SEC Votes to Adopt Changes to
Disclosure
Requirements Concerning
Executive Compensation and Related Matters |
 |
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
2006-123
Washington, D.C., July 26, 2006 - The Securities and
Exchange Commission today voted to adopt changes to the rules
requiring disclosure of executive and director compensation,
related person transactions, director independence and other
corporate governance matters, and security ownership of officers
and directors. These changes would affect disclosure in proxy
statements, annual reports and registration statements, as well
as the current reporting of compensation arrangements. The rules
would require that most of this disclosure be provided in plain
English.
"With more than 20,000 comments, and counting, it is now
official that no issue in the 72 years of the Commission's
history has generated such interest," said SEC Chairman
Christopher Cox. "The better information that both shareholders
and boards of directors will get as a result of these new rules
will help them make better decisions about the appropriate
amount to pay the men and women entrusted with running their
companies. Shareholders need intelligible disclosure that can be
understood by a lay reader without benefit of specialized
expertise or the need for an advanced degree. It's our job to
see that they get it."
"Investors have made it clear that disclosure about executive
compensation and related matters is very important to them. The
rule changes and guidance the Commission today voted to approve
will significantly improve the quality and usefulness of the
information that investors receive about executive
compensation," said John W. White, Director of the SEC's
Division of Corporation Finance. "Investors will now be provided
with one number for total annual compensation for each named
executive officer. The clarity and comparability of this one
number will be complemented by the principles-based narrative
disclosures in our new Compensation Discussion and Analysis
section and by the requirement that these disclosures be made in
plain English. By taking up these critical issues and addressing
them in record time, the Commission has once again shown its
responsiveness to the continually evolving needs of American
investors."
1. Executive and Director Compensation
The amendments will refine the currently required tabular
disclosure and combine it with improved narrative disclosure to
elicit clearer and more complete disclosure of compensation of
the principal executive officer, principal financial officer,
the three other highest paid executive officers and the
directors.
Compensation Discussion and Analysis
New company disclosure in the form of a Compensation
Discussion and Analysis will address the objectives and
implementation of executive compensation programs - focusing on
the most important factors underlying each company's
compensation policies and decisions.
- The Compensation Discussion and Analysis will be filed
and will thus be a part of the disclosure subject to
certification by a company's principal executive officer and
principal financial officer.
- A new furnished Compensation Committee Report will
require a statement of whether the compensation committee
has reviewed and discussed the Compensation Discussion and
Analysis with management and, based on this review and
discussion, recommended that it be included in the company's
annual report on Form 10-K and proxy statement.
- The Performance Graph will be retained, but no longer
coupled with executive compensation disclosure. The
requirement for the Performance Graph will be moved to the
disclosure rule covering the market price of common equity
and related matters, and the Performance Graph will be
required in annual reports to security holders that
accompany or precede proxy statements relating to annual
meetings at which directors are to be elected.
Tabular and Narrative Disclosure
Following the Compensation Discussion and Analysis section,
executive compensation disclosure will be organized into three
broad categories: compensation over the last three years;
holdings of outstanding equity-related interests received as
compensation that are the source of future gains; and retirement
plans, deferred compensation and other post-employment payments
and benefits.
- The Summary Compensation Table (see
attachment) will be the principal disclosure vehicle for
executive compensation, showing compensation for each named
executive officer over the last three years. The Summary
Compensation Table will be accompanied by narrative
disclosure and a Grants of Plan-Based Awards Table that will
help explain the compensation information presented in the
table. The Summary Compensation Table will include, in
addition to columns for salary and bonus:
- A dollar value for all equity-based awards, shown in
separate columns for stock and stock options, measured
at grant date fair value, computed pursuant to Financial
Accounting Standards Board's Statement of Financial
Accounting Standards No. 123 (revised 2004), Share-Based
Payment ("FAS 123R"), to provide a more complete picture
of compensation and facilitate reporting total
compensation;
- A column reporting the amount of compensation under
non-equity incentive plans;
- A column reporting the annual change in the
actuarial present value of accumulated pension benefits
and above-market or preferential earnings on
nonqualified deferred compensation, so that these
amounts can be deducted from total compensation for
purposes of determining the named executive officers;
- A column showing the aggregate amount of all other
compensation not reported in the other columns of the
table, including perquisites. Perquisites will be
included in the table unless the aggregate amount is
less than $10,000, and interpretive guidance will be
provided for determining what is a perquisite; and
- A column reporting total compensation.
