
Written Testimony
Senate Commerce Committee
May 20, 2003
Sean Harrigan
President, CalPERS Board of Administration
Mr. Chairman, before I begin my formal statement I would like to express
my appreciation to Senator Boxer for her kind introduction. I am deeply
gratified by her presence and her interest in the subject matter before
the committee today.
Mr. Chairman, Senator Hollings and members of the Committee, it is my
pleasure to be here today and to provide the perspective of an institutional
investor in regards to executive compensation. I also have some suggestions
where Congress could take action to help support reform in executive compensation.
I am Sean Harrigan, President of the California Public Employees' Retirement
System (CalPERS) Board of Administration. CalPERS is the largest public
pension system in the U.S., with approximately $125 billion in assets. We
have long been a leading voice in Corporate Governance, and an advocate
for better alignment of interests between shareholders and management.
Executive compensation is a critical issue to investors. Compensation
is a truly powerful tool that will drive behavior. Unfortunately, it can
drive the wrong behavior if the proper checks and balances are not in place,
or if the compensation schemes are just poorly constructed. CalPERS and
I believe most investors are not anti-compensation. In fact, we believe
paying competitive salaries for managerial talent is an important motivational
tool. But, we feel strongly that pay should be linked to long-term sustainable
performance in a very significant manner.
Something has gone wrong with executive compensation in the United States.
It is unconscionable to see that CEO pay has swollen to 400 times that of
the average production worker. It is shocking to see example after example
of top executives insulating themselves from any risk in their own compensation,
and ensuring their own financial security at the same time employees are
being asked to shoulder the burden of cuts, and shareholders are losing
value.
At American Airlines shareholders and employees were shocked to find
out that the company made a $41 million dollar payment to a fund designed
to protect the pensions of executives if the company filed bankruptcy. This
fact was not disclosed during negotiations to secure $1.8 billion in wage
concessions despite the fact that the payment was made months before.
If I had to identify one issue that is at the heart of the problem with
compensation in the United States, I would point to accountability. More
appropriately perhaps to a lack of accountability. This is an area where
we can make reform with the support of Congress.
As public markets investors we rely upon boards of directors to represent
us. In the case of compensation, the Compensation Committee is charged with
representing shareholders. It is clear to me that a major contributing factor
to the problem with executive compensation is that Compensation Committees
are not accountable to shareholders. They obviously do not feel that approving
abusive compensation packages will cost them their job. Rather, it appears
that not approving what the CEO wants is what they feel will cost them their
job. This represents the central conflict of interest inherent in the problem
of executive compensation today. Until this fundamental issue is solved,
we will continue to have widespread abuse in compensation practices.
In the last five years alone, CEO compensation has doubled according
to compensation consultants Pearl Meyer & Partners. In 1996, the average
CEO at the largest 200 companies made about $5.8 million. By 2001, that
figure jumped to $11.7 million.
The following table compares the trends in specific components of CEO
pay to the performance of the S&P 500 for 2001 and 2002.
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2001
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2002
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Median base salary
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Up 10.1 %
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Up 4.2 %
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Median cash bonus
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Down 17.6 %
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Up 8.8 %
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Median stock option grant
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Up 43.6 %
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Down 18.6 %
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Average restricted stock
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Down 21 %
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Up 1.3 %
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Median overall compensation
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Up 26.7 %
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Down 10.9 %
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Total return S&P 500
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Down 11.88 %
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Down 22.09 %
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Source: compensation
data - calculated for CalPERS by Equilar (includes only CEOs that were in
the position for the entire three year period); S&P 500 returns - Bloomberg
We think this shows a disconnect between compensation and performance
on a broad scale. Part of our concern is that it appears companies shifted
compensation from cash to options in 2001, then from options to cash in
2002 - most likely due to the bear market. It is also important to note
that the value of the option grants declined at least in part due to lower
overall stock prices. It appears that a similar number of options are still
being granted (median number of options declined only 9 percent in 2002).
This was the only factor driving the median total compensation down in 2002.
However, while the absolute levels of pay are a concern, perhaps the
most troubling element of executive compensation is the heads I win, tails
you lose attitude of corporate executives. CalPERS is deeply concerned over
what appears to be an attitude of entitlement in the executive suite of
corporate America. This attitude manifests itself in many forms.
Perhaps some of the more offensive entitlements are the so called forms
of "stealth compensation." Lavish severance packages complete with perks
for life that are fit for a king, guaranteed pension benefits far outstripping
the value of benefits provided to employees, enormous loans to executives
that are eventually forgiven, and provisions providing that the company
shall pay all the taxes due (including gross-up provisions) should the executive
incur a tax liability all send a clear message to shareowners. The message
is that we do not respect you as owners, and we do not feel accountable
to you as owners.
In other examples demonstrating a lack of respect for shareholder's capital:
Delta Airlines, Leo Mullin will be credited with 22 years of service
toward his pension upon termination, plus two additional years in a Supplemental
Retirement Benefit. The company also put $25.5 million in a protected
pension trust for him according to press accounts.
Home Depot has an employment contract that includes a $10 million loan
with predetermined criteria for forgiveness in addition to base salary,
2,500,000 stock options (plus annual increments of no less than 450,000
more options), a target bonus of between $3,000,000 and $4,000,000, deferred
stock units (750,000 in 2002), pension benefits and change in control
provisions that include (if the executive leaves for good reason or for
any reason within 12 months) $20,000,000, immediate vesting of options,
and immediate forgiveness of any outstanding loans and payment of the
gross-up for taxes.
