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Return to Virginia Business - October 2003

Executive Compensation

Say goodbye to all those stock options
Pay-for-performance is here to stay

Related link:
Top Paid 100

by Lauren Shepherd
For Virginia Business
October 2003

WEB POINTERS
For more information on executive compensation:
Mercer Human Resource Consulting
AFL-CIO

A stellar year equals stellar pay. A not-so-stellar year — forget about it. That seems to be the new mantra for executive compensation. Following years of generous stock options, corporate loans that in some cases required no interest payments and other goodies such as corporate jets, boards are tightening their belts when it comes to executive pay. They’re still rewarding leaders whose performance boosts the bottom line, but even then increases are more modest than in past years due to a prolonged bear market and increased shareholder scrutiny.

In fact, over the past five years, the average pay of the state’s highest paid CEOs appearing on Virginia Business’ annual list has dropped 27 percent, from $6.1 million in 1999 to $4.4 million in 2003. That’s not to say that some executives aren’t still making bundles of money. Take the top officers at NVR Inc., for instance, one of the state’s biggest and most successful homebuilding and mortgage-banking companies. President and CEO Dwight C. Schar collected a small fortune and garnered a number one spot on the list of the top 100 paid executives in the state. After exercising stock options, Schar earned $94.3 million in 2002. Add in a $1.5 million salary and a $1.5 million bonus, and it’s hard to feel sorry about executives’ sagging fortunes.

A hot mortgage market sparked by low interest rates meant business was booming at McLean-based NVR, with the company posting a 22 percent increase in earnings per share in the second quarter of this year. Like many executives on this year’s list, Schar was paid for good performance — a trend that industry experts say will continue as boards react to the public outcry over excessive compensation packages wrought by corporate scandals. “There’s a much closer linkage in pay-for-performance than we saw maybe five years ago,” says Steve Harris, a partner at Mercer Human Resource Consulting. “This has been a trend, and it has continued and sharpened.”

The link between pay and performance has already started showing up in national lists of who earns the most, including an annual survey done by The Wall Street Journal in conjunction with Mercer Human Resource Consulting. It analyzes executive compensation packages at 350 of the country’s largest public companies. Last year CEO salaries increased a median of 2.2 percent to $925,000, with 132 companies granting no pay raises, compared to 92 in 2001. Still, total annual compensation, which includes base salary and annual bonus, rose a median 10.2 percent in 2002 to $1.8 million, compared to a decline of 2.8 percent in 2001.

With multi-million dollar accounting scandals such as the one that forced Worldcom Inc. into bankruptcy, and CEOs facing criminal charges, corporate pay is clearly moving into a different era. Part of the new mindset, says Harris, is that stock option packages—which have netted executives multiple-figure salaries for years—aren’t as important any more. “I do not believe stock options will go away. I believe that the portion of pay in stock options will decline,” he says. In the Mercer survey, the number of CEOs receiving stock option grants fell from 314 in 2001 to 295 in 2002. Of course, many of the stock options held by CEOs are underwater these days, causalities of the stock market’s poor performance over the last three years.

While those who work hard are still being rewarded, certain industries are faring better than others. Besides homebuilding, strong financial performances in the past year have also come from firms handling student loans, as well as defense and energy companies. Three of the top ten slots on this year’s list are held by NVR executives, including Paul C. Saville, who came in number two with earnings of $30 million and fourth-ranked Dennis M. Seremet, a vice president who earned $19 million. Executives from Sallie Mae Corp. in Reston, the largest player in the student loan market, also made the top 10. COO Thomas J. Fitzpatrick ranked third, with earnings of $22.9 million, of which $21 million came in stock gains. CEO and Vice Chairman Albert L. Lord was in the seventh slot with $11.6 million.

Conspicuously absent from this year’s list was last year’s highest paid executive in Virginia, Richard D. Fairbank, chairman and CEO of Capital One Financial Corp. In lieu of a salary, Fairbank has been paid in stock options — about as close to a pay-for-performance system as one can get. Capital One’s stock took a hit last year after federal regulators told the company to double the capital it held against sub-prime loans and to increase its loan loss reserves. The stock has since rebounded, so Fairbank may reappear on future lists, with Capital One’s product lines diversifying to include auto loans and more international credit-card customers.

Regardless of how much money is in a company’s bank, many industries are beginning to change the way they pay senior executives. Boards of directors are looking for new ways other than stock options, salaries and bonuses to pay executives for a job well done. “Things are sort of in flux right now,” says Judith Fischer, director of research at Executive Compensation Advisory Services in Alexandria. “There’s a turning away from traditional forms of executive compensation.”

And we’re not talking corporate perks. The days of private jets and memberships to exclusive clubs are long gone as companies fear retribution by scandal-weary shareholders. “No one even talks about that,” says Tayloe Negus, an executive compensation consultant at the Todd Organization in Richmond. “Companies can’t afford to have the appearance of doing that.”

Instead, businesses are looking to change the make-up of their long-term incentive packages for execs. Specifically, many are moving away from handing out stock options like so much free candy. “In the ’90s, stock options were thought of as a silver bullet,” says Negus. “They were doled out pretty significantly.”

Now, with federal regulation on the horizon that would require companies to expense options, companies are less willing to grant large bundles of stock to their CEOs and executives. When companies expense options, they will be forced to include the amount on their financial statements and be more beholden to stockholders. Several Virginia companies have already voluntarily complied with the regulation, including AES Corp. in Arlington and Smithfield Foods Inc. in Smithfield. Last year, Barry J. Sharp, executive vice president and CFO at AES, garnered no stock gains as part of his $3.6 million total compensation.

Another trend catching on in corporate boardrooms is granting restricted stock. With this option, an executive has to wait until the shares vest before they can sell or transfer stock. In July, Microsoft announced it would give restricted stock to executives rather than options — a move Fischer says is an important barometer for what could happen in the future. “There’s a slight movement to restricted stock,” she says. “It’s a philosophical change.” The possible shift to performance shares is an even more blatant move toward paying executives for a good year at the shareholder bank. With performance shares, executives can earn stock if they meet certain performance benchmarks.

To industry experts, all these variations have the same outcome. They allow shareholders more power to make decisions on how much an executive takes home. And that trend may not just be for determining how to initially pay an executive. Companies are now starting to consider the perceptions and concerns of their shareholders when determining severance packages for CEOs as well. Massey Energy and Sprint, for example, have both announced they will require shareholder approval for large executive severance packages, called “golden parachutes.” “I think golden parachutes will be submitted to more scrutiny in the next few years,” says Julie Gozan, corporate governance specialist at Amalgamated Bank, which provides consulting services on corporate governance issues and employee benefit plans.

It’s hard to tell how executives feel about the changes, since most of them don’t like talking about their salaries. The good news? CEOs will be able to earn awards by achieving performance goals other than improvements in a company’s stock price. According to Mercer, boards may start considering lifestyle benefits. Or as Jack Welch would say: bring on the wine.

Return to Virginia Business - October 2003


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