Bank of America (NYSE: BAC) chief executive
Ken Lewis
received a total of $17 million in compensation during 2007 compared to
$96 million in 2006. The executive's bonus also came in at a mere $4.25
million, which is down from $6.5 million a year earlier. The cut in pay
was actually steeper than shareholders' 22 percent loss holding the
company's stock during the same time period.
"We believe our executive compensation program results in total
compensation awards that are reasonable and appropriate in amount,
align our executive officers' interests with those of our stockholders,
are directly linked to our performance and are easy for our
stockholders to understand," said the compensation committee in a
statement.
Indeed, Bank of America appears to be one of the few companies actually
getting it right this time around. The executive made far less money
because he either didn't or wasn't able to exercise his stock options
given the lower price thanks to problems with its mortgage securities.
Interestingly, shareholders will also get to vote on a new pay
proposals during the company's April 23rd annual meeting that would
give them a non-binding executive compensation vote. This is a proposal
that has been making its rounds and it quickly becoming the norm. In
the end, Bank of America may not need one since they got it right!
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