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Corporate malaise
hits execs' pocketbooks
Related
links:
Executive compensation
chart
Rethinking executive
pay isn't over yet
by
John Rubino
What
a difference a couple of years can make. For most of
the 1990s, Virginias highest-paid executives tended
to be the founders of New Economy shooting stars like
AOL, Nextel and webMethods. But with the bursting of
the tech bubble, yesterdays tech icons are either
gone or in retreat, and the really big bucks are now
flowing into companies that one way or another
help Americans spend what they dont yet
have. Its scary but true: These days the real
action is in credit cards, student loans and home mortgages.
The
biggest winner by far in 2001 was Richard Fairbank,
CEO of Falls Church-based Capital One Financial Corp.
A pioneer in the use of data mining to decide who gets
credit on what terms, Capital One has been gobbling
market share for most of the past decade. And Fairbank
timed a series of big stock sales beautifully, netting
$142 million in early 2001. Executive Vice President
John Finneran Jr. did same thing, on a smaller scale,
cashing out to the tune of $15 million.
Besides pushing the envelope in data mining, Capital
One is conducting one of the more audacious experiments
in executive pay. In
lieu of salary or bonus, Fairbank and President Nigel
Morris get options lots of them. The options
vest over the next three to five years, and will have
value only if Capital Ones stock rises steadily
from here. The goal: Long-term pay for long-term
performance, says Capital One spokesman Hamilton
Holloway. In early September, Capital Ones stock
was down by nearly half from its 2001 high, following
an earnings restatement to better account for some higher-risk
loans. So barring a sharp turnaround by yearend, dont
expect to see Fairbank or Morris atop next years
list. Which is exactly the way pay for performance is
supposed to work.
Also
striking while the iron was hot were Albert Lord and
Thomas Fitzpatrick, CEO and president, respectively,
of Reston-based SLM Corp., otherwise known as Sallie
Mae. The largest player in the student loan market,
its somewhat insulated from the business cycle,
making it a favorite of money managers. Lord and Fitzpatrick
earned nearly $46 million by selling company stock in
2001, near SLMs all-time high. With the share
price even higher this year, expect it to be well represented
on our 2003 list.
Federal
Home Loan Mortgage (Freddie Mac), meanwhile, is both
a cause and beneficiary of the red-hot housing market.
A quasi-governmental organization that buys
mortgage loans from banks and packages them into high-grade
bonds, its business is booming and its share price is
up about 80 percent from its 2000 low. Vice presidents
Gregory Parseghian and David Glenn each sold enough
stock to land them in the top 10.
If
the mortgage market is strong, it follows that lots
of new homes are going up, and McLean-based NVR Inc.
is doing much of the building. Its stock price has more
than doubled in the past year, allowing CEO Dwight Schar
and Executive Vice President Paul Saville to cash out
to the tune of $26 million. Expect Schar and Saville
to top next years list, since, according to documents
filed with the SEC, they sold stock worth over $80 million
during 2002s first seven months.
And
dont be surprised if the total is a lot higher
when all is said and done. NVR gets about half its earnings
from the Baltimore/Washington market, and the
increase in government spending [post 9/11] has kept
those markets much healthier than most. New home prices
are rising and I expect that to continue for some time,
says Legg Mason analyst David Weaver.
The
only member of this years top 10 list whose company
doesnt lend money or build houses is Douglas McCorkindale,
CEO of the McLean-based Gannett newspaper and media
conglomerate. The $11 million he earned in salary, bonus
and stock gains was a reward for something rare in the
media world: self-control. During the 1990s, when many
media companies were blowing billions on quixotic attempts
to build media superstores or ring the world with fiber,
Gannett stuck to its knitting, amassing and running
an admirably Old Economy stable of newspapers and TV
stations. Now, with icons like WorldCom and AOL Time
Warner suffering to various degrees, Gannett boasts
rising earnings and a stable share price.
The
award for the biggest salary and bonus package
$6.8 million goes to Joseph W. Luter III, CEO
of Smithfield-based Smithfield Foods, a meat processor
whose earnings set records in 2001. But with a glut
of hogs sending Smithfields earnings and stock
price down dramatically so far in 2002, dont expect
to see Luter near the top of next years list.
Overall,
the average pay package fell slightly, to about $5.1
million, continuing a decline that began in 2000. Even
so, its still more than twice the level of the
mid-1990s, and with the stock market down and corporate
pay under a microscope (see the accompanying article),
expect the trend towards smaller paychecks and
a clearer link to performance to continue for
a while.
Return
to Virginia Business - October 2002
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