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Article | Executive Pay Memo North America

Expose your executive pay plan’s clawback vulnerabilities

By Steven Seelig and Stephen Douglas | March 6, 2024

Having a detailed inventory of each element of officer pay will better prepare you and your comp committee for a restatement.
Executive Compensation
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Now that they are mandatory, it may be tempting to assume that identifying which parts of your executive compensation plan are vulnerable to clawbacks will be a straightforward endeavor. However, you may be surprised by the places where executive pay elements are hidden among other plan documents and written communications.

Run through this list of places where clawback triggers may be hiding to avoid being caught off-guard in the event of a restatement.

Financial reporting measures

Financial reporting measures are determined and presented in accordance with the accounting principles used in your financial statements, whether in whole or in part, according to the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC). This includes non-GAAP financial measures as well as other measures, metrics and ratios apart from non-GAAP measures (e.g., same-store sales).

It’s important to remember that financial reporting measures might be included in an SEC filing, but they also may be outside of financial statements (e.g., performance graphics, management’s discussion and analysis of financial conditions). Examples of what the SEC considers financial reporting measures include:

  • Revenue
  • Net income
  • Operating income
  • Profitability of one or more reportable segments
  • Financial ratios (e.g., accounts receivable turnover, inventory turnover rates)
  • Net assets or net asset value per share for registered investment and business development companies that are subject to the rule
  • EBITDA
  • Funds and adjusted funds from operations
  • Liquidity measures (e.g., working capital, operating cash flow)
  • Return measures (e.g., return on invested capital, return on assets)
  • Earnings measures (e.g., earnings per share)
  • Sales per square foot or same-store sales
  • Revenue per user or average revenue per user
  • Cost per employee
  • Any such financial reporting measures relative to a peer group
  • Tax-basis income

Clearly, identifying the elements of pay that are considered financial reporting measures is time-consuming. After all, a complete review requires looking at multiple documents that pertain to particular pay elements. When it’s time to gather your documents, include:

  • Employment agreements
  • Equity plan documents
  • Grant agreements
  • Bonus plan
  • Bonus target communications
  • Long-term incentive plan target communications
  • Proxy statement (including tables and compensation discussion and analysis (CD&A))
  • Compensation committee minutes
  • Management presentations
  • Compensation consultant report
  • Salary adjustment communications
  • Performance reviews
  • Deferred compensation plan
  • Supplemental executive retirement plan (SERP) documents
  • 401(k) plan documents

Next, begin understanding which pay elements use financial reporting metrics that can be subject to clawbacks and what needs to change in the future.

Salary

The final regulations don’t consider salary as incentive-based compensation. However, if an executive officer receives a salary increase that is earned wholly or in part based on attaining a financial reporting measure performance goal, that increase is subject to recovery.

You need to determine if any salary increases meet this standard, either entirely or in part. When the reason for an increase isn’t discernable, the compensation committee will need to clearly articulate those reasons and ensure they are detailed in the meeting minutes.

In short, your executive pay plan needs to explain precisely why salary adjustments take place. And if an adjustment was based on a financial metric, the entire increase might be subject to clawback for multiple years.

Annual bonuses

While 162(m) no longer applies specifically to named executive officers, non-equity incentive-based pay – commonly known as annual bonuses – in the summary compensation table (SCT) may still have holdover designs from prior years. Plans usually take one of two designs:

  • Single annual plan: In these plans, the threshold, target and maximum are hardwired. Also, discretion may be exercised for adjustments sometimes based on subjective or non-financial statements.
  • Bonus pool: In these situations, the amount of the bonus pool is hardwired by formula in a shareholder-approved plan. The pool might be divided by formula or through compensation committee discretion.

In either plan, the question of which financial metric is used should be easily discernable from the documents you review. But a detailed description of why bonuses have been adjusted may be missing, and that’s the part that’s used to determine which portion might be subject to non-financial factors.

For bonus pool plans, guidance in the pay vs. performance realm suggests that the entire bonus based on a restated financial metric is subject to clawback (i.e., allocation based on non-financial factors doesn’t change the fact that funding is based on a financial metric).

Special bonuses

Identified in the bonus column of the SCT, there often are specific reasons provided as to why the special bonuses are in the CD&A as well as the compensation committee’s minutes. Don’t be lulled to believe that because a bonus is paid to a single executive it isn’t tied to financial performance.

Time-based equity

Specific examples of stock and option awards – incentive-based compensation – include:

  • Restricted stock
  • Restricted stock units
  • Performance share units
  • Stock options
  • Stock appreciation right that are granted or vested based wholly or in part on satisfying a financial reporting measure performance goal

However, equity awards where some grants aren’t contingent on achieving any financial reporting measure performance goal and is vested solely based on reaching a specific employment period or attaining one or more nonfinancial reporting measures also are included.

Companies that use an economic-value approach so that the number of grants made for the annual cycle is based on stock value might have made grants in the past that were considered incentive-based pay because the grant levels were tied to share price.

However, if the year before a grant has a restatement, it likely depressed the share price that was used to determine the number of shares granted. This could mean that more shares should have been granted. All of this is to say: How grant levels are calculated should be explicitly documented to remove any questions about the potential impact of a restatement on grant.

Recently, we have seen compensation committees adjust grant levels when stock values are down, particularly those that use an economic-value approach, based on concerns that executives would receive a windfall if share values bounced back.

Examples like this make it important to review the compensation committee’s documentation for making downward adjustments to shares granted so that you understand if there is a connection to prior-year financial reporting measures. Additionally, if performance-based options are issued, the metrics used also must be documented.

Performance shares and retention grants

Often, not all financial measures that apply to a performance share grant are disclosed in the grants of plan-based awards table, so scrutinize grant agreements and other communications. Similar issues regarding discretion (as noted in the prior section on annual bonuses) may apply, although it is more likely that most performance measures and adjustments that are made are still incentive-based.

However, there often are performance measures within these grants that are awarded based on discretion using non-financial reporting measures, a portion of which should not be subject to clawback. This makes it important to review compensation committee minutes to understand why discretionary decisions are made.

Total shareholder return-based programs will always need to be examined to determine the extent to which the market-based measures used to calculate their return would have changed had the financials been accurately stated in the first place. Retention grants also need to be examined to determine the extent to which they are time- or service-based – so not subject to clawback – with their details recorded.

401(k)s and supplemental executive retirement plans

Clawbacks are not required if recovery would likely cause a retirement plan (like a 401(k)) to lose its tax-qualified status under the Internal Revenue Code. However, and at least for 401(k)s, if incentive compensation is deferred, it may be appropriate for the company to recoup amounts from other sources. A review of the documentation requires identifying whether the source of deferrals includes annual bonuses, as many plans permit.

Qualified pension plans have different nuances; if the plan accruals are based on incentive pay, that would be a company-funded contribution. Yet, the company could still decide to recoup the value from other sources even though it couldn’t recoup accruals from the pension. Of course, determining the value of any accrual for a particular year is a complicated analysis best performed by actuaries. And for supplemental executive retirement plans (SERPs), the restrictive rules of 409A may limit a company’s ability to claw back any accruals funded because of incentive compensation.

Clean up your documentation of all pay actions

Once you have reviewed your existing documents and executive pay elements, you will need to meet with all stakeholders to ensure they understand the importance of documentation and to assure officers of which dollars are at risk of recoupment upon a restatement. Compensation committee members also need to understand their role in creating those assurances and ensuring that the process functions as it should and without ambiguity.

Authors

Senior Director, Executive Compensation

Senior Director, Retirement and Executive Compensation

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