) fury; rage. furor epilep´ticus an attack of intense anger occurring in epilepsy. over former New York Stock Exchange New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) World's largest marketplace for securities. The exchange began as an informal meeting of 24 men in 1792 on what is now Wall Street in New York City. Chairman Richard A. Grasso's $140 million retirement pay package, consultants say, assures that retirement plans will be getting more corporate scrutiny, and more disclosure, in the months ahead. Ironically, the Grasso flap was touched off after the NYSE NYSE See: New York Stock Exchange voluntarily disclosed the package. But as it was picked apart amid an avalanche of news stories over several weeks, it came as a shuddering reminder to corporate boards that they had another governance issue on their hands. Nonqualified retirement plans like Supplemental Executive Retirement Plans, or SERPs, have been commonplace in U.S. companies for years. Their primary intent is to ensure that highly compensated executives are allowed to put aside a comparable percentage of their pay for retirement as are lower-paid workers; current U.S. law restricts salary deferrals on qualified plans like 401 (k)s to $11,000 a year. "American businesses have long recognized that nonqualified retirement plans can be effective in helping to attract and retain key executives and employees," says Leonard Wilson, an executive benefits consultant with The Todd Organization, headquartered in Greensboro, N.C. Moreover, many companies offer more than one nonqualified plan--and sometimes several--including Supplemental Executive Savings Plans (SESPs) and capital accumulation Most generally, the accumulation of capital refers simply to the gathering or amassment of objects of value; the increase in wealth; or the creation of wealth. Capital can be generally defined as assets invested for profit. plans. A survey done recently by Todd, analyzing 2002 proxy data from almost 2,000 companies with more than $250 million in annual sales found: * While 98 percent of the companies offered a qualified defined benefit and/or defined-contribution plan Defined-Contribution Plan A retirement plan wherein a certain amount or percentage of money is set aside each year for the benefit of the employee. There are restrictions as to when and how you can withdraw these funds without penalties. to employees, 71 percent of these companies offered one or more nonqualified retirement plans to key employees. * Larger companies are more likely to offer nonqualified plans Nonqualified plan A retirement plan that does not meet the IRS requirements for favorable tax treatment. , though qualified plans are in place throughout companies, regardless of revenue. * Ninety-six percent of companies that offer an executive deferred compensation program also offer a 401(k) plan, while 84 percent of companies that offer a SEEP also provide a defined benefit pension plan. Tom Wamberg, chairman and 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 Clark Consulting, notes that there is no immediate taxation on cash deferred through a SERE sere 1 also sear adj. Withered; dry: sere vegetation at the edge of the desert. [Middle English, from Old English , which is carried as an account balance on the books. In retirement, a SERE normally distributes an annuity payment, and there is a cash expense to the company at the time of the payment. Typically, he adds, a SERP (1) (Search Engine Results Page) The page of results that a search engine returns. It includes links to pages that have been automatically discovered by crawlers, manually indexed by people or that are paid for by advertisers. See search engine. might be structured so an executive would receive 50 percent of his or her final salary, minus pension and Social Security payments. That difference is what the company would accrue for to fund the SERP Some compensation consultants fear that SERPs could be getting an unfair rap as a result of recent news coverage. "I hope there are not other [problem situations] out there," says Brent Longnecker, president of the Resources Consulting Group in Spring, Texas. "We want executives to be fairly compensated--and they aren't under traditional 401(k) rules for highly compensated individuals--and we want them to retire on time, and not create bottlenecks. We need better disclosure and better analysis." He adds, "SERPs are great tools, and I like seeing [company] matches. But you don't want them to get excessive. There is one big bucket called 'reasonable compensation,' and it can't overflow." A key issue that will draw more scrutiny, says Longnecker, is relative pay levels, which he calls "indexing." A good consulting firm Noun 1. consulting firm - a firm of experts providing professional advice to an organization for a fee consulting company business firm, firm, house - the members of a business organization that owns or operates one or more establishments; "he worked for a will look at the compensation given the number 2 and number 3 executives in the company, he notes. Usually, that ranges around 50 to 85 percent of the top person's pay; if it is much lower, that suggests the CEO's pay is out of whack whack v. whacked, whack·ing, whacks v.tr. 1. To strike (someone or something) with a sharp blow; slap. 2. Slang To kill deliberately; murder. v.intr. . Disclosure of non-qualified plans will be a big feature of the 2004 proxy season, consultants predict. Fixed-rate payments to top executives will be "a lightning rod lightning rod, a rod made of materials, especially metals, that are good conductors of electricity, which is mounted on top of a building or other structure and attached to the ground by a cable. for exposure," says Wamberg, "You can have a fixed-rate account in deferred compensation," but it needs to be a reasonable number, more like 4 percent than 8 percent, he says. "In the next proxy season, what took four paragraphs to explain will probably take eight paragraphs, or maybe more," Wamberg adds. "We're advising our clients to over-disclose and over-explain." But it's unlikely that plans like SERPs would be shelved simply to avert a possible public relations public relations, activities and policies used to create public interest in a person, idea, product, institution, or business establishment. By its nature, public relations is devoted to serving particular interests by presenting them to the public in the most blowup. Says Long-necker: "If your goal is to provide a 50 percent final average income [for executives], you're still going to do a SERP."
Prevalence of Specific Types of Retirement Plans
Defined-
Executive Benefit
Qualified Deferred Pension
Revenue 401(k) Compensation Plan SERP
$5 billion+ 89% 80% 73% 72%
$billion-$5 billion 96% 68% 54% 54%
$250 million-$1 billion 95% 46% 30% 28%
Total/Average 94% 59% 45% 43%
Source: The Todd Organization
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