From The Economist:
How executives are rewarded is one of the many mysteries of China’s
increasingly powerful companies.
A new study
by Zhihong Chen and Yuyan Guan, of the City University of Hong Kong,
and Bin Ke, of Pennsylvania State University, casts a rare beam of
light.
The authors
examine “red chips”—companies operating in China but incorporated
abroad and listed in Hong Kong. For many years this was the main way in
which big Chinese companies interacted with the capital markets. The 83
mostly state-controlled companies covered by the study’s final year of
data, 2005, account for more than half of the stockmarket value of all
Chinese firms and more than one-third of the capitalisation of the Hong
Kong Stock Exchange.
Senior executives’ cash pay was low by global standards: $180,000 a
year on average. Almost every firm awarded stock options, worth an
average of $140,000, giving bosses healthy top-ups as well as equity
stakes—if those options were exercised. Remarkably, a lot never were.
At more than half of the firms, no options were exercised within four
years of vesting.