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Missy Latham, a spokeswoman for Fort Worth-based AMR, the nation's No. 2 airline operator, said the company takes "an extremely disciplined approach" to management pay. "Our plans directly link pay to the company's performance and place a significant amount of management compensation at risk," which is "considered good corporate governance," Latham said. She said American tries to match executive pay with median pay for similar positions in and outside the airline industry. For senior executives, up to 75 percent of their compensation can come from incentives, while the percentage is much lower for other management employees. The payouts are based largely on how AMR's stock performs compared with other airlines over a 3-year period. In the last three years, AMR's stock has fallen farther than that of Continental or Southwest but not as badly as US Airways and about the same as shares of United parent UAL Corp. Latham said the value of this year's stock awards won't be known until they vest later this month, but they are expected to be "significantly below" the targets set by the company's board in 2006. That, she said, "demonstrates the downside of at-risk compensation."
[Associated
Press;
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