Print

Excerpt: "CEO pay is up yet again. A booming stock market and bulging equity awards propelled the median 2017 compensation for CEOs of the 100 largest companies to the highest figure in 11 years, according to a new analysis."

Businessmen on Wall Street. (photo: AP)
Businessmen on Wall Street. (photo: AP)


Median CEO Pay at Largest Companies Reaches a Record $15.7 Million

By The Washington Post

14 April 18

 

EO pay is up yet again. A booming stock market and bulging equity awards propelled the median 2017 compensation for CEOs of the 100 largest companies to the highest figure in 11 years, according to a new analysis.

The report, released Wednesday by executive compensation and governance research firm Equilar, examines pay of the 100 largest public companies by revenue, and comes in advance of broader CEO pay rankings that typically arrive later in the spring and analyze the companies of the entire Standard & Poor's 500-stock index.

New to Equilar's analysis is the inclusion of a CEO-to-worker pay ratio for each company, thanks to a U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission rule that went into effect this year. The rule requires publicly traded companies to release a ratio of what their CEOs make in comparison to their median paid worker.

For the 100 largest companies, the ratios tend to be far higher than the broader market, with a median of 235 to 1, compared with 72 to 1 for companies in the Russell 3000 index that have reported their 2017 numbers so far. In other words, CEOs of the largest companies tend to get paid a lot more than others.

Each year, the list produces some eye-popping numbers in part because CEO pay packages are valued on the date new stock awards are granted. As a result, multi-year grants that CEOs only get access to over time can bulk up the size of a CEO's pay package one year, only to see the number plummet — albeit still to relatively high numbers — the following year.

The highest-paid CEO in this year's study is Broadcom's Hock Tan, who has been in the news after President Trump blocked the company's $117-billion bid for Qualcomm and, weeks later, for changing its legal domicile from Singapore to the United States. Tan's 2017 package was valued at $103.2 million. That massive number includes a new stock grant valued at $98.3 million that will pay out over a period of several years only if Broadcom meets certain total shareholder return performance thresholds.

Other names at the top of the new list include American International Group CEO Brian Duperreault ($42.8 million); Oracle co-CEOs Mark Hurd and Safra Catz (north of $40 million each); and Walt Disney CEO Robert Iger, whose pay was valued at $36.3 million.

Many of the companies on this list with the highest CEO pay ratios, meanwhile, employ large groups of retail, temporary or foreign workers whose lower annual wages can make the ratio look particularly high.

At ManpowerGroup, the staffing provider, the ratio of CEO to worker pay is 2,483 to 1; at retailer Kohl's, the ratio is 1,264 to 1. (Manpower notes in its proxy that 95% of the employees used in that calculation are "associates" employed at client firms in 80 countries, a majority of which are in temporary roles; if it calculated the ratio using just the 5% that are permanent staff, the ratio would be 273 to 1.)

And who was the lowest-paid CEO in this ranking of the 100 largest companies? That would be the Oracle of Omaha, Warren Buffett, whose stock holdings may number in the billions but whose annual compensation from Berkshire Hathaway, where he is CEO, is limited.

According to Berkshire's proxy, Buffett received a $100,000 salary, the same he has received for more than 25 years — but no bonus or new stock awards; Berkshire also provided security services for Buffett that cost $375,000 in 2017. The CEO pay ratio at Berkshire is 1.87-to-1.


e-max.it: your social media marketing partner
Email This Page