Why U.S. energy CEOs will get big payouts despite oil
meltdown
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[May 27, 2020] By
Tim McLaughlin and David French
BOSTON/NEW YORK (Reuters) - National Oilwell Varco Inc (NOV) has had a
rough few years: Since 2017, the Houston company, whose drilling
equipment is in major oilfields worldwide, has lost two-thirds of its
value, costing shareholders a combined $9 billion.
Despite that performance, Chief Executive Clay Williams pocketed $3.3
million in stock in late February, solely because his company's total
shareholder return over the three years ending in 2019 was not as bad as
most of his beleaguered peers.
U.S. energy executives have retained such lavish payouts even as they
have struggled for years to deliver shareholder returns - despite
massive growth in domestic shale oil production.
Now executives' compensation is being insulated from the pain of the
worst energy crisis in four decades, caused by the coronavirus pandemic.
Stay-at-home orders to fight the virus have crushed demand for fossil
fuels worldwide, forcing companies to cut thousands of jobs, slash
billions in capital spending and, in some cases, fight for survival. On
Thursday, NOV suspended its dividend to conserve cash.
Company spokesman Blake McCarthy said NOV has recently worked to make
executive pay terms more "shareholder friendly," including a new cap on
payouts for negative returns, which the company disclosed in an April
filing.
Williams and his peers, however, are in line for another round of big
payouts. CEOs at energy companies in the Standard & Poor's 500 index are
sitting on $140 million in performance-based share grants made in 2019
that are scheduled to vest in 2021 and 2022, according to a Reuters
review of their latest pay disclosures.
The reason? Energy companies, more than any other sector, measure
performance only against other companies in the same industry, who tend
to suffer at similar times. They use a metric called relative total
shareholder return (TSR) and benchmark it against a pre-determined group
of peer companies - making it possible for executives to get big payouts
even if their companies' stocks lose value.
That system means the heavy shareholder losses expected this year will
likely not translate to big reductions in CEO stock awards because the
pandemic hit all oil companies in roughly equal measure.
WINNING FOR LOSING
With relative TSR as a key component of pay packages, energy company
CEOs have been winning for losing for at least a decade. Investors,
meanwhile, have just been losing. The total return of the S&P 500 Energy
Index <.SPNY> is 1% over the past decade, as of May 26, a period when
the broader S&P 500’s total return rose by 243%.
Slightly more than one-third of S&P 500 companies benchmark relative TSR
against a broad index of firms. No energy companies do, according to
compensation research firm Exequity LLP.
Some of the worst performers in the energy sector recently awarded
executives multi-million dollar payments as motivation to stay put and
manage through the downturn. Chesapeake Energy Corp <CHK.N>, for
example, handed out $25 million in cash bonuses to executives just
before it disclosed in May that it was considering bankruptcy.
Chesapeake did not respond to requests for comment.
Ben Dell, managing partner at investment firm Kimmeridge, said oil and
gas firms are telling investors to be grateful the system works because,
in some cases, CEOs are not getting 100% of their performance-based
payouts.
"The abuse has been going on for years," said Dell, a critic of
excessive executive compensation whose firm buys stakes in
underperforming energy companies to push for change.
He said investors would benefit from reforms in CEO pay structures, but
that the barriers to change are high because investors generally put
little pressure on companies to rein in executive pay.
In proxy votes, investors overwhelmingly approve CEO pay packages in all
sectors of the U.S. economy, including energy, regardless of stock
performance. Average say-on-pay support in the energy sector was 90% in
2019, according to research firm Semler Brossy Consulting Group LLC. At
NOV's May 20 annual meeting, executive compensation received more than
90% support from shareholders.
Exequity senior advisor Ben Burney, a leading expert on relative TSR,
said it is fair for energy firms to judge their executives through
comparisons to peers with similar business models. The volatility of
energy prices makes broader comparisons more difficult, he said.
[to top of second column] |
A pump jack operates at a well site leased by Devon Energy
Production Company near Guthrie, Oklahoma September 15, 2015.
REUTERS/Nick Oxford/File Photo
"If you are at the top of the group, you get more. If you're at the
bottom of the group you get less," Burney said. "You don't have to reset
goals with the ebb and flow of energy prices."
A $1.3 MILLION PAYOUT AS SHAREHOLDERS LOSE BIG
More than 90% of the largest U.S. oil and gas companies use relative TSR
to calculate long-term stock incentives for senior executives, Burney
said. Across the S&P 500, 60% of companies use relative TSR.
The use of relative TSR has helped top executives at the 15 largest oil
and gas producers receive more than $2 billion in reported compensation
in the last decade, said Doug Terreson, an energy analyst at Evercore
ISI.
For example, Devon Energy Corp <DVN.N> CEO David Hager received $1.3
million in stock at the end of January as a reward for total shareholder
returns falling by 41% over three years. That was good enough for an
11th place finish among its 15-company peer group, Devon disclosed in
its proxy.
Hager received only 60% of his target grant because Devon's TSR was
below median performance in the peer group. The previous year, he
received no TSR-related payout because Devon ranked 13th out of 15
peers.
A spokesman for Devon declined to comment.
Over the past three years, Williams of NOV has been paid about $13
million on average annually. In February, he received shares equivalent
to 200% of his original 2017 stock grant because the company's relative
TSR – a 32% decline in shareholder returns – was in the top quartile of
the peer group.
The company's board of directors increased the number of shares it
granted Williams in 2019 to keep his compensation high even as the stock
lost value, another common tactic by energy firms over the past three
years, according to company filings.
NOV's new cap limits CEOs to collecting 100% of their targeted stock
grants if the company posts a negative three-year total return,
regardless of how it stacks up against peer firms, according to the
company's April proxy filing. That rule did not apply to Williams'
payout in February.
INVESTORS FLEE
Many investors have lost patience with the poor returns of energy firms.
Shale oil companies helped make the United States the world's largest
producer of oil and gas, but that hasn't translated to bottom-line
growth.
Since the end of 2016, the market capitalization of the S&P 500 Energy
Index <.SPNY> has fallen to about $725 billion, down 46%, according to
data from financial information provider Refinitiv. Large-capitalization
growth mutual funds, such as Fidelity's $100 billion-plus Contrafund <FCNTX.O>,
have largely avoided energy stocks.
Those left investing in energy are primarily passively managed index
funds and smaller investment firms that typically do not have the same
capacity to scrutinize executive compensation, nor the reputational heft
to influence entrenched boards and management teams.
Some investors are starting to push back, however. They are telling
energy companies to include the S&P 500 index in their benchmark peer
group. Burney said at least 42% of energy companies have agreed to cap
awards if they have negative returns.
Shawn Reynolds, a natural resources portfolio manager at asset manager
VanEck, said paying executives based on relative performance – and
rewarding negative returns – gives them a warped definition of success.
"Executive compensation has to reflect the experience of the long-term
shareholder," he said. "You can't expect to lose 20% of your stock price
and get paid just because the industry loses 30%."
(Reporting By Tim McLaughlin and David French; editing by David Gaffen
and Brian Thevenot)
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