CEO pay in 2015 tamed by
bond yields, Fed expectations
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[June 15, 2016]
By Sai Sachin R
(Reuters) - Chief executives of the
biggest U.S. corporations saw their pay rise in 2015 at the slowest
rate in seven years, but it's not because their boards were suddenly
getting tough.
The main cause was something far more arcane: bond yields and
interest rates.
The nominal amounts set aside by companies to cover pensions fell
substantially last year, a result of rising bond yields and
anticipation of the U.S. Federal Reserve's first interest-rate hike
in nearly a decade.
The smaller pension component - a theoretical amount, to be paid in
the future - has eaten into the value of total compensation packages
and muddied the closely scrutinized relationship between company
performance and executive pay.
"It's the smallest pay rise in a long time but that doesn't mean
that CEOs weren't bringing home more money," said John Roe, head of
advisory at ISS Corporate Solutions (ICS).
"The total number doesn't necessarily tell the whole story."
At 0.1 percent, the median pay rise in 2015 for the CEOs of more
than 300 of the S&P 500 companies was the smallest since the
financial crisis and a sharp decline from the 12.9 percent hike of
2014, data from ICS shows.
The median total pay package was $11.3 million, according to ICS.
Taken at face value, the negligible median pay rise would appear to
appease shareholders fretting over high CEO pay at a time when the
S&P 500 index <.SPX> was about flat in 2015.
But these figures include an incremental value that is added each
year to an executive's pension pot, to be paid out on retirement.
Strip away these pension values and the median S&P 500 pay rise was
3.7 percent in 2015, more in line with the 4.6 percent rise a year
earlier, excluding pensions.
The incremental pension value set aside by CBS Corp <CBS.N> for
Leslie Moonves, the top-paid CEO of an S&P 500 company, was just
$421,021 last year - roughly a seventh of the $2.8 million
designated a year earlier.
But Moonves still took home $52.2 million last year, up from $49.5
million in 2014.
The value of General Electric Co <GE.N> CEO Jeff Immelt's pension
and other deferred earnings fell to about $6 million in 2015 from
about $18 million a year earlier.
Though Immelt's total compensation fell 11.5 percent to $33 million,
his take-home pay actually rose, to about $10 million from $9.6
million a year earlier.
The incremental pension value set aside by weapons maker Lockheed
Martin Corp <LMT.N> for CEO Marillyn Hewson nearly halved to $8.4
million, dragging her total 2015 pay package down 15 percent to
$28.6 million.
ICS estimates that the value of these incremental pension amounts
fell nearly 57 percent in 2015, pulling down total compensation by
6.7 percent.
The ICS data covers 337 companies, or about two-thirds of the S&P
500, and excludes those which have changed their CEO in the last two
years or whose financial year does not align with the calendar year.
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A combination photo shows Jeff Immelt (L), Chairman & CEO of GE,
Marillyn Hewson (C), Chairman, President and CEO of Lockheed Martin,
and Leslie Moonves (R), President and Chief Executive Officer of CBS
Corporation, in file photos. REUTERS/File Photos
To be sure, the changing pension values affect only those executives
who have chosen a lump-sum pension payment, rather than installments
to be paid through their lifetime, and the total pay disclosed in
proxy filings may differ from the compensation actually realized by
executives, due to stock awards and other miscellaneous items.
FED RATE HIKE
So why did pension values fall so much in 2015?
Interest rates are used to value these lump-sum pension payments in today's
dollars. If a company were to deposit money in a bank or invest in bonds, its
value would grow over time. The higher the interest rate, the more that money
would grow, meaning a smaller initial amount must be set aside today.
Conversely, when interest rates are low, companies must set aside more money to
meet their future pension obligations.
Pension values were already high in 2014, due partly to higher life expectancy
but also because bond yields were falling and near-zero interest rates were
expected to persist.
Then, in 2015, expectations mounted that the Federal Reserve would hike rates;
in December, it did. Corporate bond yields rose about 40 basis points over the
year.
All of this helped to drag down the total current value of pension promises by
roughly 5 percent, said Dave Suchsland, Philadelphia-based senior consulting
actuary at Willis Towers Watson, an insurance brokerage and advisory.
This year, pension values and their relation to CEO pay are unpredictable. While
the Fed is indicating that a hike in interest rates could happen in the coming
months, bond yields - affected not just by rate hikes, but a variety of
macroeconomic factors - are moving in the other direction.
A near-certainty, however, is that stock-based compensation, which offset the
fall in pension values in 2015, will continue to rise.
Performance-based compensation, of which stock-based pay is a major component,
has been rising steadily in recent years, reaching a record level of about 55
percent of total pay in 2015, said Roe.
(Reporting by Sai Sachin R in Bengaluru; Additional reporting by Jessica
Kuruthukulangara and Sweta Singh in Bengaluru; Editing by Robin Paxton)
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