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CEO compensation jumped 8.5 per cent in 2016, says study

by The Associated Press   

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Over the last five years, median CEO pay in the survey has jumped by 19.6 per cent, nearly double the 10.9 per cent rise in the typical weekly paycheque for full-time employees in the U.S.

NEW YORK—The typical big-company CEO raked in $11.5 million last year in salary, stock and other compensation, according to a study by executive data firm Equilar for The Associated Press. That’s an 8.5 per cent raise from a year earlier, the biggest in three years.

The bump reflects how well stocks have done under these CEOs’ watch. Boards of directors increasingly require that CEOs push their stock price higher to collect their maximum possible payout, and the Standard & Poor’s 500 index returned 12 per cent last year.

Over the last five years, median CEO pay in the survey has jumped by 19.6 per cent, not accounting for inflation. That’s nearly double the 10.9 per cent rise in the typical weekly paycheque for full-time employees across the country.

Here are some other highlights from the AP’s annual package of stories on CEO pay, which was published this past week. See the full roundup here.

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Top of the class
The top-paid CEO last year was Thomas Rutledge of Charter Communications, at $98 million. The vast majority of that came from stock and option awards included as part of a new five-year employment agreement, and Charter’s stock will need to more than double for Rutledge to collect the full amount.

Second on the compensation list last year was Leslie Moonves of CBS, who earned $68.6 million. No. 3 was Walt Disney’s Robert Iger, who made $41 million. The media business is full of big paychecks, where actors and other employees far from the executive suites can make millions of dollars, and the industry’s CEOs have traditionally pulled down some of the country’s biggest packages.

Say on Pay
CEO pay did fall for one group of companies last year: those where investors complained the loudest about executive pay. Compensation dropped for nine of the 10 companies scoring the lowest on “Say on Pay” votes, where shareholders give thumbs up or down on top executives’ earnings.

At Exelon, for example, the majority of voting shares were against how much executives made in 2015, particularly when the stock lost 22 per cent that year. Following the vote, Exelon made several changes, including capping how much executives can receive in incentive payments if the stock loses money over the year.

Auto supplier BorgWarner had last year’s second-lowest passing rate in the survey on “Say on Pay,” with 60 per cent of voting shares saying no or abstaining. The company made changes to its compensation program and cut a 2016 incentive award by $2.4 million to $950,000 for CEO James Verrier. His total compensation dropped 29 per cent to $12.3 million last year.

Women making more, but there is still fewer of them
The median pay for a female CEO was $13.1 million last year, up 9 per cent from 2015. That’s more than the $11.4 million that the typical male CEO made, though the 9 per cent raise was the same.

But the number of women in the top CEO roles has barely budged. Just 6 per cent of the CEOs in the survey were women, a slight increase from about 5 per cent in 2015 and 2014.

The highest-paid woman last year was Virginia Rometty of IBM, bumping out Yahoo’s Marissa Mayer from the top spot.

Pay day for health care
Pay checks have remained healthy for executives in the health care industry. A year after earning the highest compensation of any industry, health care remained close to the top in 2016.

The typical health care CEO made $12.9 million, a touch below the $13.2 million made by their counterparts in industrial goods.

The least highly paid CEOs last year came from the utility industry, with median pay of $9.7 million.

Methodology
Equilar examined the regulatory filings detailing the pay packages of 346 executives. They included all companies in the S&P 500 that filed proxy statements with federal regulators between Jan. 1 and May 1, 2017. To avoid the distortions caused by sign-on bonuses, the sample includes only CEOs in place for at least two years.

To calculate CEO pay, Equilar adds salary, bonus, stock option awards and other pay components that include benefits and perks.

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