The
Too Much Executive Pay Scorecard |
| This Too
Much chart compares the various CEO pay reports
released in 2006. These cover the 2005 corporate fiscal
year. For pay reports on CEO compensation in 2007,
please check our
current top executive pay scorecard. For earlier comparisons, see
our Executive
Pay Scorecards for pay in 2004 and 2006. |
| Source |
Methodology |
Median CEO pay |
Annual increase
|
Worth noting |
| The
Corporate Library
March 20, 2006 |
A preliminary
study.
Covers 554 large U.S. corporations that had filed their
required pay data through March 13, 2006. |
$5.7 million |
11.29% |
Median weekly earnings
for full-time workers ended
2005 up 1.9 percent,
not enough to match the year's 3.8 percent inflation. |
New
York Times
April 9, 2006 |
Survey
by Pearl Meyer & Partners covers 200 major companies that had filed data
by March 31. Includes salary, bonus, restricted stock, and other long-term incentives.
Does not include profits on options exercised in
2005. Does include value of new option grants. |
$8.4 million
(Average pay:
$11.3 million) |
10.3%
(Average
up 27%) |
Top CEO on the list:
Occidental Petroleum CEO Ray Urani took home $63 million
in total pay. He also realized an additional $37.6
million in stock option profits. |
USA
Today
April 10, 2006 |
Survey by
eComp Data Services covers
240 major companies that had filed
their required pay stats through March 27. Pay figures
include salary, bonus, incentives, stock, stock-option
gains, and potential returns from fresh option grants. |
$17.9 million |
25% |
The biggest of the year's CEO pay winners:
Capital One Financial's Richard Fairbank. His $280.1
million “exceeded the annual profits of more than 550
Fortune 1000 companies.” |
Wall
Street Journal
April 10, 2006 |
Survey
by Mercer HumanResource Consulting covers 350 large companies. Includes salary, bonuses, value
of restricted stock at grant, gains
from stock-option exercises, and other long-term incentives. |
$6.1 million |
15.8% |
On top of 2005
earnings, the typical CEO in the
Wall Street Journal survey is sitting on
another $10.2 million in unrealized gains from previously
awarded stock options. |
Bloomberg
News
May 3, 2006 |
Survey
by pay analyst Graef Crystal, based on data
from Equilar, covers 492 CEOs at firms worth $3 billion or more.
Includes salary, bonus, the value
of options granted during 2005, the value of
shares awarded during 2005, long-term incentive
payouts, and miscellaneous other pay. |
$6 million
|
11%
|
Five of the 16 highest-paid CEOs owed
their fortunes to the oil industry. These five oil “roughnecks
of remuneration,” charges Crystal, raked in a
collective 361 percent more in pay than legitimate
market factors would warrant. |
Forbes
May 8, 2006 |
Survey
by Hemscott covers 500 largest companies
“as measured by a composite ranking of sales,
long-term incentive payouts, profits, assets, and market
value.” Includes salary and bonuses, grants
of restricted stock that have vested, perks, and gains from option exercises. |
$10.9 million
(average) |
6%
(average) |
Forbes also
ranks CEOs by their cumulative pay over the last five
years. Leading the pack: Oracle CEO Larry Ellison with
over $868.9 million. A $80,000-a-year
software engineer would have to work over 10,000 years
to bring home as much as Ellison did in five. |
The Corporate Library
October 4, 2006 |
Final annual survey covers CEO pay at 1,703 public companies. Pay includes salary, bonus, perks, exercised stock options, and other long-term incentive compensation. |
$7 million
(median for CEOs of S&P 500 companies) |
15.98% |
Nine CEOs pulled in over $100 million, topped by the $295 million for IAC/InterActive CEO Barry Diller, who pocketed another $173 million from Expedia, an IAC/Interactive spinoff that Diller also ran. |
The Conference Board
October 19, 2006 |
Survey compiled by Salary.com covers 3,075 publicly traded firms in 14 major industrial sectors. Total compensation includes “salary, bonus, and the annualized value of the major long-term executive incentives.” The survey calculates the value of stock options as “30 percent of the 2005 grant size (number of shares granted multiplied by the stock market price on the date of grant).” |
Construction, $2,604,000
Financial services, $2,396,000
Utilities,
$2,057,000
Insurance,
$1,792,000
Energy,
$1,580,000
Communications, $1,518,000
Telecom,
$1,399,000
Diversified services, $1,265,000
Retail,
$1,250,000
Manufacturing, $1,230,000
Wholesale,
$1,136,000
Transportation, $1,100,000
Commercial banking, $975,000
Computer services, $848,000 |
37.6%
25.0%
15.3%
14.9%
14.7%
12.8%
11.3%
10.8%
10.5%
10.4%
8.0%
7.8%
7.6%
6.3%
|
The median CEO in financial services received 249 percent of salary in bonus, 247 percent of salary in restricted stock, 141 percent of salary in long-term performance payments, and 312 percent of salary in new stock option grants. |
Regional
CEO Pay Reports |
Source |
Methodology |
Median
CEO pay |
Annual
increase |
Worth
noting |
Dallas
Morning News
May 6, 2006 |
Survey by Longnecker & Associates,
a Houston firm, covers the
pay of 100 top CEOs in Dallas-Fort
Worth. Pay includes “base salary, cash bonuses,
and long-term incentives such as stock options and
restricted stock.” |
|
- 12.6%
(average)
|
The average decrease reflects a sharp
drop in the value of new stock options awarded in 2005.
