ISS (Institutional Shareholder Services), which rates executive pay for shareholders, might seem to be losing influence, says consultant Kurt Fichthorn, but every compensation committee in America continues to be aware of the ISS standards around executive pay.
During the 2011 proxy season, shareholders seemed to be less influenced by ISS on say on pay, says Fichthorn, vice president in the Philadelphia office of Hay Group. He was joined in his presentation at a recent BLR/HRhero webinar by Martin Somelofske, a senior principal in Hay Group’s Metro New York office.
Only a handful of companies that ISS has recommended AGAINST have lost their say-on-pay votes, Fichthorn notes. However, a number of companies changed programs after receiving the ISS recommendation and before the shareholder meeting.
ISS has a rigid scorecard approach that may not reflect your organization’s philosophy, but the ISS recommendations are very important, Fichthorn says. So, if you get a negative review from ISS, take the initiative and explain to shareholders. Say, this is what we’re doing and this is why we’re doing it. This is why the position of the company is different from that of ISS and this is why it’s fair to shareholders.
HR budget cuts? Let us help. HR.BLR.com is your one-stop solution for all your HR compliance and training needs. Take a no-cost, no-obligation trial and get a complimentary copy of our special report Critical HR Recordkeeping—From Hiring to Termination. It’s yours—no matter what you decide.
Here’s Fichthorn’s list of ISS “hot buttons.” Looks like it might make a good checklist for evaluating your executive compensation program.
1. Employment contracts |
Egregious employment contracts with multi‐year pay guarantees, nonperformance based bonuses and/or equity compensation |
2. New CEO with overly generous package |
Excessive “make whole” provisions without sufficient rationale |
3. Large bonus payouts without justifiable performance linkage or proper disclosure |
Performance metrics that are changed, canceled or replaced during the performance period without explanation of the action and link to performance |
4. Egregious pension/SERP payouts |
Inclusion of additional years of service not worked or inclusion of performance-based equity awards in the calculation |
5. Excessive perquisites |
Perquisites for former executives, such as lifetime benefits, car allowances, or personal use of corporate aircraft |
Find out what the buzz is all about. Take a no-cost look at HR.BLR.com, solve your top problem, and get a complimentary gift.
6. Excessive severance and/or change in control provisions |
Change in control payments exceeding 3 times base salary and bonus or without loss of job or substantial diminution of job duties |
7. Tax Reimbursements |
Excessive reimbursement of income taxes on certain executive perquisites or other payments (e.g., personal use of corporate aircraft, etc) |
8. Repricing or replacing of underwater stock options |
Without prior shareholder approval (including cash buyouts) |
9. Internal pay disparity |
Excessive differential between CEO total pay and that of next highest‐paid named executive officer (NEO) |
10. Miscellaneous equity practices by executives or under equity plans |
Executives using company stock in hedging activities, such as “cashless” collars, forward sales, equity swaps or other similar arrangements |
In tomorrow’s Advisor, the hay Group experts’ views on executive comp trends for the rest of 2012, plus an introduction to the all-things-comp website, Compensation.BLR.com.
I suppose the ISS factor is important for some companies, but you also have to think about the perceptions of the rank and file, as well as the public.