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Broadcom's Hock Tan tops a list of highly paid CEOs. The median pay package for CEOs was $23.7 million in 2023, an 11.4% increase from the prior year. The highest-paid CEOs in the US aren't necessarily household names, but they're enjoying some pretty sweet pay packages — more than enough to avoid worries about higher prices for that morning coffee. Take Hock Tan, head of chipmaker Broadcom. Tan topped a list of the 100 highest-paid chiefs from Equilar, which analyzes data on executive compensation.
Persons: Broadcom's Hock Tan, , Hock Tan, Tan Organizations: Service, Broadcom, Business Locations: Equilar
They immediately established an ambitious, five-year strategic plan to reposition Bombardier, with a focus squarely on its sturdiest leg: the high-flying business jet and ancillary services industry. Deliveries of business and general aviation aircraft last year topped 4,000 for the first time in more than a decade, the General Aviation Manufacturers Association reported in February. Historically, the business jet market has been cyclical, said Noah Poponak, an analyst for Goldman Sachs, "but it's been hyper-cyclical in the past 20 years." Sales of all business jets were healthy leading into 2020 — and then the Covid pandemic hit. Everyone wanted a business jet and was willing to buy whatever was out there, new or used."
Persons: headwinds, Bombardier's, Alain Bellemare, divesting, Éric Martel, Bart Demosky, Demosky, Warren Buffett's Berkshire Hathaway, CFOs, Noah Poponak, Goldman Sachs, Walter Spracklin, Spracklin Organizations: Bombardier, Boeing, Airbus, General Aviation Manufacturers Association, Challenger, Global, Companies, Honeywell, RBC Capital Markets Locations: Montreal, Warren, Covid
Even when compared with other CEOs, who routinely get paid roughly 200 times more than their typical employees, Elon Musk’s pay package was eye-opening. Critics have argued for years that CEO pay packages are exorbitant. Under Musk’s pay plan, he received a chunk of stock options each time Tesla’s market value rose by $50 billion. General Motors, for example, considers executive salaries at 3M, Boeing, Ford, IBM and other huge companies, and uses complex formulas to determine CEO compensation. Corporate law experts say any new compensation package for Musk will likely be challenged in court unless Tesla's board either resigns en masse or follows a meticulous process to protect shareholders by passing a substantially smaller package.
Persons: Tesla, Kathaleen St, Jude McCormick, Musk, Bernard Arnault, Critics, Blackstone’s Steven Schwarzman, , , ’ ” McCormick, Musk’s, shouldn’t, Mary Barra, Jim, Mark Zuckerberg, Tim Cook, they’re, , Charles Elson, ” Elson, Elson Organizations: Elon, Musk, Forbes, General Motors, 3M, Boeing, Ford, IBM, Big Tech, University of Delaware, Lawyers Locations: Delaware, , Barra, U.S
The chief executives of Nvidia (NVDA) and AMD (AMD) aren’t just two of the most powerful people in the global AI chip industry, they’re also family. “For almost half a century now, Taiwan’s economy has been centered on electronics production, chip assembly, chip manufacturing, chip design, everything semiconductors. According to Nvidia, Huang was born in 1963 in Taipei before moving to the southern city of Tainan. “I would say anyone who logs on the internet is likely touching not just one, but dozens and hundreds of Nvidia and AMD chips,” said Miller. I would say anyone who logs on the internet is likely touching not just one, but dozens and hundreds of Nvidia and AMD chips.
