The Executive-Compensation Package: Salaries, Bonuses, Benefits, and "Perks"

1979 ◽  
Vol 20 (2) ◽  
pp. 17-24
Author(s):  
Jean-Robert H. Cauvin
2004 ◽  
Vol 16 (1) ◽  
pp. 57-92 ◽  
Author(s):  
Konstantinos Stathopoulos ◽  
Susanne Espenlaub ◽  
Martin Walker

This paper examines the executive compensation practices of listed U.K. retailing companies. We compare “New Economy” retailers (e-commerce/dot-coms) to more traditional retailers operating in the “Old Economy.” We also discriminate between recently floated retailers and their more seasoned counterparts. Using a sample of remuneration contracts for 549 directors in 72 listed U.K. companies in the New and Old Economies, we investigate the structure and level of executive (and nonexecutive) compensation defined as the sum of salary, annual bonus, and the values of executive stock options and long-term incentive plans (LTIPs). We investigate the extent to which the contract features are determined by firm characteristics, economic sector, and governance/ownership factors. In contrast to the U.S., where almost all executive stock options are issued at the money, there is a greater variety of practice in the U.K. with some options being granted substantially in the money. We therefore pay special attention to this U.K. institutional feature by producing a model designed to explain the crosssectional variation in the moneyness of stock options at the date of issue. We also examine the determinants of a number of other contract features. These are: the time to maturity of the executive stock options, the leverage of the compensation package, the ratio of long-term pay relative to short-term pay, and pay performance sensitivity. We find that differences in compensation arrangements can be explained to a significant extent by differences in firm size, growth/growth opportunities, firm financial policy, ownership characteristics, and governance arrangements. We also find some systematic differences between the compensation arrangements of CEOs and other executives.


2007 ◽  
Vol 22 (4) ◽  
pp. 599-621 ◽  
Author(s):  
Steven Balsam ◽  
David H. Ryan

This study analyzes the effect of Internal Revenue Code section 162(m) on the compensation package of those chief executive officers (CEOs) hired after the imposition of this code section. Research documents that CEO compensation has increased dramatically since the imposition of section 162(m); yet, this research has not distinguished between the effects on the compensation of CEOs already in place when section 162(m) was imposed from those CEOs hired post-162(m) imposition. We focus our analysis on the compensation of CEOs hired after the imposition of section 162(m), because when firms hire a new CEO, they have a better opportunity to redesign the executive pay package. Consequently, we posit that section 162(m) will have its greatest effect when the affected companies change CEOs. Our analysis provides evidence that the increase in salary normally associated with the hiring of a new CEO has been mitigated and there has been an increase in the sensitivity of firm performance to bonus pay for CEOs appointed after 1994 in affected firms.


2013 ◽  
Vol 11 (1) ◽  
pp. 307-315
Author(s):  
Yixi Ning

This paper examines the amount and structure of the pay package for the departing CEO in a company around CEO succession. I find that the characteristics of the departing CEO compensation can provide valuable information regarding the incoming changes in corporate governance around the succession. Specifically, when a departing CEO is entrenched with a “better” compensation package characterized with a greater amount of pay in cash and in total at a lower risk, the CEO, after his retirement, is more likely to remain on the board as a director or become the chairman of the board, persuade the board to pick an insider rather than an outsider to be his successor, and to promote the company’s current president and/or chief operating officer to be the incoming CEO. These findings are consistent with the management entrenchment theory that when a CEO is entrenched with a greater discretionary power and better personal benefits, he is more likely to use his managerial power to continue his influence on the company even after he retires from the CEO position.


Author(s):  
Akpa Victoria O. ◽  
Egwakhe Johnson A. ◽  
Aliu Fatai O.

Executive compensation is a major strategy being employed by deposit money banks to achieve steady growth in their customer acquisition efforts. The banks face series of challenges including inability to achieve consistent service excellence which had negatively impacted on new customer acquisition. The study examined the effect of executive compensation package on customer acquisition of selected deposit money banks in Lagos State, Nigeria. The study employed cross sectional survey research design where four hundred and twenty-nine copies of the research instruments were administered to purposively selected respondents who were senior and executive staff of the selected banks. The result of multiple regression analysis revealed that base salary (B = 0.217, p = 0.000) and recognition (B = 0.123, p = 0.012) have positive and significant effect on customer acquisition while supplementary benefits (B = 0.017, p = 0.568) and executive bonus (B = 0.044, p = 0.175) have positive, but insignificant effect on customer acquisition. The study concluded that executive compensation has positive effect on customer of selected deposit money banks in Lagos State, Nigeria. It was recommended that attractive compensation management should be instituted to ensure that executive staff are adequately remunerated to facilitate their performance with less distractions.


