Posts Tagged ‘CEO compensation’

Which U.S. Market Interactions Affect CEO Pay? Evidence from U.K. Companies

Wednesday, October 24th, 2012

Which U.S. Market Interactions Affect CEO Pay? Evidence from U.K. Companies (SSRN)
Authors: 
Joseph Gerakos, University of Chicago – Booth School of Business;  Joseph D. Piotroski ,
Stanford University – Graduate School of Business; Suraj Srinivasan , Harvard Business School
Date: August 2012
Management Science, Forthcoming

Abstract: This paper examines how different types of interactions with U.S. markets by non-U.S. firms are associated with higher level of CEO pay, greater emphasis on incentive-based compensation, and smaller pay gap with U.S. firms. Using a sample of CEOs of U.K. firms and using both broad cross-sectional and narrow event-window tests, we find that capital market relationship in the form of an U.S. exchange listing is related to higher U.K CEO pay; however, the effect is similar when U.K. firms have a listing in any foreign country implying a foreign listing effect not unique to the U.S. Product market relationships measured by the extent of sales in the U.S. by U.K. companies are associated with higher pay, greater use of U.S.-style pay arrangements, and a reduction in the U.S.-U.K. pay gap. The product market effect is incremental to the effect of a U.S. exchange listing, the extent of the firm’s non-U.S. foreign market interactions, and the characteristics of the executive. The U.S-U.K. CEO pay gap reduces in U.K. firms that make U.S. acquisitions. Further, the firm’s use of a U.S. compensation consultant increases the sensitivity of U.K. pay practices to U.S. product market relationships.

Keywords: CEO compensation, international pay, globalization, corporate governance, incentives, cross-listing, United Kingdom

New in Stanford Closer Look Series: Ten Myths of “Say On Pay”

Thursday, June 28th, 2012

Ten Myths of “Say On Pay”
Authors: Professor David F. Larcker,  Stanford Graduate School of Business; Allan McCall, co-founder of Compensia and currently a PhD candidate at the Stanford GSB; Gaizka Ormazabal, Assistant Professor of Accounting at IESE Business School at the University of Navarra; and Brian Tayan, Researcher, Corporate Governance Research Program, Stanford GSB.
Published: July 28,  2012

Say on pay is the practice of granting shareholders the right to vote on a company’s executive compensation program at the annual shareholder meeting.  Under the Dodd-Frank Act of 2010, publicly traded companies in the U.S. are required to adopt say on pay.  Advocates of this approach believe that say on pay will increase the accountability of corporate directors and lead to improved compensation practices.

In recent years, several myths have come to be accepted by the media and governance experts.  These myths include the beliefs that:

  1. There is only one approach to “say on pay”
  2. All shareholders want the right to vote on executive compensation
  3. Say on pay reduces executive compensation levels
  4. Pay plans are a failure if they do not receive high shareholder support
  5. Say on pay improves “pay for performance”
  6. Plain-vanilla equity awards are not performance-based
  7. Discretionary bonuses should not be allowed
  8. Shareholders should reject nonstandard benefits
  9. Boards should adjust pay plans to satisfy dissatisfied shareholders
  10. Proxy advisory firm recommendations for say on pay are correct

We examine each of these myths in the context of the research evidence and explain why they are incorrect.

We ask:

* Should the U.S. rescind the requirement for mandatory say on pay and return to a voluntary regime?

Read the attached Closer Look and let us know what you think!

To receive monthly alerts about the Closer Look series, please email the Stanford Corporate Governance Research Program at corpgovernance@gsb.stanford.edu. You can also follow more corporate governance news on Twitter: @StanfordCorpGov .  To view the entire collection of  Stanford Closer Looks please click here.

New in Stanford Closer Look Series: “What Is CEO Talent Worth?”

Monday, January 23rd, 2012
  • What Is CEO Talent Worth?  (PDF)
    By Professor, David F. Larcker and Brian Tayan, Researcher, Corporate Governance Research Program, Stanford Graduate School of Business, and Usman Liaqat
    January 24, 2012

The topic of executive compensation elicits strong emotions among corporate stakeholders and practitioners. On the one hand are those who believe that chief executive officers in the United States are overpaid. On the other hand are those who believe that CEOs are simply paid the going fair-market rate.

Much less effort, however, is put into determining whether total compensation is commensurate with the value of services rendered.