As proposed, the accompanying narrative would have
required disclosure for up to three employees who were
not executive officers during the last completed fiscal
year, but whose total compensation was greater than that
of any of the named executive officers. This provision
will be revised and reproposed for public comment. The
new proposal would require that the accompanying
narrative disclosure include the total compensation
(excluding the same items that would be deducted from
total compensation for purposes of determining named
executive officers) and job positions of each of a
company's three most highly compensated employees,
whether or not they were executive officers during the
last completed fiscal year, whose compensation for the
last completed fiscal year was greater than that of any
of the named executive officers included in the tables,
except that employees having no responsibility for
significant policy decisions within the company, a
significant subsidiary, or a principal business unit,
division or function would be excluded when determining
which employees are among the most highly compensated.
Under the revised proposal, this provision would only
apply to large accelerated filers.
- Disclosure regarding outstanding equity interests will
include:
- The Outstanding Equity Awards at Fiscal-Year End
Table, which will show outstanding awards representing
potential amounts that may be received in the future,
including such information as the amount of securities
underlying exercisable and unexercisable options, the
exercise prices and the expiration dates for each
outstanding option (rather than on an aggregate basis);
and
- The Option Exercises and Stock Vested Table, which
will show amounts realized on equity compensation during
the last fiscal year.
- Retirement plan and post-employment disclosure will
include:
- The Pension Benefits Table, which will require
disclosure of the actuarial present value of each named
executive officer's accumulated benefit under each
pension plan, computed using the same assumptions
(except for the normal retirement age) and measurement
period as used for financial reporting purposes under
generally accepted accounting principles;
- The Nonqualified Deferred Compensation Table, which
will require disclosure with respect to nonqualified
deferred compensation plans of executive contributions,
company contributions, withdrawals, all earnings for the
year (not just the above-market or preferential portion)
and the year-end balance; and
- A narrative description of any arrangement that
provides for payments or benefits at, following, or in
connection with any termination of a named executive
officer, a change in responsibilities, or a change in
control of the company, including quantification of
these potential payments and benefits assuming that the
triggering event took place on the last business day of
the company's last fiscal year and the price per share
was the closing market price on that date.
Disclosure Regarding Option Grants
The Commission will provide in the Release additional
guidance regarding disclosure of company programs, plans and
practices relating to the granting of options, including in
particular the timing of option grants in coordination with the
release of material nonpublic information and the selection of
exercise prices that differ from the underlying stock's price on
the grant date.
- Required disclosure will include clear tabular
presentations of option grants including:
- The Compensation Discussion and Analysis section will
also require enhanced narrative disclosure about option
grants to executives. Companies will be called upon to
analyze and discuss, as appropriate, material information
such as the reasons a company selects particular grant dates
for awards or the methods a company uses to select the terms
of awards, such as the exercise prices of stock options.
- With regard to the timing of stock options in
particular, companies will be called upon in the guidance to
answer questions such as:
- Does a company have any program, plan or practice to
time option grants to its executives in coordination
with the release of material non-public information?
- How does any program, plan or practice to time
option grants to executives fit in the context of the
company's program, plan or practice, if any, with regard
to option grants to employees more generally?
- What was the role of the compensation committee in
approving and administering such a program, plan or
practice? How did the board or compensation committee
take such information into account when determining
whether and in what amount to make those grants? Did the
compensation committee delegate any aspect of the actual
administration of a program, plan or practice to any
other persons?
- What was the role of executive officers in the
company's program, plan or practice of option timing?
- Does the company set the grant date of its stock
option grants to new executives in coordination with the
release of material non-public information?
- Does a company plan to time, or has it timed, its
release of material nonpublic information for the
purpose of affecting the value of executive
compensation?
Disclosure will also be required where a company has not
previously disclosed a program, plan or practice of timing
option grants to executives, but has adopted such a program,
plan or practice or has made one or more decisions since the
beginning of the past fiscal year to time option grants.
- Similar disclosure standards will apply if a company has
a program, plan or practice of awarding options and setting
the exercise price based on the stock's price on a date
other than the actual grant date or if the company
determines the exercise price of option grants by using
formulas based on average prices (or lowest prices) of the
company's stock in a period preceding, surrounding or
following the grant date.
Director Compensation
Director compensation for the last fiscal year will be
required in a Director Compensation Table (along with related
narrative), which will be similar in format to the Summary
Compensation Table described above.