2015 ◽  
Vol 28 (1) ◽  
pp. 127-149 ◽  
Author(s):  
Christine E. L. Tan ◽  
Susan M. Young

ABSTRACT Shareholders and regulators have increasingly been calling upon firms to reign in executive compensation. Most of this discussion has focused on bonuses and stock options, the more observable portions of an executive compensation package. More difficult for investors to assess, however, is long-term incentive pay, such as supplemental executive retirement plans (SERPs), which has become a significant portion of executive compensation. Our study examines whether managers use accelerated share repurchases (ASRs) to increase total compensation through this under-emphasized form of pay. Managers wishing to increase their total compensation through an increase in earnings per share (EPS) should prefer ASRs, which generally have a more immediate and significant impact on EPS relative to open market repurchases (OMRs). For a sample of repurchase firms, we find evidence that managers who have performance-contingent SERPs in place (i.e., a SERP based on salary and bonus or on average earnings), together with EPS-based bonuses and a share repurchase that results in a higher EPS number, are significantly more likely to choose an ASR versus an OMR. JEL Classifications: G34; G35; M4; M41; M52. Data Availability: The data are available from public sources identified in this study.


2019 ◽  
Vol 7 (1) ◽  
pp. 29-36
Author(s):  
Ummeh Habiba Faria Benteh Rahman

This paper examines the compensation package of the CEO of both the Nordic and US markets and their roles in the organization. The paper contains the comparison between the compensation package of Nordic and US CEOs along with the harmony of the determinants. The work pattern and compensation are different in these two markets, certainly. It has been a big influence in the organization or working places to provide the most desired efforts on the particular or assigned responsibilities. This study is based on a systematic review of literatures, empirical evidences and surveys extracted from 23 articles of the previous studies on the compensation packages of CEO of both Nordic and US markets. The paper will be discussing about the chief executive body in the organization, the compensation design along with their compensation package system, discussing about the theories and determinants’ differences of their compensation practices and how this package is designed in both the Nordic and US markets. The difference between these two markets will be elaborately discussed and following by the author’s own discussion. The paper will end by providing a valid conclusion about the whole study.


2014 ◽  
Vol 11 (2) ◽  
pp. 389-403
Author(s):  
Minhua Yang

We examine whether the changes in corporate governance lead to a better acquisition decision. SOX greatly improve the corporate governance which should reduce the non-value-maximizing behavior of acquiring managers. We find a significant increase in acquirer returns after the passage of SOX. We also find that CEOs with strong managerial power are more likely to receive more restricted stock in their compensation package after the 2002 reforms. Finally, I find a significant positive relation between the restricted stock compensation of acquiring firm CEOs and abnormal stock returns after 2002. This provides empirical support on the effectiveness of the shift away from options towards restricted stock in executive compensation packages. Restricted stock is associated with better merger decisions.


2010 ◽  
Vol 8 (1) ◽  
pp. 37-48 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ralph DeFeo ◽  
Ehsan Nikbakht ◽  
Andrew Spieler

The purpose of this paper is to determine if companies that chose to incorporate Economic Value Added (EVA®) as part of their executive compensation package tend to have better corporate governance than similar firms who have not chosen to use EVA®. EVA® is an economic profit metric developed by Stern Stewart & Co., which is calculated by taking the Net Operating Profits after Taxes (NOPAT) and subtracting a capital charge from it. Through the use of binary logistic regression the strength of several key corporate governance measures were tested in order to ascertain whether they have a significant impact on influencing a firm to use EVA®. A major finding is that firms that employed EVA® as part of their compensation package tend to have a weaker corporate governance.


2021 ◽  
Vol 9 (11) ◽  
pp. 2624-2657
Author(s):  
Dr Helena Megameno Nailonga Ngalandji - Hakweenda

The purpose of this paper was to investigate the relationship between compensation packages and the performance of executive officers in Commercial Public Enterprises in Namibia. The paper was conducted to achieve the following specific objective: to determine the relationship between compensation packages of executives and the performance of Commercial PEs in Namibia. It was all in the context of mixed research approach for data collection using a questionnaire as a tool. The study found that there is a partial relationship between executive compensation and the performance of some commercial public enterprises, in accordance with their Tier Levels.  It is recommended that the Government (shareholder) finds the best fit model of executive compensation packages in order to induce a positive level of performance. It is further recommended that a study be conducted, to investigate the relationship between the role of an independent high-level committee on executive compensation packages, aimed at enhancing performance in Commercial Public Enterprises in Namibia   Keywords: Compensation Package; Performance; Commercial Public Enterprises; Executives  


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