Investing Information

Reading Between The Lines In Annual Proxy Statements


Upper Saddle River, N.J. - May 11, 2005 - Now that a large number of the proxy statements for public companies with fiscal years ending December 31, 2004 have been issued, those of us that scrutinize them for a living, as well as those that have invested in those companies, have an opportunity to analyze their executive pay packages in detail. With all of the attention on Corporate Governance and how to improve the level of transparency and insure that a strong relationship exists between pay and performance, these statements provide for interesting reading.

Many comb through these filings with the intent of learning if the compensation is reflective of the recent trends towards "pay-for-performance". In reality, does the compensation accurately reflect the company's financial performance? And does it make sense? We also are interested in learning how companies are reacting to the recent and anticipated changes in tax, accounting rules, and related legislation and the extent to which those changes are affecting executive compensation design.

With this in mind, we have been reading various recent filings, which when analyzed, still leaves some doubt if the companies are being as open and straight forward as we have all hoped for. Unfortunately, there is still a tendency for companies to use ambiguous, unclear language. In some instances, the linkage to performance is still questionable. The key is to read what has been presented in a very careful way, taking into consideration what is said, and in some instances, what is not said. Some examples from a recent proxy issued by a large company provide evidence of why it is important to read and interpret them very carefully:

"Our policy is to maximize the tax deductibility of compensation payments to (Top Management) under Section 162(m) of the Internal Revenue Code and the regulations thereunder (Section 162(m)). Our shareholders have approved our incentive plans designed and administered to qualify compensation awarded thereunder as "performance-based". We may, however, authorize payments to (Top Management) that may not be fully deductible if we believe such payments are in our shareholders' interests."

This means that the programs are in compliance with the Internal Revenue Code §162(m); however, and it is a big HOWEVER, they may not qualify for exemption under the one million dollar cap, and therefore would not be deductible for tax purposes. We find it quite a stretch to see how that is in the shareholder's interest, since a non-deductible expense reduces the company's profitability.

"(Top Management) pay is compared to (Key Sales Management) pay to ensure appropriate internal relationships are achieved."

While internal equity and hierarchical relationships are important in this company's situation, Key Sales Management consists of some very highly compensated sales types that may actually push up the Top Management pay, if the company tries to maintain internal equity. The reality is that top salespeople/producers can make huge amounts, but it is based on their individual performance achievement, and therefore it may be more than the amount that would be paid to corporate officers. Trying to maintain an artificial differential may therefore not be warranted, nor in the best interests of the shareholders.

"(The CEO) participates in several defined benefit pension plans, including some unfunded executive plans?.The amount estimated?.is?.not subject to deductions for Social Security or other offset amounts."

Most large companies have some form of Supplemental Executive Retirement Program (SERP), which provides non-qualified retirement benefits that are over and above those allowed by government regulations. The standard in designing these plans, which are typically very generous and have a time rather than performance commitment, is that other company-sponsored retirement programs, 401(k) matches, and Social Security would offset the benefits that are provided. Although in the scheme of things, the lack of an offset to these extra benefits may not be a large cost, it is still a hidden extra benefit that should be quantified and disclosed.

"As described above, in contrast to compensation in prior fiscal years, we did not ascribe a value to (the CEO's) restricted stock units based on a 25% discount from fair market value of the common stock to compensate for the vesting characteristics and transfer restrictions on the restricted stock units."

At first read, this seems to make sense, but after multiple readings, we still aren't sure what this means; have the restricted shares been discounted or not? This is an example of ambiguous and confusing language, which companies should work to avoid.

The bottom line is that while many companies are becoming better and more open at responding to regulatory and shareholder demands within their public disclosures, more work is necessary to have complete transparency. In the meantime, let the reader be wary.

Compensation Resources, Inc. provides compensation and human resource consulting to mid-size and Fortune 500 clients as well as public, private, family-owned and emerging companies. CRI specializes in Executive Compensation, Salary Administration, Performance Management, Sales Compensation, and expert witness services. Our reference library boasts over 4,800 surveys.


MORE RESOURCES:

Maktoob Business (press release)

CIC Head Wary of Investing in Western Banks
Wall Street Journal - 23 hours ago
By PETER STEIN HONG KONG -- The chairman of China's $200 billion sovereign wealth fund says the funds' directors "don't have the courage" to invest in the ...
Head of China's biggest government investment fund says not ... In-Forum
UPDATE 1-China wealth fund lacks stomach for financial buys Reuters
China reluctant to invest in foreign banks The Associated Press
FinanceAsia - Channel News Asia
all 242 news articles


ETF Investing: 5 Pitfalls to Avoid
U.S. News & World Report, DC - 2 hours ago
By Kirk Shinkle Security, transparency, low costs: It's the mantra of the exchange-traded fund industry, and by and large, most ETFs do live up to the ...
Building a Portfolio Using ETFs U.S. News & World Report
all 5 news articles


Oyak Cement says investing despite shrinking market
Reuters - 15 hours ago
ISTANBUL, Dec 3 (Reuters) - Turkey's Oyak Cement Group said on Wednesday it was pressing ahead with investments despite an expected 10 percent decline in ...


Toss your stock-investing assumptions, Bill Gross says
Los Angeles Times, CA - Dec 2, 2008
Even though stock prices look cheap by some measures, investors should think twice before jumping in. So says Bill Gross, noted bond guru at Pacific ...


Ziegler Exchange Traded Trust Announces Change to Previously ...
MarketWatch - 10 hours ago
Prospective purchasers of the NYSE Arca Tech 100 ETF should consider the investment objectives, risks, charges and expenses carefully before investing. ...


Maktoob

Recessions Are Perfect for Currency Investing
Seeking Alpha, NY - 13 hours ago
One thing that I love about the currency market is that there is always a currency or two going up at all times, even when stocks and commodities are ...
Yen Gains on Concern Recession Will Spur Repatriation of Funds Bloomberg
Market Overview by Forex Yard Forex Hound
Forex Markets: A Look into The Dollar, Part IV istockAnalyst.com (press release)
Forex Factory
all 492 news articles


Your Once-in-a-Lifetime Investing Opportunity
Motley Fool - 6 hours ago
And that's creating a once-in-a-lifetime investing opportunity -- for you. There are unbelievable bargains available now, the likes of which we haven't seen ...


Research and Markets: Wall Street's Buried Treasure: The Low ...
MarketWatch - Dec 2, 2008
BILL KRAFT, trader, speaker, trading coach, and author of Trade Your Way to Wealth "Investing without Wall Street's Buried Treasure is like trying to live ...
A Blitz of Funds Reopen for Business U.S. News & World Report
Fidelity to Open Contrafund, Low-Priced Stock Fund (Update1) Bloomberg
all 46 news articles


Global Investing Roundups
Money Morning - Dec 2, 2008
NBER: US in Recession Since Dec. 2007; Fed Reserve Could Buy T-Bills; JP Morgan Sees 0% Interest Rates; Pilgrim’s Pride Files for Bankruptcy Protection; ...


Global Investing Roundups
Money Morning - 16 hours ago
US sales in November fell 31% for Ford Motor Co. (F) and 34% for Toyota Motor Corp. (ADR:TM) Every line of Ford vehicle posted falling sales, ...

Investing - Google News

home | site map
© 2006