We do however feel that there are concrete steps that can be taken to
help reign in abusive executive compensation. Shareholders must take a more
active role overseeing directors at the companies in which we invest with
the goal of increasing the absolute level of accountability of directors
to shareholders must be increased. There are also several improvements to
the structure of compensation programs that we believe can have a dramatic
effect on rationalizing executive pay. Let me briefly go over the steps
CalPERS is taking in the area of executive compensation and mention some
of the specific proposals we have made to improve the alignment of interests.
Executive Compensation Policies
CalPERS amended its U.S. Corporate Governance Core Principles and Guidelines
recently to call on companies to formulate executive compensation policies
and seek shareholder approval for those policies. Currently, Compensation
Committees issue a statement in the proxy to briefly describe the company's
compensation philosophy. Shareholders role in this process is relegated
to a distant back seat. In discussions with companies about this issue,
they often state emphatically that only the board has the right and the
expertise to manage the affairs of the company and particularly the issue
of compensation. Companies state that the Compensation Committee must have
the flexibility to attract and retain executives and that shareholders should
essentially trust them to do the right thing. Yet the behavior of corporate
America in regards to executive compensation indicates otherwise.
We believe it is a completely appropriate role for owners of a corporation
to approve broad policies in relation to executive compensation. Perhaps
most importantly, it would force Compensation Committees to face shareholders
with a plan on how they will use compensation of all forms in managing the
corporation. This will help to shift the accountability back to where it
belongs, to the owners.
Action item 1: Congress could support these recommendations and call
upon the SEC and the exchanges to consider requirements that shareholder
approve executive compensation policies.
We believe that executive compensation policies should provide the following,
at a minimum:
The company's desired mix of base, bonus and long-term incentive compensation;
The company's intended forms of incentive and bonus compensation including
what types of measures will be used to drive incentive compensation. Again,
we believe companies should construct incentive plans with a significant
portion of performance based components;
The parameters by which the company will use severance packages, if
at all.
Quantitative Model - Website Application as a Research Reference Tool
CalPERS is also dedicating a portion of its website to executive compensation
issues. In the near future we will post a catalog of extensive research
available in the executive compensation arena. We are also developing a
quantitative model that we will apply to our U.S. indexed holdings to help
identify on a more systematic basis where compensation abuses are occurring.
The model will be used to identify companies where performance and compensation
diverge by analyzing peer relative and market relative compensation measures
along with performance data. It is our intent to use our website to highlight
cases of egregious compensation much in the way we have used public means
in our Focus List of under-performing companies.
Greater Performance Based Metrics
In another major effort, we are pushing for greater use of performance
based metrics in equity compensation plans. Standard at-the-money fixed
price options - those with the strike price set at the current market value
of the stock on the day of the grant - have been used extensively in the
United States, and have become the largest single component of CEO pay.
While fixed price options do have some merit as an alignment tool, they
are inferior in many ways to performance based plans. Yet companies have
been reluctant to say the least to adopt performance based equity plans.
CalPERS recently co-sponsored a shareholder proposal at General Electric
calling for the company to make a significant portion of their option grants
to top executives performance based. The company adamantly opposed the resolution,
they said because not many companies are using these types of equity grants.
One can only suspect that it was really because they do not want to be held
to true measures of outperformance to obtain the highest levels of incentive
compensation. It is easy to see why shareholders and management differ on
these issues.
Shareholder Approval of Equity Based Compensation
CalPERS is also lobbying hard to help ensure that shareholders have the
right to approve any equity based compensation plan. Under current exchange
rules, companies are not required in certain circumstances to obtain shareholder
approval to adopt equity-based compensation plans. In other words, companies
are allowed to unilaterally dilute the equity owners of the corporation.
It is ridiculous to think that an owner should not have the right to decide
if he or she is willing to dilute their equity, no matter what the purpose.
It is even more ironic when you consider the fact that boards and management
have a significant self interest in adopting equity based compensation plans.
While shareholders have fought the NYSE and NASDAQ for years over this
issue, it has finally come to pass that the proposed changes to the listing
standards include greater shareholder approval of equity based compensation
plans. But the fight is not over. Despite the fact that the proposed changes
to the listing standards were developed last summer, the SEC has yet to
implement this change. Most troubling of all, the exchanges are seeking
a number of exceptions to shareholder approval that would continue to let
companies unilaterally dilute equity owners. We are opposed to these exceptions.
We believe this can be the shortest rule the SEC will ever be able to issue,
and it can be stated in a single sentence: Any new equity based compensation
plan or material change to an existing plan must be shareholder approved.
Action item 2: Congress could join shareholders in supporting shareholder
approval of all equity-based compensation plans without exception.
Shareholder Access to the Proxy
And finally I would like to mention one remaining reform we are advocating,
shareholder access to the proxy. This would provide that shareholders who
meet minimum ownership thresholds could nominate directors to corporate
boards through management's proxy. While this may not appear to be particularly
relevant to executive compensation at first glance, it has everything to
do with accountability. With responsible yet meaningful reforms to the SEC
rules governing access to the proxy, shareholders will be given greater
ability to hold directors accountable for poor performance. As I mentioned
earlier, we believe this has a material impact on their behavior and on
the quality of their representation of shareholder's interests. This has
an obvious impact on our ability to right the ship when it comes to compensation.
Action item 3: Congress could join shareholders in seeking fair access
to the proxy.
Thank you, I would be glad to answer any questions that you may have.
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