(art) Options and Executive compensation;
  chicagotribune.com
  Stock grants, competition elevate pay  Packages at top swell 17% even as many share prices languish 
                By Stephen Franklin                and Kathy Bergen                Tribune Staff Writers                April 23, 2000 
                Calculating how               Christopher B. Galvin               earned his reward last               year, as Motorola Inc.               officials explain it, sounds               like keeping a checklist.
                The company's stock               soared in value by 142               percent. Its total market               value doubled. It pulled off               a sizable merger, sailed               through a restructuring and seems to have recovered               from 1998, one of its worst years ever.
                Check. Check. Check. 
                To show its appreciation, Motorola's board handed the               chief executive $58.9 million in cash compensation,               stock awards and stock options, making him not only               the highest-paid CEO among Chicago's biggest               companies last year, but also the highest-paid in               Motorola's history.
                But Galvin's pay matters far beyond the bounds of his               Schaumburg-based electronics giant, because it offers               an insight into two developing trends.
                One is the unending explosion of CEO pay, largely               triggered by bigger and bigger stock option grants and               more recently by the awarding of restricted stocks- a               device usually viewed as a golden handcuff to keep               CEOs from jumping ship.
                In the case of Galvin- the grandson of Motorola's               founder and son of a former CEO- he received $42.6               million in stock options and $13.1 million in restricted               stock. The board of directors' rationale is that it not only               wanted to tie his financial rewards more closely to the               performance of the company's stock, but also wanted to               show that if the company does well, so will its CEO.               That seems to be Corporate America's mantra today. 
                The other trend is how the dot-coms, high-tech start-ups               and other stalwarts of the new economy have shaken up               the landscape by luring executives from old-economy               companies with multimillion-dollar packages and the               promise of even bigger rewards after initial public               offerings.
                Fearful of losing their executives, more and more               companies are boosting CEO pay packages, even if               their stocks are declining and the hot CEO candidates               are younger, second-tier executives. The result is a wage               inflation sweeping through the CEO ranks. 
                These issues were very much on the minds of               Motorola's directors as they set salaries last year, said               Samuel Scott, the outside director who heads the               compensation committee. "Motorola has been a good               company for others to take talent from," explained               Scott, who also is chief operating officer of Bedford               Park-based Corn Products International Inc. 
                Many Chicago-area companies seem convinced that               they can overcome the dangers of a volatile stock               market and hang onto their CEOs by giving more perks,               more benefits, more salary, more bonuses and more               restricted stocks. Like everywhere else in Corporate               America, more is the theme. 
                "It looks like companies will pay about anything" to land               or keep a sought-after executive, said George Paulin,               president of Frederic W. Cook & Co., a New               York-based pay consultant. 
                Among the CEOs of the 100 biggest publicly traded               firms in the Chicago area, the median cash compensation               package- salaries, bonuses and other payments- was               nearly $1.1 million last year. Tacking on the estimated               value of stock options awarded, restricted stock and               other long-term payments, the median compensation for               the CEOs jumped to $2.5 million, according to figures               compiled for the Tribune by William M. Mercer Inc.
                In salaries alone, the median was 6 percent higher than               in 1998; the median overall cash payment rose 8.5               percent. 
                But salaries and bonuses play a small role in many               CEOs' compensation: Stocks and other forms of               long-term payments made last year accounted for about               60 percent of their total annual compensation. 
                And stocks clearly helped swell the compensation               packages of CEOs last year. In 1998, 10 Chicago-area               CEOs had cash and stock packages totaling $10 million               or more. Last year, the number rose to 15.
                Heeding a 1994 law that requires companies to pay               taxes on CEO salaries over $1 million, only eight               Chicago-area firms went over that cap, up from six in               1998. The law was intended to force companies to               make their CEOs' salaries more performance-based, but               it left a loophole. A CEOs salary above $1 million can               be tax-deductible if a company shows that it is               performance-based, and most companies did that. 
                What is striking about the overall surge in CEOs'               compensation is that it took place in a year when nearly               half of the companies that had a full year of stock trading               saw their shares decline in value, even though major               market indexes were up. Depressed stock values may               also explain why less than a third of the CEOs cashed in               options last year.
                Stock options give executives the right to buy shares at a               set price at a certain future time. If the stock rises, the               difference between the grant price and the stock price               when the option is exercised is profit. If the stock price               falls below the grant price, it is virtually worthless. A               restricted stock is stock given to executives that can be               kept after a set period- regardless of whether the price               went up or down.
                Nationwide, a study of 362 of the nation's top               companies by Business Week showed that the CEOs'               cash compensation and stock grants climbed by an               average of 17 percent, reaching $12.4 million last year. 
                This occurred in a year when the average pay increase               for all workers, adjusted for inflation, was 2.6 percent               and the median salary for all workers was $28,550,               according to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics.
                While companies lavish stock options on their               executives, the trend is slowly spreading through the               workforce-just less than 20 percent of employees at               the nation's publicly held companies were eligible last               year for options, up from 12 percent in 1996, according               to Watson Wyatt & Co.
                "We know why American CEOs love the               economy- because it has constrained everyone's wages               but one group: executives," said Richard Trumka,               secretary-treasurer of the AFL-CIO in Washington,               which took up the battle against skyrocketing CEO pay               several years ago. 
                By the labor group's calculations, the average earnings               of CEOs at major corporations last year were 476 times               that of the average blue-collar worker. In 1990, CEO               pay was 85 times that of the average blue-collar worker,               according to the AFL-CIO.
                The wage gap seems likely to grow, and a major reason               is the surging new economy.
