The Conference Board, NASDAQ
OMX and NYSE Euronext jointly released The 2011 U.S. Director
Compensation and Board Practices Report, a benchmarking tool
with more than 120 corporate governance data points searchable by company
size (measurable by revenue and asset value) and industrial sectors.
The report is based on a
survey of public companies registered with the U.S. Securities and
Exchange Commission. The Harvard Law School Forum on Corporate Governance
and Financial Regulation, Stanford University’s Rock Center for Corporate
Governance, the National Investor Relations Institute (NIRI) and the
Shareholder Forum also endorsed the survey by distributing it to their
members and readers.
The Conference Board’s annual
benchmark series on director compensation was first released in 1939. In
the last decade, the database has been expanded to report on a wide array
of governance practices, documenting a steady transformation in the role
of public companies’ boards and underscoring the increasing importance of
directors’ monitoring responsibilities and the growing influence of
shareholders.
The following are the major
findings from the 2011 edition of the study.
Director compensation
Cash retainers vary from a low average of $21,138 for commercial
banks to a high of $78,848 in the retail trade industry. The same
industries represent the two ends of the spectrum for stock awards, which
vary from a low of $13,891 in commercial banks to a high of $97,742 in the
retail trade industry. In addition, some variation exists within
industries: for example, as many as 10 percent of financial services
companies annually award to each of their directors as little as $11,200
in cash. Board compensation in the energy industry shows the largest
difference ($265,600) between the 10th and 90th percentiles. Board members
in the chemicals industry and in the computer services industry received
the highest total compensation ($184,115 on average).
Larger companies (by annual
revenue and asset value) awarded substantially higher cash retainers and
total compensation to board members than smaller companies. Companies in
the smallest category measured by annual revenue awarded directors $60,000
in cash retainer at the 90th percentile. This amount is much higher in the
largest companies ($110,000). Median total compensation ranges from
$46,843 in the smallest companies to $190,000 in the largest companies.
Both measures of compensation show a direct correlation with asset value
as well.
When it comes to compensation
mix, computer services is the industry with the lowest percentage of total
director compensation awarded in cash retainer (26.6 percent); however, it
is also the sector that placed the greater emphasis on equity-based
compensation (stock awards and stock options), which surpasses 70 percent
of the total. Directors at smaller financial companies (with assets valued
at $1 billion or less) were, on average, compensated more in cash, while
larger financials were more likely to compensate their board members in
stock and stock options. Across all industry groups and revenue and asset
classes, most companies awarded board members additional funds to serve as
members of major committees; as with other measures of compensation for
executives and board members, the amount of these additional awards
increases with company size. For example, in companies with annual revenue
of $5 billion or greater, compensation for the chair of the audit
committee was $18,242, compared to $6,583 for those with revenue under
$100 million, on average.
Board size
Most companies responding to the survey have 10 board members. No
variation in the number of directors exists from industry to industry, but
boards tend to grow larger as annual corporate revenue or total corporate
asset value increases.
Age, diversity, and
professional background In financial services, the average age
among the youngest directors is 48 and the average age of the oldest is
72, the largest age range among all industry categories. In general, the
larger the company is, the more diverse the board is. Among manufacturing
companies, 14 percent of the directors are female, the lowest of the three
industry categories.
Across industries, about half
of board members are CEOs, presidents, or board chairs of for-profit
companies. Other senior executives (CFOs, COOs, general counsel, etc.)
make up more than 10 percent of the typical board.
Independence and
affiliations More than 80 percent of board members across
industries are independent under major securities exchange listing
standards and the percentage of independent directors is correlated with
the size of the company. In fact, across all industries and almost all
size groups, a large majority of companies reported adopting a policy
requiring the board to be composed of more than a simple majority of
independent directors. In approximately one-third of companies in the
financial services sector and one-fourth of those in manufacturing and
nonfinancial services, the policy also sets standards on director
independence that are even more stringent than those set by the security
exchange on which the company is listed.
Most companies only count one
board member who is also an employee, whereas directors who are otherwise
affiliated with the company (e.g., through former employment or the
provision of such professional services as legal or management consulting
assistance) are virtually absent. Approximately one-third of currently
serving board members have retired from a previous career and are
professional directors.
In manufacturing and
financial services, approximately 70 percent of directors also serve on
the board of at least one other for-profit corporation. Across asset value
groups, between four and nine directors also sit on at least one board of
trustees of a nonprofit organization.