Actual cash payments to Dallas-Fort Worth execs jumped
17 percent. The top 10 execs averaged $19.1 million
in total pay. |
Rocky Mountain News
May 6, 2006
|
Survey covers 262
executives, both CEOs and other high-ranking execs,
at the 50 most valuable
publicly traded companies in Colorado. Total pay
includes salary, bonuses, perks, restricted
stock awards, and profits realized from stock option
awards, but not “the estimated value
of new stock option grants.” |
$5.34 million (for
top 50 executives identified)
$1.21 million (for total 262-exec sample)
|
40% for top 50,
59% for full sample
|
Colorado execs
cleared $244 million exercising options
in 2005 and, at year's end, “still had $916
million in options left.” The execs surveyed
took in 28.3 million new options in 2005. But the real hikes came in
grants of restricted stock, up more than double the
2004 total. |
Chicago
Sun-Times
May 8, 2006 |
Survey covers CEO
pay at 20 large Illinois publicly traded companies.
Pay includes salary, cash bonuses, stock options, and
grants of restricted stock. |
$9.7 million
(average)
|
- 8%
(average)
|
Dragging the
average down: a 25.3 percent drop in total pay for
Allstate CEO Ed Liddy. His take-home fell
to $9.04 million after hurricane payouts squeezed the Allstate
bottom line. |
Atlanta Business
Chronicle
May 12, 2006
|
Survey by Mercer
covers CEO pay at Atlanta's 41
largest publicly traded companies. “Expected” direct
compensation includes
salaries, bonuses, and “long-term incentives
awarded in 2005.” |
$3.06 million |
15.1% |
Sitting on top the Atlanta list: Home
Depot CEO Robert Nardelli, with $38.1 million, a 5.9
percent increase over his previous year's pay. In 2005,
Home Depot shareholders saw a minus 4.3 percent
return. |
Buffalo News
May 21, 2006
|
Survey covers the
pay of 52 top execs from companies in
greater Buffalo. Pay includes salary, bonuses,
perks, restricted stock grants,
and “the value of options granted in previous
years that were exercised last year,” but not
the value of new options received. |
$768,861 |
23% |
Only two Buffalo
area execs made over the national CEO median last year.
But the area's execs did just fine compared to local
Erie County workers. Exec pay in western New York jumped
six times faster than the 3.9 gain in local worker
average weekly earnings. |
San Francisco Chronicle
May 21, 2006
|
Survey
by Equilar,
a San Mateo research firm, covers the pay for 1,036
execs at 200 Bay Area companies. Pay includes the value
of new options but not the profits
from cashing out previously awarded options. |
$1.3 million |
-18% |
CEO pay can be habit-forming. Wells
Fargo chief executive Richard Kovacevich received a
$7 million bonus last year, his fourth consecutive
$7 million annual bonus. His total take-home for 2005:
$20.2 million. |
San Jose Mercury News
May 21, 2006
|
The survey, compiled by Equilar, "includes salary, bonuses, stock option gains, and other forms of pay for 749 executives who run the 150 largest public companies in Silicon Valley." |
$3.53 million
(average)
|
27%
(average)
|
The number of Silicon
Valley execs taking home at least $10 million jumped
to 57 in 2005, up from 43 in 2004. Yahoo
CEO Terry Semel has raked in nearly $429 million
in option gains since 2001. |
South
Florida
Sun-Sentinel May
28, 2006 |
Survey covers “the top two executives
of local companies of various sizes.” Pay includes
salary, bonuses, and the value of new stock option
grants awarded during the year. |
$1.2 million (salary and bonus), $4.7
million with new option grants. |
22.8%
(salary and bonus)
|
Antonio Mon of home builder
Technical Olympic USA took in $9 million in salary
and bonus, plus $4,500 a month for “the personal
use of a corporate apartment” and $115,486
in personal rides on the corporate jet. |
Minneapolis
Star Tribune
May 22, 2006
|
Survey covers Minnesota's
100 highest-paid execs. Pay includes “salary,
bonus, restricted stock grants and gains from previously
issued stock options,” but
not the value of new option grants received in
2005. |
$1.8 million |
59.3% |
The number of top execs in Minnesota
making at least $1 million has nearly doubled since
2000, from 36 to 66. The biggest CEO take-home in 2005
went to Target CEO Bob Ulrich, with $45 million in
total pay. |
Los
Angeles Times
May 30, 2006 |
Survey by Salary.com
covers the pay of CEOs at California's 100 largest
publicly traded companies. Pay does not include gains
CEOs realized from cashing out options received before
2005, but does include a value for new options the
execs received last year. |
$13.2 million
(average) |
20%
(average) |
Nineteen California CEOs took home
at least $20 million in 2005, seven more than in 2004.