Persons: Taipei CNN — Jensen Huang, Lisa Su, they’re, Su, Jean Wu, Wu, Huang, ” Su, ” Wu, ” Christopher Miller, , it’s, there’s, Hwa Cheng, Edith Yeung, Miller, Robyn Beck, AMD’s, Florence Lo, , Christopher Miller Organizations: Taipei CNN, Nvidia, AMD, CNN, Consumer Technology Association, rockstar, Technology, Bloomberg, Getty, Race Capital, ASUS, Consumer, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Oregon State University, Stanford University, McKinsey, Associated Press, CTA Locations: Hong Kong, Taipei, Taiwan, United States, China, Silicon Valley, Silicon, Tainan, Thailand, Washington, Kentucky, New York City, Las Vegas, AFP, Santa Clara , California
"The reason we ask for 40% pay increases is because in the last four years alone, the CEO pay went up 40%. U.S. companies, in contrast, use grant date value of stock packages awarded to executives during the reporting year. AdvertisementAdvertisementThat's because in some years, talking about a CEO's "realized pay" can obscure exorbitant pay packages approved by company boards. AdvertisementAdvertisementThe CEOs of GM and Ford also saw their compensation packages peak in 2021, before declining slightly in 2022. However you slice the numbers, the gap between CEO pay and rank-and-file workers at all three companies is gigantic.
Persons: Mary Barra's, Shawn Fain, Fain, Mary Barra, James Farley, Jim Hackett, Stellantis, Carlos Tavares, Mike Manley's, Equilar, Tavares, That's, Manley, , Harry Katz, Tesla, Elon Organizations: UAW, Service, United Auto Workers, Ford, GM, Netflix, Writers Guild of America, WGA, Comcast, Big Three, , Motors, Chrysler, CBS, Big, General, AP, Equilar, Fiat Chrysler Automobiles, French PSA Group, Fiat Chrysler, Institute, Detroit, Cornell University, U.S Locations: Wall, Silicon, Stellantis, American, European
In its annual renumeration report, Stellantis reported CEO Carlos Tavares' 2022 pay was 23.46 million euros. That's a nearly 77% increase over then Fiat Chrysler CEO Mike Manley's 2019 pay of 13.28 million euros. However you slice the numbers, the gap between CEO pay and rank-and-file workers at all three companies is gigantic. It's far above the typical pay gap at S&P 500 companies, which was 186-1 according to AP's annual CEO pay survey, which uses data analyzed by Equilar. CEO Elon Musk's 2022 compensation was reported as zero in the company's proxy statement, rendering its official pay ratio meaningless.
Persons: — It’s, Shawn Fain, Fain, ” Fain, , Mary Barra, James Farley, William Clay Ford, Stellantis, Carlos Tavares, Mike Manley's, , Equilar, Tavares, That's, Manley, , Tavares ’, Harry Katz, Tesla, Elon, Tom Krishner Organizations: United Auto Workers, UAW, Netflix, Writers Guild of America, WGA, Comcast, Big Three, , Motors, Ford, Chrysler, Associated Press, Big, General, Barra, AP, Equilar, Fiat Chrysler Automobiles, French PSA Group, GM, Fiat Chrysler, Institute, Detroit, Cornell University, U.S Locations: Stellantis, American, European, Detroit
[1/2] A boardroom is seen at the legal offices of the law firm Polsinelli in New York City, New York, U.S., June 3, 2021. REUTERS/Andrew KellyAug 9 (Reuters) - Boards of S&P 500 companies made recruiting directors with financial expertise their top priority over the past year, slowing boardroom gains for minorities, according to a new report. According to research firm Equilar, just three of 68 financial services CEOs in the S&P 500 are nonwhite. Investors have sought more boardroom diversity as part of a broader U.S. reckoning on race relations. The decline in the share of new minority directors came from a drop in Black or African-American directors.
Persons: Polsinelli, Andrew Kelly, Spencer Stuart, Julie Daum, Spencer Stuart's, Daum, Ross Kerber, Jonathan Oatis Organizations: REUTERS, Investors, Thomson Locations: New York City , New York, U.S
Does It Help to Know How Much the Boss Makes?
  + stars: | 2023-07-01 | by ( Sarah Kessler | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: +1 min
In 1933, the U.S. government asked 2,000 corporations listed on stock exchanges in New York to disclose how much they paid their top bosses — its first effort at making the pay of executives more visible. The idea was to encourage the “more conservative management of industry,” The New York Times reported when it published some of the results on its front page. Instead, according to a study by Alexandre Mas, a Princeton economist, the opposite happened: Average chief executive compensation rose, mostly because the lower-paid executives — now realizing that they were, indeed, lower-paid — pushed for raises that brought their compensation in line with their higher-paid peers’. Nonetheless, the belief that revealing chief executive pay would help keep executive compensation in check stuck around, and got more complex. In 2018, the Securities and Exchange Commission required companies to publish not only executive pay, but also a ratio that describes how the pay of a company’s leader compared with the pay of its median worker.
