Title: MBAO 6600 Executive Compensation
1Long-Term Performance Incentives for Executives
- Long-term Performance Incentives Reward
Executives for achieving superior long-run
performance that provides above average returns
to shareholders. - Long-term incentives encourage executives to take
risks with firm assets leading to shareholder
gains that they might otherwise avoid. - Example Investing in a risky project that leads
to a radical innovation that changes the rules of
competition.
2Types of Long-term Performance Incentives
(Source R. Bernstein, 1998 Foundation for
Enterprise Development)
- Types of Long-term Incentives for Executives
- Performance-based
- Non-Performance-based
- Founders equity
- Restricted stock tied to Executive tenure -
golden handcuff - Stock options given as a Recruiting Bonus
3Types of Long-term Performance Incentives
(Source R. Bernstein, 1998 Foundation for
Enterprise Development)
- Performance-based LT Incentives for Executives
- Vested Stock Bonus - An award of stock given to
executives to reward specific performance. - Outright Award
- Taxable to employee based on full market value at
the time of the grant - Deductible to employer at same time and same
amount
4Types of Long-term Performance Incentives
(Source R. Bernstein, 1998 Foundation for
Enterprise Development)
- Restricted Stock Bonus - an award of stock that
has further restrictions that must be satisfied
before the stock can be owned. - Requires that the executive must stay with the
company during a vesting schedule or meet some
specific performance goals. - Taxable to employee when restrictions are removed
- Deductible to employer at same time and same
amount
5Types of Long-term Performance Incentives
(Source R. Bernstein, 1998 Foundation for
Enterprise Development)
- Stock Option Plans - gives the executive the
right to purchase company stock in the future at
a price that is fixed at the date of the grant. - Value of options not reported on accounting
records - Options given to executives dilute value of stock
owned by other shareholders - Strike price of stock options are set at time
of grant and may be set at market price of stock
on day of grant, or some other price of the
stock. - Stock options are given a period when they can be
exercised which in most cases is around 10 years.
6Types of Long-term Performance Incentives
(Source R. Bernstein, 1998 Foundation for
Enterprise Development)
- Types of Stock Option Plans
- Incentive Stock Option (ISO)
- Limits on number, length, price and who may
participate - Non-taxable to executive until stock is sold and
then taxed at capital gains rate of taxes. - No corporate tax deduction
7Types of Long-term Performance Incentives
(Source R. Bernstein, 1998 Foundation for
Enterprise Development)
- Non-Qualified Stock Options (NSO)
- Flexible to apply compared to ISO
- Taxable to employee at exercise date
- Taxed as ordinary income if sold when options
exercised taxed as capital gains if held for
more than 12 months. - Corporate tax deduction at exercise date
- Most high technology firms use non-qualified
stock options for flexibility and tax reasons.
8Types of Long-term Performance Incentives
- Stock Appreciation Rights (SARs) and Phantom
Stock - cash based plans that simulate stock
perf. - Advantages
- long-term incentive without issuing stock less
complex from legal perspective - does not dilute voting control
- avoids admin. regulatory complexities, more
flexible designs - Disadvantages
- no real ownership provided to executive
- company must book value of outstanding SARs or
phantom stock as compensation expense
periodically
9Types of Long-term Performance Incentives
- Stock Appreciation Rights (SARs)
- SARs mirror stock options - receives cash
difference between strike price and market value
of stock - No investment on part of executive required
- Gives executive feel of ownership without
giving up control to executive
10Types of Long-term Performance Incentives
- Phantom Stock
- Phantom stock mirrors stock bonuses
- Executive receives units of value in firm, tied
to value of stock appreciation - Results in a cash distribution
11Improving the Relationship between Stock Options
and Performance (Source A. Rappaport, 1999,
Harvard Business Review)
- Problems with Stock Option Plans
- 1. Windfall effects - between 1995-1997 there
was a 100 increase in stock indexes resulting in
huge gains for below average performers. - 2. Fixed price options are problematic - poorly
related to strategic performance goals - 3. Downside on options is minimal
12Improving the Relationship between Stock Options
and Performance (Source A. Rappaport, 1999)
- Proposed Solutions
- 1. Premium priced stock options
- price must exceed a premium above market on day
options are granted, such as 25 or 50 above
market price used by Monsanto, Colgate-Palmolive - 2. Indexing
- tie options to an index of competitors or market
index such as S P 500 - in the money when index is exceeded
- discount value of options when index is not
reached - more indexed options needed than fixed to
encourage execs to bear greater risk