Board leadership
The percentage of companies that have a non-CEO chair varies from
a low 43 percent in financial services industries to 50 percent in
nonfinancial services. The larger the company, the less likely it is to
have a non-CEO chair. A large majority of non-CEO chairs are independent,
as defined by the rules of the securities exchange on which the company is
listed or more stringent company standards. Across industries and almost
all size groups, in most cases, the CEO/chairman separation is not
contemplated by a formal policy of the board.
Analysis also shows that the
percentage of companies with a lead director ranges between 61 percent in
manufacturing and 64 percent in the nonfinancial services sector and
generally increases with company size. As much as 73 percent of companies
in the largest revenue group have a lead director, compared with only 31.6
percent of the smallest companies. Virtually all lead directors appointed
by the company meet widely accepted independence standards, such as those
set by national securities exchanges.
Majority voting
policies A total of 44 percent of companies in the financial
services industries still retain a pure plurality-voting model, while in
manufacturing and nonfinancial services, only 33 and 34 percent do so.
There is a direct correlation between company size (measured both by
annual corporate revenue and asset value) and the adoption of a majority
voting policy for director elections. In the largest revenue group, for
example, 80 percent of companies adopt some form of majority voting. Of
those, 86 percent supplement it with a mandatory resignation policy.
In 41 percent of
manufacturing and nonfinancial services companies with annual revenue of
$5 billion or greater and in 46 percent of financial companies with asset
valued at $100 billion or greater, the policy is silent on the criteria on
which the body designated to decide on the resignation should base its
decision. Across industries, the majority of companies with a resignation
policy contemplate a 90-day timeframe for the decision on the resignation
to be made; similarly, across industries, corporate policies require that
the decision on the resignation be made public. Finally, the vast majority
of corporate policies, across industries and almost all size groups, do
not contain a presumption that a tendered resignation should be accepted.
Of all survey responses, only
3 percent of companies in the nonfinancial services sector reported having
one or more members of their board standing for reelection in the 2010
proxy season who failed to receive the required majority vote. An analysis
based on company size shows that these cases pertained to companies in the
smallest revenue groups (12 percent of companies with annual revenue of
$499 million or less).
Reimbursement of
proxy solicitation expenses The reimbursement of proxy
solicitation expenses remains a marginal corporate practice. The sector
reporting the highest level of adoption of such a policy is the financial
services sector, with a meager 7 percent. The corporate size analysis
indicates that the policy tends to be favored by smallest companies: 7
percent of companies with annual revenue between $100 and $499 million
have instituted it, compared to 1 percent of those with revenue of $5
billion or greater and none of the companies in the two highest asset
groups.
Board classification
In recent years, shareholder resolutions requesting the
declassification of boards have caused a steady decline in staggered
structures. Findings from the 2011 survey indicate considerable variation
in this area across company size groups, with the lowest percentage of
classified boards (15 percent) among companies in the highest revenue
categories. At the same time, 47 percent of companies in the lowest
revenue group still reported having classified boards. As far as the
industry analysis is concerned, the percentage of companies with
classified boards is 38 percent in both manufacturing and financial
services.
Shareholder rights
plans (poison pills) Pressure from shareholders and proxy
advisory groups has driven the recent trend toward the repeal of existing
poison pills designed with the sole intent of entrenching management. As a
result, more than 80 percent of surveyed companies across industries and
virtually all financial companies in the largest size group reported not
having a poison pill in place. At a minimum, shareholder rights plans are
generally subject to a mechanism of shareholder ratification within a
certain time of the adoption. Across industries and revenue groups, less
than a quarter of companies do not rely on poison pills or
“fiduciary out” provisions nor do they require shareholders to approve the
adoption, amendment, or renewal of a shareholder rights plan. Financial
services companies with asset value of $1 billion or less reported the
highest percentage of adoption of net operating loss (NOL) poison pills (8
percent).
Other antitakeover
practices The majority of surveyed companies in manufacturing and
nonfinancial services grant shareholders a right to call special meetings
that is contingent upon certain prerequisites (e.g., minimum shareholder
ownership thresholds); the practice of granting such a right is less
prevalent among financial companies. The majority of surveyed companies
across industries do not prohibit shareholder action by written consent;
companies with a policy prohibiting shareholder action by written consent
tend to be larger in size. The majority of surveyed companies across
industries do not require a supermajority vote of shareholders for charter
or bylaws amendments, with no correlation based on revenue or asset value.
