BlackRock's
Larry Fink paid nearly $26 million in 2015
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[March 19, 2016]
By Sudarshan Varadhan, Trevor Hunnicutt and Ross Kerber
NEW YORK (Reuters) - BlackRock Inc
<BLK.N>, the world's largest asset manager, raised total compensation
for Chairman and Chief Executive Larry Fink by about 8 percent in 2015,
according to a filing on Friday.
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Fink was awarded $25.8 million in compensation in 2015, compared
with $23.9 million in 2014, based on a calculation of his pay
according to U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission guidelines.
But the company's own calculations of Fink's pay show his
compensation flat for 2015. The calculations vary because BlackRock
reports some incentive pay in a different year, according to the
filing.
BlackRock's filing also shows the company will face an unusual test
of its oversight of CEO pay at other companies, where its funds are
often large investors and routinely vote in favor of their executive
compensation.
Fink's pay included a $900,000 salary, a bonus of $8.7 million,
nearly $16 million in stock awards and $193,000 in "other"
compensation, according to that calculation.
BlackRock President Rob Kapito was paid $20 million, the filing
said. Fink, 63, and Kapito, 59, were among BlackRock's founders in
1988.
Last year was difficult for money management firms, which were
whipsawed by volatile capital markets.
The BlackRock board committee that analyzes compensation concluded
among other factors that the company's share of key markets
increased and that the company showed "strong and consistent
financial results despite a challenging" environment, according to
the filing.
BlackRock's stock traded nearly 5 percent lower at the end of 2015
than at the end of 2014, while a grouping of such companies measured
by the Dow Jones U.S. Asset Managers Index <.DJUSAG> fell by 12
percent. Over the year, the stock returned negative 2.3 percent, a
figure that includes dividend payouts.
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Net income of New York-based BlackRock rose 2 percent in 2015 to
more than $3.3 billion in a year of flat growth in assets under
management for the company, which oversaw more than $4.6 trillion as
of Dec. 31, 2015.
Separately, a proxy resolution on which BlackRock's investors will
vote this year calls on the company to report on its own
proxy-voting practices, citing among other things that BlackRock
supports CEO pay more often than other investment managers.
In Friday's filing BlackRock's directors urged investors to vote
against the proposal, calling it unnecessary since the company
already discloses much about how its Stewardship Team determines
votes and that such a proposal could "threaten the independence" of
that team.
(Reporting By Sudarshan Varadhan in Bengaluru, Trevor Hunnicutt in
New York and Ross Kerber in Boston; Editing by Anil D'Silva, Leslie
Adler and Bernard Orr)
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