Persons: , Alexandre Mas, Organizations: The New York Times, Securities and Exchange Commission Locations: U.S, New York, Princeton
How Sweet It Is, if You’re the Boss
  + stars: | 2023-06-30 | by ( Jeff Sommer | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: 1 min
It’s good to be the boss. But you get paid more than everybody else — vastly more, as the latest numbers remind us. What’s more, companies must compare the rich earnings of their leaders with the pay of ordinary workers. For the leaders of corporate America, the sums almost always range from large to hard to believe. Consider that the highest paid chief executive in this year’s report, compiled by the executive compensation research firm Equilar, was Sundar Pichai of Google’s parent, Alphabet.
Persons: Dodd, Frank, What’s, I’ve, Sundar Pichai Locations: America
Who wants to be a CEO right now?
  + stars: | 2023-06-09 | by ( Hasan Chowdhury | ) www.businessinsider.com   time to read: +3 min
Let's be real: Being a CEO sucks right now. But 2023 has brought a level of scrutiny that makes being a CEO today a nightmare for even the toughest leader. CNN's former chief Chris Licht stepped down on Wednesday after less than a year, following intense criticism from inside and outside his newsroom. Meme stock company GameStop fired its CEO Matthew Furlong on the same day as Licht, also after a short tenure. At the low point of a boom-and-bust cycle where high interest rates and high expectations reign supreme, being a CEO sucks.
Persons: Let's, CNN's Chris Licht, , Jack Welch, CNN's, Chris Licht, Licht, Matthew Furlong, Jeff Shell, Jack Bowles, Patience, Matt Turner, Raul Vargas Organizations: Corporate, Service, General Electric, Observers, GameStop, Google, Farmers Group Locations: freefall, British
June 1 (Reuters) - Netflix Inc (NFLX.O) shareholders on Thursday withheld their support for the company's executive pay package, in a non-binding vote that followed a call by striking Hollywood writers to reject the proposed 2023 compensation. "While investors have long taken issue with Netflix's executive pay, the compensation structure is more egregious against the backdrop of the strike," wrote Writers Guild West President Meredith Stiehm. Netflix shareholders withheld support for the executive compensation structure for 2023, in a non-binding "say on pay" vote. Last year, the company's executive pay package won support from just 27% of the shareholder votes cast. After last year's vote, Netflix said it made changes including instituting a salary cap for its co-chief executives and a performance-based bonus plan.
Persons: Guild of America West, Meredith Stiehm, Stiehm, Reed Hastings, Ted Sarandos, Greg Peters, Peters, Ari Emanuel, David Zaslav, Dawn Chmielewski, David Gregorio, Christopher Cushing Organizations: Netflix Inc, Guild of America, Guild West, Comcast Corp, Netflix, Hollywood, Endeavor, Warner Bros Discovery, Alliance, Television Producers, SAG, Thomson Locations: Los Angeles
That's a staggering 384 times the average pay of a Hollywood writer. Overall, average pay for Hollywood's top execs climbed to $28 million in 2021, up 53% from 2018 (and roughly 108 times the average writer's pay) according to the analysis, which uses compensation data from the research firm Equilar and includes stock options, base salaries, bonuses and other perks. Meanwhile, average pay for Hollywood writers has remained virtually flat at about $260,000 as 2021, the Times reports. Hollywood executive pay dropped in 2022 due to stock market volatility and investor pressure to make streaming profitable. From 1978 to 2021, CEO pay grew by 1,460%, adjusted for inflation, versus just 18.1% for the typical worker.