We examine the issue and explain how such a calculation might be performed. We ask:

* How much value creation should be attributable to the efforts of the CEO?
* What percentage of this value should be fairly offered as compensation?
* Can the board actually perform this calculation? If not, how does it make rational decisions about pay levels?

Read the attached Closer Look and let us know what you think!

To receive monthly alerts about the Closer Look series, please email the Stanford Corporate Governance Research Program at corpgovernance@gsb.stanford.edu. You can also follow more corporate governance news on Twitter: @StanfordCorpGov .  To view the entire collection of  Stanford Closer Looks please click here.

New in Stanford Closer Look Series: What Does It Mean for an Executive To Make $1 Million?

Wednesday, December 14th, 2011

The press and other third-party observers frequently discuss executive compensation.  However, executive compensation figures are not always what they seem.  Executive pay packages contain a diverse mix of cash and non-cash incentives, payable in one or multiple years and subject to accruals, estimates, and restrictions that often render their ultimate value quite different from their expected value.  Even total compensation figures disclosed in the annual proxy comingle forward- and backward-looking amounts as well as fixed and contingent payments that make it difficult for investors to understand what compensation has been promised to executives and what they eventually earn.

We untangle the mess and examine three basic methods for calculating compensation: expected value, earned value, and realized value.

We discuss the applicability of each, illustrating concepts with real examples and summary statistics.

Why don’t companies voluntarily disclose these figures so stakeholders can better evaluate incentives and pay for performance?

Read the attached Closer Look and let us know what you think!

To receive monthly alerts about the Closer Look series, please email the Stanford Corporate Governance Research Program at corpgovernance@gsb.stanford.edu. You can also follow more corporate governance news on Twitter: @StanfordCorpGov .  To view the entire collection of  Stanford Closer Looks please click here.

Underperforming CEOs Risk Being Fired in Economic Downturns –Professor Dirk Jenter

Thursday, August 18th, 2011

Underperforming CEOs Risk Being Fired in Economic Downturns
Aug 18th, 2011

STANFORD GRADUATE SCHOOL OF BUSINESS—When a company does badly, no manager likes to be blamed for things that were really outside his control—like a general downturn in the economy. That goes especially for chief executives. But do boards really take external factors into account when giving CEOs the ax?

A new study finds that more CEOs are fired when their industry or the overall market is doing badly. But, say the scholars, it is not just a case of boards looking for scapegoats during harder times. The CEOs who are let go under such conditions tend to be underperformers anyway…

7 Myths of Executive Compensation

Thursday, June 16th, 2011

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: June 15, 2011

Contact: Helen Chang, Stanford Graduate School of Business, 650-723-3358, chang_helen@gsb.stanford.edu

Board experts from Stanford Graduate School of Business say

Criticism of CEO pay might be off the mark

STANFORD, CA — "Executive compensation may be the lightning rod for shareholders in the wake of the financial crisis, but the truth about how pay should be structured is clouded by a lot of popular myths," says David Larcker, who is James Irvin Miller Professor of Accounting and Director of the Corporate Governance Research Program at the Stanford Graduate School of Business. He is coauthor of the new book Corporate Governance Matters (FT Press).

"Boards have been put on the defensive when it comes to comp, but the problems that critics are offering solutions to aren‟t that cut and dried," explains Brian Tayan, Larcker‟s coauthor and a researcher at Stanford GSB.

The 7 Myths of Executive Compensation

Larcker and Tayan‟s research exposes seven common myths around compensation:

Myth #1: The ratio of CEO pay to that of the average worker is a useful statistic.

"Dodd-Frank requires that companies disclose the ratio of CEO pay to that of the average worker," says Larcker. "But in certain companies, high pay packages may be necessary, and in certain industries – such as retail – the ratio may be much higher than in other industries, such as investment banking. Boards have to consider that how much they pay will have an impact on the types of people who want to take the CEO position. You don‟t want to drive talented CEOs out of public companies so that they can avoid scrutiny over how much they are paid."

Myth #2: Compensation consultants cause pay to be too high.