                With the stock market rewarding technology stocks so               handsomely last year, the value of stock option grants               awarded to new-economy CEOs far outstripped those               of their old-economy counterparts, according to               Executive Compensation Advisory Services in               Alexandria, Va.
                But hefty option grants are not the rule of thumb among               the new Chicago-area high-tech firms that are competing               with other new-economy rivals. The median               compensation packages for these CEOs markedly               trailed those of other Top 100 companies. 
                But some of the CEOs were well-compensated in other               ways: Many owned large amounts of their companies'               stock, worth millions on paper. Philip S. Bligh, the CEO               of Chicago-based technology consultant Inforte Corp.,               owns about one-fourth of the company's outstanding               shares.
                Theoretically, the goal of most stock option grants is to               link CEOs' pay to performance. But several               Chicago-area companies took steps that seemed to skirt               pay experts' advice about making compensation as               performance-based as possible.
                Neither the stock options nor the restricted stock that               Motorola gave Galvin were linked to any specific               performance goals. But board member Scott said that               the CEO's performance is judged annually when stocks               are handed out. 
                At Sears, Roebuck and Co., top executives have               performance-based stock options- they cannot               exercise their options unless the company's stock hits a               certain level. But Sears' board last year gave CEO               Arthur C. Martinez and other top executives another               year for them to exercise the options. The reason,               spokeswoman Peggy Palter explained, is that goals               needed to be "more realistic."
                Sears' stock has tumbled in the past three years and               trades well below its levels of two years ago.
                That kind of switching around by boards infuriates Nell               Minow, an official of the Corporate Library, a Web site               that tracks and researches Corporate America. "It's               heads I win, tails I still win," she said. "People will               always say I didn't anticipate blah, blah, blah."
                She is equally upset by the generous good-byes handed               to CEOs when they have been bounced from their jobs.               "My view is that your departure package should be               zero," she said.
                At Bank One Corp., where the company's stock fell 35               percent last year, former CEO John B. McCoy took a               $10.3 million severance when he left his job under               pressure in December. That was in addition to $2 million               worth of restricted stock and $15 million worth of stock               options that were granted to him earlier in the year.
                In 1998, the bank did not give McCoy any restricted               stock because of shortfalls in the company's earnings               and stock performance, but it did give him $3.5 million               in deferred compensation for his leadership.
                Bank officials said that two consulting firms helped               determine the size of McCoy's severance, and both felt               it was typical for such packages. 
                As the flow of stock options to executives has swelled,               shareholder-rights groups have become increasingly               alarmed. They object to excessive use of option grants,               because they can dilute the value of outstanding shares               by broadening the base over which profits will be               spread.
                And there is no question that dilution is on the rise.               Stock options set aside for employee compensation               packages accounted for 13.7 percent of outstanding               shares in 1999, up from 6.9 percent a decade earlier,               according to the survey by New York-based pay               consultants Pearl Meyer & Partners Inc. And the lion's               share of those packages go to top executives.
                Indeed, some CEOs have been very rich in terms of the               stocks they have amassed over time. Among               Chicago-area CEOs, Motorola's Galvin is the leader               with in-the-money options worth $75 million. Next               comes Jack Greenberg, CEO of McDonald's Corp.,               who cashed in options worth $5.8 million last year,               leaving him in-the-money options valued at $64.6               million.
                For all of the talk about the two different realms of CEO               pay- those of the old and the new economies- experts               say it seems likely that the two will come together. 
                "There's basically a convergence between old- and               new-economy companies," said James Hatch, executive               vice president at Los Angeles-based Compensation               Resource Group Inc.
                Internet start-ups, in their early days, tend to offer               relatively low salaries and heaps of stock options. As               their stocks skyrocketed, many top honchos became               very, very rich- at least on paper.
                But now that the days of easy money seem to be ending               with the Nasdaq stock market's volatility and diminished               value of shares of several IPOs, many of these               companies are finding they have to offer higher base               salaries, larger cash bonuses and long-term cash-based               incentive plans to lure top executives from established               firms, Hatch said.
                To keep their CEOs from wandering to greener               pastures, some boards are using a stick, in the form of               so-called claw-back provisions, noted Paulin of               Frederic W. Cook. Top executives who jump to a               competing firm not only have to leave unvested options               on the table, but also often have to repay any profits               they may have reaped from exercising options for some               period before their exit, usually six to 18 months.
                Still, "retention devices are not too effective right now,"               Paulin said, noting that firms seeking top talent are willing               pay whatever it takes to lure stars.
                The only retention strategy that looks promising, he said,               is to make changes in the financial structure of a               company, spinning off the high-growth aspects of a               business and giving top executives stock options in the               newly established entities.
                "You're giving them the same upside they would have if               they went to a stand-alone new-economy company," he               said, noting that Skokie-based information services firm               Bell & Howell Co. has taken steps in this direction.
                The firm last year started a new venture with its on-line               periodical database for schoolchildren, an operation               called bigchalk.com that is expected to go public later               this year. All employees at the new venture will receive               stock options, as will top execs at Bell & Howell.
                The goal is twofold, "to unleash shareholder value and               to retain executives," said Bob Rook, vice president of               human resources operations.
                With all of the tinkering, the basic question in today's               world of turbocharged CEO pay remains the same:               How much money will get the job done?
                "I tend to accept it that high pay is the norm, and there's               not much you can do about it," said James Heard,               president of Proxy Monitor, a New York firm that               advises institutional investors. "Even people doing a               lousy job will get paid money that people 10 or 15 years               ago would have considered astounding."  |