Frequency of board
meetings and attendance policies Across industries, the average
number of board meetings is six, with three or four additional discussions
among all board members held by phone. The average company also held six
executive sessions in the surveyed year. This finding highlights the
practice of beginning or ending virtually all meetings without the CEO and
other members of management in the boardroom. In general, boards of small
companies meet just as often as those of large companies. Meeting fees are
awarded by 57 percent of corporations in financial services and by 60 of
those in nonfinancial services; however, only a small percentage of
surveyed companies reported that they penalize low attendance (for
example, by means of a policy requiring directors to forfeit a portion of
their compensation if they miss more than a certain number of meetings).
The percentage of companies paying meeting attendance fees varies by
revenue and asset group, with a peak among midsize companies.
Internet use for
communication among directors Less than the majority of corporate
boards across industries use a board portal, where directors can securely
access board documents and collaborate with other board members
electronically. However, this technology is more widespread in the
financial services sector, where it has been introduced by almost 73
percent of companies with asset value of $100 billion or greater.
Say-on-pay frequency
Survey findings show that 82 percent of manufacturing companies, 81
percent of those in nonfinancial services, and 76 percent of those in
financial services are currently holding annual say-on-pay voting. Ten
percent of companies in the financial services industry and 47 percent of
manufacturing and nonfinancial services companies in the smallest size
group ($100 million or less in annual revenue) avail themselves of the
temporary exemption from the advisory vote granted by the SEC rules to
smaller issuers. There is direct correlation between the annual revenue of
surveyed companies and the annual frequency of their say-on-pay vote, but
that is mostly explained by the large adhesion to the rule exemption by
smaller companies in manufacturing and nonfinancial services. Across
industries and size groups, virtually no companies adopt a biennial
say-on-pay policy.
Clawback provisions
Approximately 50 percent of companies across industries reported that they
only adopted the type of clawback policy mandated by the Sarbanes-Oxley
Act; the number is slightly higher for nonfinancial services companies (59
percent). Approximately 28 percent of financial services companies
indicated that they also introduced a clawback policy of the type mandated
by the Dodd-Frank Act and, at the time of the survey, not yet regulated by
the SEC. There is no clear correlation between the use of clawbacks and
the size of companies.
Other compensation
policies A range of one-fourth to one-third of surveyed companies
have an antigross-ups policy in place. The percentage of companies
adopting such policy increases with corporate size, as measured both by
annual revenue and asset value. Approximately 24 percent of financial
services companies impose a retention period for stock awarded to
employees as part of their annual compensation, with a concentration among
the largest companies (73 percent in the group of those with asset value
equal to or greater than $100 billion). Despite growing interest in the
practice among compensation experts and advisers, bonus banking remains
uncommon outside of the financial services sector: only 7 percent of
financial services companies reported having such policy in place.
Stock ownership
guidelines Across industries, a large majority of companies adopt
formal guidelines requiring minimum stock ownership for board members.
When in place, those guidelines may require board members to acquire, over
a certain timeframe, a minimum number of shares, a minimum dollar amount
worth of stock, or a multiple of the annual retainer worth of stock. Among
surveyed companies, the most widely used type of guideline is the one
based on a multiple of the annual retainer. When adopted, stock ownership
guidelines are almost always disclosed to the market.
Compensation
benchmarking disclosure More than three-quarters of surveyed
companies indicated that their proxy statement contained the names of
individual companies composing the peer group used for executive
compensation benchmarking purposes; the larger the company size, the
higher the percentage of companies providing this type of disclosure. The
compensation committee is most frequently charged with the responsibility
of determining the compensation peer group; however, 45 percent of
manufacturing companies and 47 percent of nonfinancial services companies
reported that their senior management was also directly involved in the
selection process. Industry and company size are the most frequently used
features to identify the companies that should be included in the
compensation peer group: the larger the company size, the more relevant
these features become to the selection process. Across industries and
company size groups, annual base salary is the aspect of senior executive
compensation that is most tied to the analysis of the compensation peer
group; however, 23 percent of manufacturing companies use compensation
peer benchmarking to determine annual equity-based incentives, and 12
percent for cash-based bonuses contingent upon performance.
