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S&P 500 Executive Pay Cuts Are A “Facade”

By Jacob Wolinsky. Originally published at ValueWalk.

Pay Cuts

S&P 500 executive pay cuts are a “facade” and gender diversity remains stuck new study finds

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Q4 2020 hedge fund letters, conferences and more

CEO base pay cuts represent only 6% of total compensation, and only 5% of executive roles are filled by women

Pay Cuts Announced By Companies Are A Mere ‘Facade’

CGLytics, a Diligent brand, today released its second annual S&P 500 Proxy season review providing detailed analysis of the imbalance between Chief Executive Officers (CEOs) pay compared to their performance.

Pay Cuts

The report, titled ‘S&P 500 Report – Do 2020 Trends Foretell the Future?’ finds that pay cuts announced by companies are a mere ‘facade’ representing on average only 6% of total CEO pay for the 2019 financial year. Furthermore, women are vastly outnumbered in executive roles with only 5% of companies in the index headed by women, calling into question whether shareholder ESG demands for diversity are truly being heard.

Pay Cuts

Other key takeaways include:

  • Over three-quarters of S&P 500 companies fail to align executive compensation with performance.
  • Total Shareholder Compensation (TSC) and Total Realized Compensation (TRC) both climbed from 2018 to 2019. Notably, total Long Term Incentives (LTI) Realised increased by 167 percent.
  • LTI continues to dominate CEO average pay. It forms over 70% of the average CEO pay. Base pay however forms an insignificant portion.
  • The Communications Services sector has the highest-paid aggregate compensation in the index.
  • The IT sector has the least relative alignment between pay and performance. Only 15 percent of IT companies show alignment and of the remaining companies in this sector, 45% display relative misalignment between pay and performance.
  • The 35 highest-paid CEOs reviewed in this report received an aggregated, absolute combined TRC of over $3.3 billion up by 23.6% from 2018.
  • Employee pay significantly lags CEO pay; the data suggests the average CEO pay ratio is 262 in the index.

CEO

S&P 500 CEOs Made Sizable Gains In Compensation

“The COVID-19 pandemic continues to cause significant economic hardship to millions of workers around the world. Yet our report shows the S&P 500 CEOs made sizable gains in compensation last year, even while many of them issued statements about taking pay reductions,” said Dottie Schindlinger, Executive Director of the Diligent Institute. “Progress around modern corporate governance practices is happening though. CEO-to-worker pay ratio is becoming a standard metric in shaping compensation practices, and with ESG disclosures top of mind for governments, we are seeing more companies make commitments on ESG issues and tying executive compensation to environment and social factors.”

The post S&P 500 Executive Pay Cuts Are A “Facade” appeared first on ValueWalk.

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