Persons: David Zaslav, That's, Ari Emanuel, Reed Hastings, Bob Iger, Walt, Ted Sarandos, Rupert Murdoch, Lachlan Murdoch, Brian Roberts, Joseph Ianniello, Patrick Whitesell, Kaitlin Fontana, Kelly Evans Organizations: Hollywood, Los Angeles Times, Warner Bros, Discovery Inc, Times, Writers Guild of America, Endeavor Group Holdings Inc, Netflix, Walt Disney Co, Fox Corp, Comcast Corp, Paramount Global, Endeavor, Paramount, Disney, Company, WGA, Alliance, Television Producers, LA Times, Economic, Comcast, CNBC Locations: U.S, California
May 3 (Reuters) - Median pay for top U.S. CEOs rose 7.7% last year to a record $22.3 million, a new study found, as big stock awards helped the group stay ahead of inflation while U.S. workers' pay fell behind. Pay among the CEOs rose faster than for U.S. workers in 2022 despite tight labor markets. Total return for the companies whose CEO pay was studied was negative 11%. He added that amid the macroeconomic uncertainty, "There's still a little more of this incentivizing of executives that's leading to the increases in CEO pay." "Our CEO’s compensation is and will continue to be 100% performance based," the spokesperson said.
See here: Recent filings illustrate the way CEOs are still lavishly compensated even when massive screw-ups happen on their watch. A Southwest representative told CNN that the December cancellations did factor into the bonuses paid out to employees. The boards that make decisions on CEO pay are usually stacked with executives or former executives from other companies who benefit from the system. Often, CEOs of distressed companies — rather than seeing pay cut — receive so-called retention bonuses to encourage leaders not to flee the sinking ship. “When all the numbers are crunched, 2022 is going to be a flat year for CEO pay,” said Reda.
CEOs take pay cuts after brutal 2022
  + stars: | 2023-01-30 | by ( Matt Egan | ) edition.cnn.com   time to read: +4 min
The pay cuts are hitting some of America’s best-known and highest-paid bosses, including Apple CEO Tim Cook, Morgan Stanley CEO James Gorman and Goldman Sachs CEO David Solomon. The bank then disclosed on Friday that Solomon’s 2022 pay is being cut by nearly 30%. Goldman Sachs’ profit dropped 49% last year as the slowdown in dealmaking curbed advisory fees. Morgan Stanley CEO James Gorman (left), Apple boss Tim Cook (middle) and Goldman Sachs CEO David Solomon (right) are among the leaders whose pay has been clipped in recent weeks. Tech bosses have received the biggest pay hikes, with the median CEO pay surging by 42.1% in 2021 to $19.1 million, Equilar said.
At Walt Disney, the G in ESG stands for goofy
  + stars: | 2023-01-12 | by ( Jennifer Saba | ) www.reuters.com   time to read: +3 min
NEW YORK, Jan 12 (Reuters Breakingviews) - It’s sadly fitting that Walt Disney (DIS.N) persists with Mickey Mouse corporate governance. The $176 billion entertainment empire on Wednesday appointed Nike (NKE.N) Chairman Mark Parker to run its board, too. Parker, who has been a director at Disney since 2016, was around for all of it. Parker has been a Disney director since 2016, and he also serves as executive chairman of Nike. Disney also said that shareholder Trian Partners had nominated founding partner Nelson Peltz to serve on the company’s board.
Women continue to face a significant wage gap that has hardly budged over the last 15 years, with women of color bearing the brunt of the disparity. The year "2022 really is a mixed bag when it comes to gender equality," says Melissa Boteach, the vice president for income security and child care/early learning at the National Women's Law Center. Aside from that victory, there has been little progress in closing the gender wage gap over the past decade. This year, the wage gap narrowed by one penny. The wage gap Black women face narrowed by about four cents in one year, while Latinas' wage gap didn't budge at all.
Former AMC CEO Christina Spade got a $10 million payout after only three months on the job. AMC's former CEO getting a massive payout for three months of work is not good for shareholder capitalism or stakeholder capitalism. "But AMC's former CEO getting a massive payout for three months of work is not good for shareholder capitalism or stakeholder capitalism. Ja_inter/Getty ImagesLayoffs vs. the golden parachuteResearch shows that CEO severance packages serve an important purpose in corporate America. And some investor groups have recently proposed votes to curb CEO pay.