Compensation risk
disclosure Across industries and size groups, a large majority of
companies, after reviewing its compensation policies and practices,
concluded and disclosed that such policies and practices are not
reasonably likely to have a material adverse effect on the company. Most
often, the disclosure on compensation-related risk is included in the
Compensation Discussion & Analysis (CD&A) section of the proxy statement:
in particular, this is the case for 82 percent of financial services
companies with asset value between $10 billion and $99 billion. Companies
reported adopting a wide array of measures to mitigate
compensation-related risk: across industries and size groups, the most
widely cited mitigation measures are multiyear vesting periods for equity
grants (used, for example, by 76 percent of surveyed companies in
financial services) and an executive compensation policy requiring a mix
of cash and equity and of an annual and longer-term incentives (84
percent, also in financial services). Often, such measures are combined
with others, including shareholder guidelines requiring employees to
retain award shares for a specified period or through retirement and a cap
on maximum incentive award payouts for top executives. The least cited
among mitigation measures is the use of performance review processes where
the evaluation is conducted over an extended period of time as opposed to
only annually (20 percent of financial services companies). Not
surprising, for the greatest majority of surveyed companies, the duty to
assess and oversee compensation-related risk is formally delegated to the
compensation committee.
Compensation
consultant fee disclosure Of the surveyed financial companies, 59
percent reported in their 2010 proxy statements the names of the
compensation consultant(s) from whom they obtained advice. The number of
reporting companies increases to 72 percent and 80 percent of the largest
size groups measured by annual revenue and asset value, respectively. Not
surprising, for the greatest majority of surveyed companies (and virtually
all companies across industries), the compensation consultant(s) were
retained by the compensation committee. Across industries and size groups,
a large majority of companies did not disclose the aggregate fee paid
during the reportable fiscal year for compensation-related services and
for additional consulting services, since the fee amount was lower than
the $120,000 threshold for which securities laws mandate disclosure.
Risk oversight
practices The majority of surveyed companies across industries
and size groups reported that their risk management procedures are based
on a widely accepted enterprise risk management (ERM) framework. The
popularity of ERM increases among the largest organizations, especially in
the financial sector—in which 73 percent of the largest survey
participants have adopted some form of ERM. In FY2010, prior to the
effectiveness of the new Dodd-Frank Act provisions requiring financial
institutions to establish a risk committee of the board, approximately one
financial company out of 10 had already formed such a committee. However,
the survey also detected a wide variation within the financial sector,
with 40 percent of the largest companies by asset value reporting
assignment of the risk oversight function to a dedicated risk committee;
at the time, only 10 percent of financial companies in this size group
were continuing to delegate risk oversight responsibility exclusively to
the audit committee.
Findings show that financial
companies also constitute the only industry group analyzed in which more
than half of surveyed companies engaged in the practice of reporting on
risk at each board meeting and as part of the regular board agenda. The
percentage decreases to 24 in manufacturing companies and 36 in
nonfinancial services companies; in both industries, the relative majority
of respondents indicated that their boards of directors receive
information on risk from management at least annually.
When analyzed by size,
virtually all of the financial companies with asset value equal to $10
billion or greater do avail themselves of a dedicated chief risk officer (CRO),
and in most cases (70 percent) the CRO reports directly to the CEO.
Approximately 46 percent of companies in nonfinancial services and 41
percent of manufacturing companies reported having instituted an ERM
committee at the management level.
CEO succession
planning practices Virtually no companies across industries and
size groups assign CEO succession planning oversight responsibilities to a
dedicated standalone committee of the board. Instead, these functions are
performed either by the full board (44 percent of financial services
companies and 57 percent of both manufacturing and nonfinancial services
companies) or through delegation to the compensation committee or the
nominating/corporate governance committee. There is a direct correlation
between revenue size and assignment of succession planning oversight
responsibilities to the compensation committee: the delegation to the
compensation committee is reported by as much as 33 percent of financial
companies with asset value of $100 billion or greater and 41 percent of
the remaining sample with annual revenue of $1 billion or greater.
Across industry and almost
all size groups, a large majority of companies reported that their boards
review the CEO succession plan on an annual basis, whereas the revenue
analysis reveals an inverse correlation between the frequency of the
review and the company size—with 32 percent of companies with annual
revenue of $100 million or less indicating that their boards reviews the
CEO succession plan only when a change in circumstances warrants it (e.g.,
retirement, sudden death or illness, or other emergencies).
Mandatory retirement policies
based on age remain a marginally used element of CEO succession plans.
Only 13 percent of manufacturing companies and 11 percent of nonfinancial
services companies adopt an age-based mandatory retirement policy for
CEOs, and the number is even lower in the financial sector (9 percent).
