It would take a typical worker 169 years to amass a CEO's salary
A typical CEO at one of the biggest U.S. companies took home $12.3 million last year, according to the Associated Press's annual survey of executive compensation. The gap between the boss and their workforce widened further.
Median pay for CEOs in the survey climbed 4.1% last year, while pay for typical workers rose 3.2%. It would take two lifetimes for the typical employee at most S&P 500 companies to make what their CEO did, or 169 years, according to data analyzed by Equilar for the AP.
Lisa Su of Advanced Micro Devices topped the list. She earned compensation valued at $58.5 million after guiding her company's stock to the best performance in the S&P 500 for two straight years. It's the first time a woman has topped the list since the AP's annual pay survey began in 2011.
CEOs such as Alphabet's Sundar Pichai and Intel's Robert Swan had packages that were valued even higher that Su's, but were excluded because the AP's survey looks only at S&P 500 bosses who have been in the job for at least two years, in part to avoid distortions caused by sign-on bonuses.
The AP's compensation study included pay data for 329 CEOs at S&P 500 companies who have served at least two full fiscal years at their companies, which filed proxy statements between Jan. 1 and April 30.
Of course, the survey's results are from before the coronavirus pandemic upended everything. Now, there's a chance the outbreak will do what rising anger about income inequality has not in recent years: pull executive compensation lower.
Hundreds of CEOs across the country have already said they'll forgo some or all of their salary. And the turmoil in the stock market and the global economy could also threaten the stock awards and bonuses that make up the majority of CEOs' pay.
A gradual slowdown
CEOs in the AP's survey had a median compensation valued at $12.3 million last year, which means half made more and half made less. Besides salary and cash bonuses, that includes stock awards and option grants that CEOs receive only if the company's stock price rises in the future. In many cases, these were stock and options that companies granted their CEOs last year, for their performance in 2018 and earlier.
The 4.1% rise in median pay was a slowdown for S&P 500 CEOs, who had seen their pay jump 7.2% the year before and by even more in earlier years. Much of the slowdown was because of a drop in how much cash the CEOs got for hitting various performance targets.
At Eastman Chemical, for example, the value of CEO Mark Costa's compensation dropped 11% to $14 million last year, according to the survey, in part because he fell short in some performance metrics set by the board of directors.
Eastman's board said Costa exceeded the goals set for "growth and innovation" in 2019, but he only partially met the targets for how much cash the company generated, as well as for employee safety and other measures. He received $377,000 in what the company calls its "unit performance plan," down from the $1.5 million he got from the plan a year earlier.
Investors get more say
The slowdown in CEO pay across the S&P 500 is partly due to the increased voice investors have gotten on the subject, shareholder advocates say. It's been nearly a decade since the U.S. government began requiring companies give their investors a "Say on Pay" at annual meetings, allowing them a non-binding up-or-down vote on executive compensation.
"I think there has been a growing sense — not by all, but a growing portion of institutional investors — that CEOs are overpaid," said Amy Borrus, deputy director of the Council of Institutional Investors. "It's not so much that they're overpaid but that it's out of whack with corporate performance"
She said pay packages are often built on goals set by boards that are difficult for investors to understand and that don't always incentivize performance.
Whlle shareholders are giving most companies an overwhelming thumbs-up, scrutiny has helped curb some of the most egregious practices in recent years, such as companies paying the equivalent of CEOs' income taxes, said Rosanna Landis Weaver, program manager of executive compensation at As You Sow, a shareholder advocacy group.
"We might find out just how well the system works next year," she said. "I fully expect some companies will keep their targets and metrics the same, and there will be fewer bonuses."
Because companies have tied more of their CEOs' compensation to corporate performance — and because many boards set their financial goals early this year, before everyone fully appreciated how badly the COVID-19 outbreak would wreck the global economy — many CEOs are likely to fall short of all the pay they could have been in line for.
The S&P 500 lost as much as a third of its value earlier this year, when worries about the recession were at their peak. Corporate profits, another key measure for CEO pay, are also expected to crater. Across the S&P 500, earnings per share will likely sink 33% this year, strategists at Goldman Sachs say.
The COVID-19 response
The coronavirus shutdowns have put more than 36 million Americans out of work, and to show that they're sharing in the pain, many top executives have volunteered to give up some or all of their salaries. At Disney, which has furloughed 120,000 of its workers, Iger agreed to forgo all his salary through the end of the fiscal year, except for what he's contributing to participate in the corporate health benefit plan. He stepped aside as Disney's CEO earlier this year and became its executive chairman.
Another CEO high atop the rankings, Comcast's Brian Roberts, pledged to donate all his salary to charities that support COVID-19 relief efforts "for the duration of this situation."
A CEO's salary, though, typically makes up less than 10% of total compensation each year. What will hit CEOs' pocketbooks more is what happens to companies' share prices, which will affect the value of stock and options they were already granted, as well as the bonuses they would have been in line for.
"The stock market alone has really caused some significant decrease in outstanding value for executives," said Kelly Malafis, partner at Compensation Advisory Partners.
The economy's sudden, unexpected downdraft has investors on guard for boards of directors to rejigger CEOs' performance goals and make them easier to achieve. Boards could also give CEOs bigger grants of stock to make up for the plunges in price earlier this year, as many companies did after the 2008 financial crisis.
"The risk is that if there is a strong rebound in the market, that could lead to windfall profits for executives," said Borrus of the Council of Institutional Investors, which represents pension funds and other big investors.
Most boards are in a wait-and-see mode given all the uncertainty about where the economy is heading, and given how much scrutiny is sure to be cast on pay packages next year. Besides, the stock market has already recovered more than half its earlier losses.
"You can't be the organization that has laid off employees, that has cut the 401(k) match and yet your CEO is getting pay increases and bonuses," said Melissa Burek, partner at Compensation Advisory Partners. "That's not a good story."