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They argued the pay package did what it aimed to do -- ensure the entrepreneur successfully guided Tesla through a critical period which helped drive the stock 10-fold higher. The Tesla shareholder lawsuit argues that the pay package should have required Musk to work full time at Tesla. In all, 19 witnesses are scheduled, including directors and executives from 2018, compensation experts and advisors who helped craft the pay package. Tesla has hit 11 of the 12 targets as its value ballooned briefly to more than $1 trillion from $50 billion, according to court papers. A decision will likely take around three months after the trial and could be appealed to the Delaware Supreme Court.
Last year, Elon Musk parted ways with one of his top deputies at Tesla Inc., a French auto-industry executive named Jerome Guillen . Mr. Guillen worked at Tesla for roughly a decade, rising to oversee the company’s car division. He was rewarded with equity grants that swelled with Tesla’s valuation. By the end of 2020, Mr. Guillen’s unvested equity in the car maker was valued at around $600 million, according to an Equilar Inc. analysis.
Last year, Elon Musk parted ways with one of his top deputies at Tesla Inc., a French auto-industry executive named Jerome Guillen . Mr. Guillen worked at Tesla for roughly a decade, rising to oversee the company’s car division. He was rewarded with equity grants that swelled with Tesla’s valuation. By the end of 2020, Mr. Guillen’s unvested equity in the car maker was valued at around $600 million, according to an Equilar Inc. analysis.
[1/2] SpaceX Chief Engineer Elon Musk gestures during a joint news conference with T-Mobile CEO Mike Sievert at the SpaceX Starbase, in Brownsville, Texas, U.S., August 25, 2022. REUTERS/Adrees LatifCompanies Twitter Inc FollowTesla Inc FollowWILMINGTON, Del., Nov 7 (Reuters) - As Elon Musk is engulfed in his overhaul of Twitter, the entrepreneur is headed to trial to defend his record $56 billion Tesla Inc pay package against claims it unjustly enriches him without requiring his full-time presence at the carmaker. The disputed pay package allows Musk to buy 1% of Tesla's stock at a deep discount each time escalating performance and financial targets are met; otherwise Musk gets nothing. Does Elon Musk work for the board or does the board work for Elon Musk," said Minor Myers, a professor at UConn School of Law. Myers said if the pay package is rescinded, the board could simply create a new one and do so with McCormick's ruling to guide them.
In a response to a Twitter user asking about the layoffs, Musk tweeted: "This is false." Citing unidentified people familiar with the matter, the Times reported the cuts could begin as soon as Saturday. According to media reports on Saturday, Musk fired top executives in an effort to avoid hefty severance payouts, while lining up other layoffs as soon as Saturday. In a tweet on Saturday LightShed analyst Rich Greenfield said Musk fired top Twitter execs "for cause," preventing their unvested stock from vesting as part of a change of control. Reuters wasn't immediately able to contact the fired executives.
Oct 29 (Reuters) - Twitter's (TWTR.N) new owner Elon Musk fired top executives in an effort to avoid hefty severance payouts, while lining up other layoffs as soon as Saturday to avoid stock grants due on Nov. 1, according to media reports on Saturday. He had accused them of misleading him and Twitter investors over the number of fake accounts on the platform. In a tweet on Saturday LightShed analyst Rich Greenfield said Musk fired top Twitter execs "for cause," preventing their unvested stock from vesting as part of a change of control. Reuters wasn't immediately able to make contact with the fired executives. Citing unidentified people familiar with the matter, the Times reported the cuts could begin as soon as Saturday.
Elon Musk fired top Twitter execs "for cause" to avoid severance payments, The Information reported. He fired CEO Parag Agrawal and three other executives on Thursday as he completed his takeover. The execs are in line to receive up to $122 million in payouts, researchers Equilar told Reuters. Musk removed Twitter CEO Parag Agrawal, chief financial officer Ned Segal, legal chief Vijaya Gadde, and general counsel Sean Edgett on Thursday after closing his $44 billion deal. His relationship with Agrawal in particular quickly soured, with the pair trading blows on Twitter and over text messages.
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