There is a direct correlation between the size of companies (both by
annual revenue and asset value) and the adoption of the policy: companies
with asset valued at $100 billion or greater report the highest level of
adoption (20 percent). Across industries, the large majority of surveyed
companies indicated that they do not have a formal policy on whether the
retiring CEO should continue to serve as a member of the board and remain
involved in the business leadership for a limited time following the
appointment of the new CEO. However, there is a clear direct correlation
between the adoption of such policies and the size of the company:
approximately 21 percent of companies with annual revenue of $5 billion or
greater and as many as 60 percent of those with assets valued at $100
billion or greater formally require that the CEO leave the board as part
of his or her succession plan.
From the industry analysis of
survey responses, approximately 27 percent of companies in the financial
sector include in their annual disclosure to shareholders information on
succession planning. The number is lower in manufacturing and nonfinancial
services (20 percent and 24 percent, respectively). There is a direct
correlation between disclosure practices and company size, with larger
companies being more prone to include this type of information in the
annual report: approximately 40 percent of respondents in the largest
asset group indicated that they provide the disclosure.
Director attendance
of shareholder meetings Across industries, a large majority of
companies reported having a formal requirement for nonexecutive directors
to attend the annual shareholder meeting; the lowest percentage (55) is
registered in the financial services sector. However, the corporate size
analysis shows that the requirement is not prevalent in certain groups:
for example, only 36 percent of the largest financial companies (with
asset value of $100 billion or greater) have instituted it.
Board/shareholder
engagement policies Only about a quarter of surveyed companies
adopt a board/shareholder communication protocol, with the highest
percentage found in the financial sector (27 percent) and among the
smallest size groups (42 percent of companies with annual revenue below
$100 million and 23 percent for companies with an asset value between $1
billion and $9.9 billion).
Mandatory director
retirement policies Retirement policies, whether based on tenure
or director age, are being adopted to ensure periodic change and
innovation in the makeup of boards. For organizations reporting a
mandatory retirement policy based on age, the average and median age limit
across industries is 72 years. For companies reporting a mandatory
retirement policy based on tenure—a practice that appears to be adopted by
virtually no respondents in the financial services sector and only by 5
percent and 8 percent of respondents in manufacturing and nonfinancial
services, respectively—the maximum permitted tenure varies from 12 to 15
years.
Restrictions on
multiple board service The majority of the respondents
(approximately 56 percent) across all industries have a policy limiting
the number of public-company directorships that their board members may
concurrently hold. Of those, approximately 80 percent of companies in
manufacturing and nonfinancial services allow board members to serve on
three or more additional for-profit boards; these policies appear even
more frequently among the largest companies. However, they are stricter
for directors who also are employed as senior executives of the company.
Director education
A large majority of surveyed companies reported that they
organize an orientation program internally for their newly elected
directors, with help from other board members, senior executives, and key
employees. None of the surveyed companies hire outside parties for these
programs. As for the continuing education of seasoned directors, most
companies avail themselves of accredited outside roundtable programs that
directors attend on their own schedule. There is a direct correlation
between size groups and the percentage of companies using in-house
programs provided by management to meet the board’s specific knowledge
gaps and informational needs: in the largest asset group, 73 percent do
so. It is interesting to note that approximately one-quarter of
manufacturing companies do not have continuing education requirements for
their board members.
Director performance
assessment Of companies in the nonfinancial services industry, 34
percent assess their directors’ performance on an individual basis.
Individual performance assessment is particularly infrequent in the
largest size groups: for example, only 18 percent in the largest asset
group conduct such this evaluation type. The evaluation of board
performance is typically organized internally, through written
questionnaires (used by 81 percent of companies in manufacturing and as
many as 86 percent midsize companies) and without the assistance of an
outside contractor. Most often, the coordination of the process is
delegated to the general counsel or a senior member of the legal team;
however, for financial companies, there is a direct correlation between
company size and the cases in which one or more board members are assigned
the responsibility for leading the assessment process.
Board committee
practices While almost all companies that responded to the survey
have committees in charge of financial, audit, compensation, and director
nomination issues, a few respondents also have dedicated committees for a
variety of other board duties—finance, social responsibility, technology,
and human resources oversight, among others. Of course, these activities
may be subsumed into other committees because companies assign risk
oversight duties to the audit committee or succession planning
responsibilities to the nominating/governance committee. There is a direct
correlation between company size measured by asset value and findings on
the institution of executive committees and finance committees of the
board. As company size increases, so does the size of the committees of
the board. Across industries, the average number of audit, compensation,
and nominating/governance committee members is four.
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