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Executive Investigator
Tracking and Analyzing Executive Salaries, Bonuses, and Perks
 Thursday, January 24, 2008
A Watson Wyatt Worldwide poll found that a significant number of U.S. companies do not plan to disclose performance goals for their executive pay programs in their 2008 proxy statements. In fact, only 42 percent of companies plan to disclose the specifics while 31 percent have no plans to reveal goals at all! The SEC instituted the new disclosure rules effective in 2007 in order to provide investors with a clearer picture of executive compensation; however, the rules only request companies provide the information unless it would result in competitive harm.

"Setting sufficiently challenging performance goals and appropriate corporate performance metrics is an extremely important part of the executive pay process," said Ira Kay, global director of executive compensation consulting at Watson Wyatt. "The SEC has put significant pressure on companies to disclose their goals so that shareholders can determine if programs are paying for performance. However, companies are still struggling with the decision of whether to disclose this information."

Thursday, January 24, 2008 7:06:49 PM UTC  #    Comments [0]  |  Trackback
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