2. Related Person Transactions, Director Independence and
Other Corporate Governance Matters
Related Person Transactions
The amendments will streamline and modernize the related
person transaction disclosure requirement, while also making it
more principles-based. The changes to this disclosure
requirement will include:
- Increasing the dollar threshold for transactions
required to be disclosed from $60,000 to $120,000;
- Requiring disclosure of a company's policies and
procedures for the review, approval or ratification of
related person transactions;
- Eliminating the distinction between indebtedness and
other types of related person transactions, and eliminating
requirements for disclosure of specific types of director
relationships; and
- Specifying exceptions for some categories of
transactions that do not fall within the principle for
disclosure under the related person transaction disclosure
requirement.
Director Independence and Other Corporate Governance Matters
A new Item 407 of Regulations S-K and S-B will consolidate
existing disclosure requirements regarding director independence
and related corporate governance matters, in most cases without
substantive change, and will also update disclosure requirements
regarding director independence to reflect the Commission's
current requirements and current listing standards. The
disclosure under this requirement will include:
- Disclosure of whether each director and director nominee
is independent;
- A description, by specific category or type, of any
transactions, relationships or arrangements not disclosed as
a related person transaction that were considered by the
board of directors when determining if applicable
independence standards were satisfied;
- Disclosure of any audit, nominating and compensation
committee members who are not independent; and
- Disclosure about the compensation committee's processes
and procedures for the consideration of executive and
director compensation.
3. Security Ownership of Officers and Directors
The amendments will require disclosure of the number of
shares pledged by management, and the inclusion of directors'
qualifying shares in the total amount of securities owned.
4. Form 8-K
The rules will modify the disclosure requirements in Form 8-K
to capture some employment arrangements and material amendments
thereto only for named executive officers. The rules will also
consolidate all Form 8-K disclosure regarding employment
arrangements under a single item.
5. Plain English Disclosure in Proxy and Information
Statements
The rules will require companies to prepare most of this
information using plain English principles in organization,
language and design.
6. Registered Investment Companies and Business Development
Companies
The amendments will modify certain disclosure requirements
for registered investment companies and business development
companies. Specifically, the amendments will:
- Apply the executive compensation disclosure requirements
for operating companies in their entirety to business
development companies;
- Increase to $120,000 the current $60,000 threshold for
disclosure of certain interests, transactions, and
relationships of independent directors of registered
investment companies, similar to the increase proposed for
operating companies with respect to related party
disclosure; and
- Reorganize the proxy rules applicable to investment
companies to reflect organizational changes proposed for
operating companies.
7. Compliance
Compliance with these provisions will be required as follows.
- For Forms 8-K, compliance will be required for
triggering events that occur 60 days or more after
publication in the Federal Register;
- For Forms 10-K and 10-KSB, compliance will be required
for fiscal years ending on or after Dec. 15, 2006;
- For proxy and information statements covering
registrants other than registered investment companies,
compliance will be required for any new proxy or information
statements filed on or after Dec. 15, 2006, that are
required to include Item 402 and 404 disclosure for fiscal
years ending on or after Dec. 15, 2006;
- For Securities Act registration statements covering
registrants other than registered investment companies and
Exchange Act registration statements (including
pre-effective and post-effective amendments, as applicable),
compliance will be required for registration statements that
are filed with the Commission on or after Dec. 15, 2006,
that are required to include Item 402 and 404 disclosure for
fiscal years ending on or after Dec. 15, 2006;
- For initial registration statements and post-effective
amendments that are annual updates to effective registration
statements that are filed on Forms N-1A, N-2 and N-3 (except
those filed by business development companies), compliance
will be required for registration statements and
post-effective amendments that are filed with the Commission
on or after Dec. 15, 2006; and
- For proxy and information statements covering registered
investment companies, compliance will be required for any
new proxy or information statement filed on or after Dec.
15, 2006.
***
The full text of the detailed release concerning these items
will be posted to the SEC Web site as soon as possible.
# # #
Summary Compensation Table
|
Name and Principal Position |
Year |
Salary ($) |
Bonus ($) |
Stock Awards ($) |
Option Awards ($) |
Non-Equity Incentive Plan
Compen-sation
($) |
Change in Pension Value and
Non-qualified Deferred Compen-sation Earnings
($) |
All Other Compen-sation
($) |
Total ($) |
|
(a) |
(b) |
(c) |
(d) |
(e) |
(f) |
(g) |
(h) |
(i) |
(j) |
|
PEO1 |
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PEO2 |
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A |
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B |
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C |
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1
PEO refers to principal executive officer.
2
PFO refers to principal financial officer. |