By Matt Andrejczak
In a fresh stab at curbing executive-severance benefits, some
companies have been under fire for "golden coffins" that pay the
heirs of executives who die on the job unearned salary, bonuses and
other compensation.
Shaw Group Inc. (SGR), Johnson Controls Inc. (JCI) and other
companies have in recent months made changes to their death-benefit
policies or current arrangements. Shareholders have attacked golden
coffins for being too excessive. Deals for two executives at Nabors
Industries Ltd. (NBR), for instance, are currently valued at $200
million combined.
But, over the past two decades, actual payments made by public
companies have been scant, helping to support the argument by
corporate boards that golden coffin payments are rare and a cheap
way to retain and lure CEOs.
"Because statistically few executives die while still actively
employed, the value of such benefits to executives is largely
intangible -- and therefore inexpensive to provide," Abercrombie
& Fitch Co. (ANF) said in its May proxy statement. The retailer
said it has never paid a death benefit to an executive officer's
estate or family.
Since 2002, there have been at least seven death benefits paid
to an executive's estate, a MarketWatch review of federal
securities filings found. There have been more than a dozen
payments paid since 1989, according to federal filings and old news
reports.
Recent payments include those at Shaw Group, Movado Group Inc.
(MOV), and Orexigen Therapeutics Inc. (OREX). Others have been made
at Safeway Inc. (SWY), Walt Disney Co. (DIS), McDonald's Corp.
(MCD) and Callaway Golf Co. (ELY).
In this year's round of annual meetings, investors at 12
companies were asked to vote if they thought shareholders should
have any say on whether the estate of a deceased executive should
get unearned salary and accelerated bonuses.
The verdict: In 10 votes so far this year, investors have shot
down the proposal in nine instances, based on final and preliminary
figures. At Shaw Group, 66.9% of shareholders voted in favor of it.
The lowest level of support was at Walt Disney Co, with 27.8%. The
rest scored between 32% and 49.2%.
But activists are encouraged. "We're pleased with the support
levels," said Con Hitchcock, outside counsel for Amalgamated Bank,
which filed five proposals on corporate proxies in 2009. "We've
focused board attention on this issue."
Take Shaw. On April 8, its board approved a policy to give
shareholders an "advisory vote" on new executive employment
agreements that offer so-called golden coffin benefits. Ultimately,
Shaw's board will have the final say, a spokeswoman said.
The board at Nabors Industries cut the potential value of golden
coffin payments to its CEO and its COO. Johnson Controls revised
one death benefit provision that awards a payment equal to two to
three years salary upon their death. It had equaled 10 years.
When asked, opponents of golden coffins could name very few
instances where companies actually made a payout. There was no
mention of any historical death-benefit payments in
stockholder-proxy proposals made at 14 companies this year.
And no such master list has been compiled, according to the
Corporate Library and other corporate-governance advisory firms
contacted by MarketWatch.
In a recent example, Shaw paid the estate of Richard Gill $2.7
million after his March 2008 death. It mostly consisted of one
year's base salary, accelerated stock awards, and insurance
proceeds, the company's December 2008 proxy filing showed.
Watchmaker Movado is obligated to pay the surviving spouse of
Gegalio Grinberg $600,000 for the year ending Jan. 31, 2010 and an
annual payment of $500,000 thereafter in equal monthly installments
for her lifetime, according to a company filing.
Grinberg died Jan. 4 of natural causes. He built a successful
U.S. business selling expensive wristwatches after he fled Cuba
when Fidel Castro took power. A few weeks before his death, he
replaced an original "death and disability" agreement written in
1994 with a "retirement" agreement.
The old agreement called for his spouse to be paid $395,845 as
of fiscal 2009. A Movado spokesperson didn't return calls.
Death benefit arrangements are common for companies ranging from
small community banks to Fortune 500 companies. Some deals date
back to the 1980s and some don't appear to cost too much. Another
characteristic: Small, family-run companies like them.
For instance, International Shipholding Corp. (ISH) agreed in
1988 to pay the estate of its since-retired CEO Niels W. Johnsen
$822,000 upon his death, filings show.
The company said it already has sufficient funds reserved to pay
the amount. Johnsen's son runs the company. The family owns 24.9%
of the ship vessel transporter.
In the past 20 years, supermarket chain Safeway said it made two
payments totaling less than $1.35 million to the beneficiaries of
employees who died on the job. The company didn't disclose in a
federal filing if those people worked at the executive level. The
company wasn't able to respond in time for this article. At its
recent annual meeting, 38% of shareholders supported the idea of
curbing golden coffin deals.
A spokesman for General Dynamics Corp. (GD) said the defense
contractor has never made any death benefit payment. The company
came under shareholder scrutiny for the existence of a death
benefit agreement valued at $8.5 million for the estate of CEO
Nicholas Chabraja.
That agreement is set to expire when Chabraja steps down as CEO
June 30.
Shareholders have attacked golden coffins because they claim the
perks are egregious, such as retention payments even if the
executive dies and excessive contributions to cover executive life
insurance premiums.
More of these arrangements came to light when the Securities and
Exchange Commission changed proxy disclosure laws in late 2006.
Before then, it was harder to track down the value of these
perks.
Opponents of golden coffins would rather CEOs be paid based on
performance. They contend the agreements aren't justified when an
executive has already amassed large equity awards.
"Golden coffins should be subject to a sniff test," said David
Wise, senior consultant at Hay Group, a global management firm.
-Matt Andrejczak, 415-439-6400; AskNewswires@dowjones.com