DolmatConnell & Partners, Inc., an independent executive
compensation consulting firm, released today their 2008 Tech100 and
LifeScience100 Studies. These studies, now in their fourth and second year
respectively, provide insight into the evolving world of
executive compensation in the 100 largest publicly traded High Technology and
Life Science companies in the U.S.
Changes in CEO pay level varied significantly between the two studies and
were linked to overall industry performance levels. In the Tech100, CEO base
salaries increased 3.8% and actual total cash compensation increased 2.9%,
while total direct compensation (base + actual bonus + annual long-term
incentive grant values) fell 0.6%. This was in line with a median annual
total shareholder return for the industry which was 1.6%. The picture in the
LifeScience100 was vastly different, with a median total shareholder return of
14.4% last year. CEO base salaries increased 5.6%, actual total cash
compensation increased 10.3%, and total direct compensation rose 11.8%.
Pay-for-performance is dramatically improving, as Boards and Compensation
Committees are responding to shareholder concerns with respect to executive
pay. DolmatConnell & Partners looked at the Top 20 and Bottom 20 performing
companies in each industry and found several encouraging results.
In the Tech100, median target bonuses for the Top 20 performing companies
were 120% of base salary and actual bonus payouts were 139% of target ($1.4M),
whereas in the Bottom 20 companies, median target bonuses were 150% of base
salary, and actual bonus payouts were only 19% of target ($225K). Bonus
payouts in the LifeScience100 followed similar trends. Says Jack Dolmat-
Connell, CEO of DolmatConnell & Partners, "It is great to see that Boards are
finally getting tough relative to the pay of underperforming CEOs. This is
what has infuriated investors for years -- high pay for mediocre or poor
results."
Most studies of executive compensation look at the aggregate value of base
salary, actual bonus and the annual long-term incentive grant values in a
given year, also known as "pay opportunity" for a given year. In addition to
this, the DolmatConnell & Partners' studies looked at the value of
compensation "realized" in a given year -- what executives actually took home.
The results of this new look are stunning -- CEOs at Top 20 companies in the
Tech100 realized $9.0M in 2007, whereas CEOs at Bottom 20 companies realized
only $3.4M, a very significant difference in compensation based on
performance. Unrealized compensation (the value of equity still outstanding)
differences were even more dramatic -- CEOs of Top 20 companies held equity
worth $45.0M, while the equity outstanding of the CEOs of the Bottom 20 was
worth only $8.1M. Says Dolmat-Connell, "This is incredibly positive news
based on a completely new and better way of looking at executive pay. It is
also fascinating to note that the vast majority of the value of the equity
held by CEOs in the Top 20 was in the form of stock options, an investor-
friendly long-term incentive vehicle, whereas the majority of the value of the
equity held by the Bottom 20 CEOs was in the form of time-based restricted
shares, a very investor-unfriendly vehicle."