"The perception is that compensation consultants are beholden to management," says Tayan. "But research shows that it is not the compensation consultant or whether the comp consultant is conflicted that drives excessive pay levels. Instead, it is the governance of the firm. Pay becomes too high if the board members are personal

friends of the CEO, appointed by the CEO, or highly busy (in terms of total number of board appointments), etc.”
Myth #3: We can easily identify compensation plans that cause excessive risk-taking.
“It is commonly accepted that the structure of executive compensation contracts encouraged the excessive risk-taking leading to the financial crisis,” says Larcker. “As a result, Dodd-Frank now requires companies to discuss the relation between compensation and risk. The reasoning may be valid, but we simply do not yet know how to measure the relationship between compensation and excessive risk-taking in any precise way. How many boards can go through their plans and say, „This feature causes risk-taking, but this one does not?‟”
Myth #4: The performance targets in the compensation plan tie directly to the strategy.
“Many companies have adopted complicated bonus plans whose target values depend on achieving a variety of financial and nonfinancial targets,” says Tayan. “The assumption is that these targets map directly to the corporate strategy. But evidence suggests that not all companies do a good job of making this connection. It is a very difficult assessment, and requires testing the relationship between performance drivers and actual operating results – something that is not common in boardrooms today. Companies also tend to overemphasize the financial metrics and underemphasize nonfinancial metrics that might be the real indicators of future performance.”
Myth #5: Eliminating discretionary bonuses is a good idea.
“Sometimes when a company misses its performance targets, the board may decide to give what is called a „discretionary‟ bonus to the CEO anyway,” explains Larcker. “The perception is that these bonuses are always bad because they reflect pay that was „unmerited.‟ The truth is that there are times when external factors, such as an economic downturn or change in industry conditions, reduce company performance. What the board needs to assess is whether the company still performed above expectations, even though these unexpected factors occurred. If it did, the board should reward that individual.”
Myth #6: Proxy advisory firms know how to evaluate compensation contracts.
“Following Dodd-Frank, companies are now required to allow shareholders to cast an advisory vote on whether they approve of the executive pay packages – this is known as „say on pay,‟” says Tayan. “Proxy advisory firms are heavily influential in this vote, but it is not at all clear that their rigid guidelines are in the best interests of shareholders. For example, they automatically vote against a company if they allow things such as option exchanges that are not approved by shareholders, very large severance agreements, or tax gross ups on certain benefits or payments. These restrictions might be arbitrary and might not be appropriate for a specific company.”
Myth #7: The numbers reported in the financial statement for stock option expenses are a good approximation of their cost.
“Companies award stock options because they want to give executives incentive to create long term value, and the cost of these grants are required to be included in financial statements and the annual proxy,” says Larcker. “The truth is that we do not know the true cost of executive stock options. The current models do not take into account human behavior, such as the propensity of executives to exercise their options early when they are 100% in the money. The board would clearly benefit from more precise valuation models that more closely measure the cost to firm and the value to the executive.”
“In the rush to assign blame for the financial crisis, it‟s easy to point to the all the big numbers in top executive compensation plans,” says Larcker. “But the truth is a lot more complicated.”
To speak with authors David Larcker or Brian Tayan, contact Davia Temin or Suzanne Oaks: 212-588-8788 or news@teminandco.com.
# # #

Stanford Closer Look: Seven Myths of Corporate Governance (CGRP-16)

Thursday, June 2nd, 2011


 CGRP16 – Seven Myths of Corporate Governance (PDF) by Professor David F. Larcker and Brian Tayan, MBA '03

In recent years, there has been much discussion over how to improve governance systems broadly. In the process, certain myths have developed that continue to be accepted, despite a lack of robust supporting evidence.

These myths include the beliefs that:

1. The structure of the board always tells you something about the quality of the board

2. CEOs in the U.S. are overpaid

3. Pay for performance does not exist in CEO compensation contracts

4. Companies are prepared to replace the CEO if needed

5. Regulation improves corporate governance

6. The voting recommendations of proxy advisory firms are correct

7. Best practices are the solution to bad governance

We examine each of these myths in closer detail and explain why they are false.

So long as these myths are accepted by practitioners and the public, how can we expect managerial behavior and firm performance to improve? Read the attached Closer Look and let us know what you think!

Larcker and Tayan are the authors of recently published book: Corporate Governance Matters: A Closer Look at Organizational Choices and Their Consequences, FT Press

Topics, Issues and Controversies in Corporate Governance: The Closer Look series is a collection of short case studies through which we explore topics, issues, and controversies in corporate governance. In each study, we take a targeted look at a specific issue that is relevant to the current debate on governance and explain why it is so important. To see the full series of  Stanford Closer Looks click here.

