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- <text id=93TT1025>
- <title>
- Mar. 01, 1993: Rolling Back Executive Pay
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Mar. 01, 1993 You Say You Want a Revolution...
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- BUSINESS, Page 49
- Rolling Back Executive Pay
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Taking a cue from President Clinton, opponents of excessive
- corporate salaries grow emboldened
- </p>
- <p>By THOMAS MCCARROLL
- </p>
- <p> To hear Silicon Graphics president Edward McCracken tell it,
- taking away the executive's most prized form of compensation--stock options--would be nothing less than a disaster for
- American business. High-tech companies, like his computer-manufacturing
- firm, would be unable to recruit top engineers and software
- programmers, warns McCracken. They would then lose their competitive
- edge. "The next thing you know," he says, "the Japanese would
- be taking over, and all of Silicon Valley would be at risk."
- </p>
- <p> That, in a nutshell, is the view of corporate America, which
- continues to cling to its massive compensation packages in spite
- of lower earnings and large layoffs. Now, however, after years
- of insisting on their right to pay themselves what they think
- they are worth, corporate executives face a rising howl of protest
- they may not be able to ignore. And their favorite form of income--the stock option, which makes up as much as 90% of their
- total pay--is a major target.
- </p>
- <p> Last week saw a double-barreled threat to outsize compensation
- packages. First, President Clinton proposed eliminating tax
- deductions by corporations for executive pay of more than $1
- million, which would have a profound impact on how much the
- company's top managers are paid. Clinton left a loophole for
- "performance based" compensation, which could include stock
- options. But at the same time, the Financial Accounting Standards
- Board, which sets the standards for America's accountants, was
- considering a rule that would force companies to deduct the
- value of stock options from their earnings. That too would have
- an immediate and dire effect: it would reduce profits up to
- 48% for the average small firm and 3% for the typical big corporation.
- It would also drastically curtail the use of stock options by
- companies.
- </p>
- <p> Indeed, the FASB plan comes as excessive corporate compensation
- is being attacked from all quarters, including Congress, where
- two bills now propose similar changes. One, a bill sponsored
- by Minnesota Representative Martin Sabo, seeks to end tax breaks
- for corporations that pay CEOs more than 25 times what the lowest-paid
- employee earns. And in January, Michigan Senator Carl Levin
- reintroduced legislation that would force companies to account
- for the payment of stock options on their profit statements.
- </p>
- <p> A movement by shareholders to limit executive pay is also gaining
- support. Stockholders at 43 companies last year submitted proposals
- to limit executive pay, and that number is expected to double
- this year. Even the Securities and Exchange Commission is cracking
- down. Under new SEC rules, companies must provide, in their
- annual report to shareholders, some value for the stock options
- granted to executives. "Executives have been praying for this
- issue to cool down," says Graef ("Bud") Crystal, a leading compensation
- consultant. "But it's not, and they're going to stay on the
- hot seat."
- </p>
- <p> The hottest issue by far is "stock incentives," usually in the
- form of options that are given to executives outright and allow
- them to buy company stock at a set price later on. The idea
- is that as the stock goes up, the employee's rights to buy shares
- at the older, fixed price become more valuable. While stock
- options are rare in countries such as Japan and Germany, about
- 90% of U.S. firms provide them to their senior-level executives.
- Some companies--such as PepsiCo, Pfizer and Silicon Graphics--offer options to all employees, from the mail room to the
- boardroom. U.S. executives cashed in some $4 billion worth of
- stock options last year, in contrast to $2.1 billion in 1991.
- </p>
- <p> Although designed to provide executives with a strong incentive
- to perform well over time, stock options often seem to be used
- to reward executives who perform poorly. One prominent example
- is Advanced Micro Devices chairman Walter J. ("Jerry") Sanders.
- Although his firm's stock price has declined 35% over the past
- seven years, Sanders has pocketed some $29 million in option
- profits during the same period. United States Surgical Corp.
- chairman Leon Hirsch has been awarded 2.8 million shares (current
- market value: $186 million) since 1991, even though his company's
- stock has underperformed the Standard & Poor's 500 index by
- 3 percentage points. The award is an extreme example of so-called
- mega-options, grants consisting of at least 250,000 shares.
- The number of mega-options issued by corporations has increased
- 300% since 1990.
- </p>
- <p> Annoyed, shareholders have moved to curb such abuses--just
- as they have moved to remove a number of CEOs in recent months.
- Under pressure from big institutional investors, for example,
- ITT Corp. drastically altered the stock-option plan for its
- chairman, Rand Araskog. He had received an outright stock gift
- with no strings attached. The company replaced the grant with
- a plan based on performance. AT&T also upped the ante for its
- CEO, Robert Allen. Allen was once awarded 45,000 shares just
- for staying on the job. Now, he will receive 250,000 shares,
- but only if the value of the company's stock appreciates 20%
- to 50% by 1997.
- </p>
- <p> In spite of the growing opposition, corporate management continues
- to successfully oppose curbs on its executive payrolls. The
- FASB plan, for example, is facing opposition that its chairman,
- Dennis Beresford, describes as "unprecedented." Of more than
- 350 letters on this issue so far received by FASB from companies,
- accounting firms and stock exchanges, only one or two support
- the rule change. Leading the charge against the proposal is
- the Business Roundtable, a New York City group representing
- 200 CEOs. In a letter to FASB, Citicorp CEO John Reed, who heads
- the Business Roundtable's accounting task force, said the plan
- would have "negative effects" on U.S. competitiveness. Small
- and midsize firms oppose the plan because it would force them
- to curtail or severely limit their only affordable means to
- attract top executive and technical talent.
- </p>
- <p> Congress is also divided on the issue. Although Senator Levin
- strongly backs the proposal, his Michigan colleague, Donald
- Riegle, opposes it. In his letter to FASB, Riegle, the chairman
- of the Banking Committee, wrote that the plan "could undermine
- the competitiveness of American industry without any corresponding
- benefit to the users of corporate financial statements."
- </p>
- <p> But even if the companies prevail on the accounting standard,
- victory is unlikely to bring them any lasting peace. In an era
- of massive and painful corporate downsizing, richly paid executives
- are out of step with the times. And while they may win a battle
- or two, it is almost certain that they will have to settle for
- something less than the grand lucre that came their way in the
- days of Reagan and Bush.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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