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Executive Investigator Tracking and Analyzing Executive Salaries, Bonuses, and Perks
 Wednesday, August 27, 2008
Executive Excess 2008 also looks at the pay of fund managers - which is usually ignored in general discussions of rising pay because such managers are not heads of publicly traded companies so many arguments levied against them do not apply. However, through the lens of beneficial tax treatment, fund managers may be more, not less, guilty. Here are the top 5 fund managers by pay in 2007 (no, these billion dollar numbers are not typos): John Paulson, Paulson & Co.: $3.7 billion George Soros, Soros Fund Management: $2.9 billion James Simons, Renaissance Technologies: $2.8 billion Philip Falcone, Harbinger Partners: $1.7 billion Kenneth Griffin, Citadel Investment Group: $1.5 billion
 Tuesday, August 26, 2008
As promised, the beginning of an extensive look at the Institute for Policy Studies and United for a Fair Economy's 15th annual CEO Compensation Survey, this year titled " Executive Excess 2008: How Average Taxpayers Subsidize Runaway Pay." Key FindingsCEO-WORKER DIVIDE: S&P 500 CEOs last year averaged $10.5 million, 344 times the pay of typical American workers. Last year, the top 50 hedge and private equity fund managers averaged $588 million each, more than 19,000 times as much as typical U.S. workers earned. TAXPAYER SUBSIDIES FOR EXECUTIVE PAY: Average U.S. taxpayers subsidize excessive executive compensation — by more than $20 billion per year — via a variety of tax and accounting loopholes. INDIRECT TAXPAYER SUPPORT FOR RUNAWAY PAY: More than 85 percent of the public companies on the federal government’s top 100 contractors list paid their CEOs over 100 times the pay of average U.S. workers. REFORM ROADBLOCKS: Legislation that would plug executive-friendly tax loopholes is already pending in Congress. But this legislation has stalled — and will likely remain stalled unless the November 2008 elections change current Congressional voting dynamics.
 Monday, August 25, 2008
The Christian Science Monitor takes a broad look at the executive compensation issue: How much?Some 77 percent of Americans polled last year felt that corporate
executives "earn too much." Most corporate boards apparently disagree.
Last year, although the nation's economy was already in trouble, they
gave the chief executive officers of the Standard & Poor's 500
largest companies on average a 2.6 percent pay hike to $10,544,470. Why no action?On the presidential campaign trail, both Sens. Barack Obama and John
McCain attack the high levels of pay for corporate bosses, but are
mostly fuzzy on remedies. Several bills before Congress would attempt
to tame runaway executive pay. But none have passed both houses.
Politicians are "looking out" to protect the campaign contributions they receive from corporate executives, says Ms. Anderson.
And it's an election year.
Are they worth the money? A new study by economists Ulrike Malmendier at the University of
California, Berkeley, and Geoffrey Tate at the UCLA Anderson School of
Management, Los Angeles, cast some doubt for some "CEO superstars."
After gaining fame and prestigious awards from business magazines and
others for their corporate performance, they are rewarded with even
more pay. But in the next three years their firms underperform by 15 to
20 percent compared with firms of non-prize-winning executives.
Ms. Malmendier suspects the CEOs are too busy writing books, sitting on other company boards, taking prestigious public service
jobs, and improving their golf handicaps.
 Friday, August 22, 2008
From the Associated Press: Oracle Corp. (NASDAQ: ORCL) founder Larry Ellison, a longtime fixture on the list
of the world's richest people, is now ensconced atop The Associated
Press' rankings of the top-paid chief executives in the United States. Never
shy about flaunting his estimated $25 billion fortune, Ellison
established himself as the best-paid CEO among major U.S. companies by
persuading Oracle to award him a fiscal 2008 pay package valued at
$84.6 million under the AP's calculations.
 Tuesday, August 19, 2008
Though buyouts can be good for shareholders, the International Herald Tribune shows that the real benefits often go to executives: August Busch IV, chief executive of Anheuser-Busch Cos. Inc. will be
paid nearly $10.4 million after the brewer is sold to InBev SA and
$120,000 a month to consult for the new company through the end of 2013.
Terms of the consulting deal are currently being negotiated,
according to a filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission
made Friday.
Busch, a member of the St. Louis-based brewer's founding family,
will also be eligible for an additional payment of $13.3 million on
various change in control payments and benefits, the filing said.
 Friday, August 15, 2008
UnitedHealth Group Inc. (NYSE: UNH) became one of the most prominent players in an options backdating scandal where award dates were altered to make them more profitable for executives. In December, former UnitedHealth CEO William McGuire agreed to give-up a staggering $420 million in addition to $200 million he had already returned. Now, according to the WSJ: The Minnesota Supreme Court on Thursday said a federal judge has little
leeway to review or reject a stock-options backdating settlement
between UnitedHealth and former Chief Executive William McGuire, increasing the likelihood that the deal will be approved.
 Thursday, August 14, 2008
In a rare major media story, the Associated Press does a straight CEO pay piece rather than a general look at the climate of executive compensation: Stephen Sanger got a nearly 14 percent raise in his final year as
the chairman and chief executive of General Mills Inc. (NYSE: GIS), according to a
filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission. Sanger, who
retired as head of the company that makes Wheaties and Cheerios cereals
at the end of its fiscal 2008 year in May, earned $13.8 million, the
filing said. That compared to earnings of $12.1 million in the previous
year. Sanger's base salary was nearly $1.3 million, and he also was given
$3.5 million in non-equity incentive plan compensation for meeting
financial targets, the regulatory filing said. In addition,
Sanger was given miscellaneous compensation of $470,701. This included
company contributions to savings plans as well as perks valued at
$192,184; those included $50,567 for personal air travel, $16,806 for
use of the executive car and $40,200 in discounts when he bought the
car. He was also given $15,054 for financial planning, $32,772 for
insurance and $17,298 for unused vacation days. The bulk of his
compensation for the fiscal year was in stock and option awards valued
at more than $8.5 million when they were granted in June 2007.
 Wednesday, August 13, 2008
On August 18th The Institute for Policy Studies and United for a Fair Economy will release their annual report on CEO pay - this year highlighting how the tax and accounting systems favor high paying positions through: - Preferential capital gains treatment of carried interest
- Unlimited deferred pay
- Offshore deferred compensation
- Unlimited deductibility of executive compensation
- Stock option accounting double standard
Expect in-depth coverage here when the report is released.
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© 2006-2008, Accelerize New Media, Inc. (OTC-BB: ACLZ)
Senior Editor: Justin Kuepper
Executive Investigator reports on and analyzes Executive pay, perks and other compensation, and current news that relates to Executive Compensation.
The content in this blog may be republished or quoted without express permission as long as credit is given and a link provided to ExecutiveInvestigator.com
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