Why Does Corporate Governance Really Matter? New Book from Stanford Showcases Research into How Boards Can Govern Better

Thursday, May 19th, 2011

Corporate Governance Matters by Professor David Larcker and Brian Tayan

STANFORD, Calif.–(BUSINESS WIRE)–“The debate on the role of boards in the wake of the financial crisis has created a lot of hype and rhetoric about corporate governance,” says David Larcker, who is James Irvin Miller Professor of Accounting and Director of the Corporate Governance Research Program at the Stanford Graduate School of Business and coauthor with Brian Tayan of the new book Corporate Governance Matters (FT Press). According to Larcker, many so-called experts are heavy on opinions about governance, but light on the facts.

“The fight for ‘say on pay’ and proxy access has gotten a lot of ink – but it is unclear whether it will actually create shareholder value.”

“The FDA requires research on drug outcomes before approving a pharmaceutical,” he says. “Shouldn’t experts that prescribe ‘cures for bad governance’ be subject to a similar standard of review?”

In their book, Larcker and Tayan, a researcher at Stanford GSB, challenge the conventional wisdom of the many books, reports, and recommendations of blue-ribbon panels on what constitutes “good” governance. The authors researched hundreds of companies and interviewed many board directors to uncover the real-life consequences of corporate governance practices – from director independence to designing appropriate executive pay packages.

“A lot of people want to measure what’s measurable – we wanted to measure what’s informative,” says Tayan. “For example, certain lightning-rod issues, such as ‘excessive’ risk taking and CEO compensation, get a lot of attention from outside observers, while important issues that are considerably more difficult to assess – such as corporate strategy and succession planning – tend to get the short shrift.”

Trends Getting in the Way of Good Governance

“Our research shows that many emerging developments that were intended to improve governance – purportedly to avert the kind of financial disaster we just experienced – just don’t hold water,” Larcker explains. These include:

  1. Compliance drowning out strategy – “A check-the-box approach is not what we need from directors. We need instead their best thinking and ability to manage risk appropriately for corporate growth.”
  2. “Federalization of corporate governance” – “As corporate governance becomes increasingly, and probably inexorably, ‘federalized’ through regulations such as Dodd-Frank, there is a real question as to whether these laws make boards govern better,” he says. “We’re still debating whether the 10-year-old Sarbanes Oxley was good for the economy.”
  3. “Shareholder democracy” movement – “The fight for ‘say on pay’ and proxy access has gotten a lot of ink – but it is unclear whether it will actually create shareholder value.”
  4. Rise of proxy advisory firms – “Proxy advisory firms exhibit substantial influence over the proxy voting process. What is the evidence that their recommendations lead to the kinds of positive outcomes that stakeholders really care about?”

“We wrote our book for thinkers – for practitioners who want to see how important governance issues play out in the real world,” says Tayan.

“By integrating several different approaches to the topic – both business and legal – we have created a practical framework for directors that will help them make decisions that lead to organizational success.”

To speak with the authors, contact Davia Temin or Suzanne Oaks at 212-588-8788 or news@teminandco.com.

For information on Corporate Governance Research Program: http://www.gsb.stanford.edu/cgrp/about/

Contacts

Stanford Graduate School of Business

Helen Chang, 650-723-3358

chang_helen@gsb.stanford.edu

 

 

Do US Market Interactions Affect CEO Pay? Evidence from UK Companies

Friday, February 4th, 2011

New working paper on SSRNhttp://ssrn.com/abstract=1738083
Paper Date: January 2011

Abstract

This paper examines the extent that interactions with US markets impact the compensation practices of non-US firms. Using a sample of large UK companies, we find that the total compensation of UK CEOs is positively related to the extent of the firm’s interactions with US markets, as captured by the percentage of total sales generated in the US, the presence of prior US acquisition activity, the presence of a US exchange listing, and CEO and director-level US board experience. More importantly, we find that exposure to US product markets is associated with the adoption of US-style compensation arrangements (i.e., incentive-based pay packages). In contrast, we find no such association with exposures to other (non-US) foreign product markets.

Together, our evidence is consistent with US market interactions impacting UK compensation practices through two mechanisms: (1) to alleviate internal and external pay disparities arising from the presence of US operations and businesses (proxied by the percent US Sales and prior US acquisitions) and (2) to compensate CEOs for bearing the additional risk and responsibility associated with exposure to foreign securities laws and legal environment (proxied by both US and non-US exchange listings).

Authors

Joseph Gerakos
University of Chicago – Booth School of Business

Joseph D. Piotroski
Stanford University Graduate School of Business

Suraj Srinivasan
Harvard Business School