Twenty-one of California's top execs took home
pay packages that equaled at least 5 percent
of their total company earnings for the year. |
St. Paul
Pioneer Press
June 4, 2006 |
Survey covers pay for top executives
at Minnesota's 100 largest public
companies. Pay
includes salary, bonus, grants of restricted stock, and
profits cleared cashing out options granted
in previous years. |
$4.4 million
(average)
|
8%
(average) |
Cost of personal travel on U.S. Bancorp corporate
jets by CEO Jerry Grundhofer: $226,727. His total compensation:
$6.4 million, plus another $11.6 million in new stock
options. |
Des
Moines Sunday Register
June 4, 2006 |
Survey covers pay
“for top executives at the 20 largest Iowa-based
publicly traded companies.” Pay
includes “salary, bonus, long-term cash, and cash-value
stock awards,” but not
stock options. |
$1.85 million
(average)
|
31.25%
(average) |
In 2005, top executive pay
increased nearly eight times the 4 percent hike in
average Iowa per capita income. The state's
highest-paid CEO: Barry Griswell of the Principal Financial
Group, with $7.4 million in take-home. |
Philadelphia
Business Journal
June 5, 2006 |
Survey by Mercer
Human Resource Consulting covers top execs at
the Philadelphia region's 100 largest publicly traded
companies. Pay includes “salary, bonus, long-term
incentives (restricted stock awards, incentive-plan
payouts), and profits from stock options and/or stock
appreciation during the year.” |
(Three Philly area execs to made
over $20 million in 2005, 10 more than $10 million) |
6%
(average) |
Running a giant health insurer continues
to be good for a CEO's financial health. Cigna CEO
H. Edward Hanway “netted $26.1 million
in total compensation,” enough to earn him third
place in the Philly CEO pay 2005 rankings, despite
a near 10 percent decline in his company's share price. |
San Diego Union Tribune
June 11, 2006 |
Survey covers execs
120 San Diego area publicly traded companies. Pay includes
salary, bonuses, stock options, restricted stock, “and
perks such as car allowances and financial planning
services.” |
$1.08 million
(average for top five execs at the 120 companies surveyed):
$1.47
million
(average for CEOs only) |
22%
(average for top five execs);
42%
(average for CEOs)
|
At Qualcom, chair
Irwin Jacobs pulled in $78.4 million and his son, CEO
Paul Jacobs, $31 million. Overall,
the number of San Diego execs making at least $1 million
jumped to 111, from 90 in 2004. San Diego workers averaged
$41,375 last year, up 3.9 percent over 2004. |
Baltimore
Sun
June 18, 2006 |
Survey by Salary.com covers 100 publicly
traded companies with headquarters in Maryland. Pay
includes salary, bonus, other cash compensation, stock
grants, and the value of new options awarded. Not included:
profits from exercised stock options. |
[Two Maryland top execs made
at least $40 million, seven more at least $10 million,
41 more over $1 million, not counting gains
from exercised stock options.] |
|
Constellation Energy CEO Mayo Shattuck
III took home $9.3 million in 2005, plus a “$43.5
million paper profit” exercising options from
previous years.
Also in 2005: Constellation's BGE utility proposed
a 72 percent consumer rate hike. |
Chicago
Tribune
July 2, 2006 |
Survey covers pay for the Chicago
area's top 100 CEOs. Pay includes “salary, bonus,
other cash compensation, stock grants, and the estimated
value of stock options granted.” |
$4.47 million |
0.4% |
At the top: Boeing CEO W. James McNerney
Jr., the former
3M CEO who came to Boeing a year
ago with a signing package that reimbursed him for
the “incentive” pay he would have been
eligible to receive at 3M. McNerney's total pay: $28.9
million. |
Washington Post
July 10, 2006 |
Survey covers 708 execs at 157
D.C.-area firms. Pay includes salary, bonus,
the value of option grants, grants of restricted stock
and other long-term compensation, and perks. |
$6.4 million
(top 100)
$642,543
(next 600) |
21.2%
(top 100)
-3.9%
(next 600) |
Overall pay for the 708 executives
surveyed amounted to $1.4 billion, “more than
the budget of the D.C. public schools.” |
St. Louis Post-Dispatch
September 10, 2006 |
Survey covers 276 executives from 54 companies in the St. Louis metro area. Pay includes “salary, bonus, profit on stock options exercised, restricted stock grants, performance shares, long-term pay and other pay but not the value of options issued last year.” |
$3.13 million
(average for
CEOs) |
11%
(average
for CEOs)
|
The 276 executives surveyed took home, combined, $544.3 million in 2005, 24 percent more than the earnings of the 283 executives the Post-Dispatch tracked in its pay report last year. |
Charlotte Observer
December 3, 2006 |
Survey by the compensation research firm Equilar covers 50 of the largest publicly traded companies in North and South Carolina. Pay totals “count gains from cashing in options.” |
$4.26 million
(average) |
|
This year's top pay, $19.1 million for Bank of America CEO Ken Lewis, adds up to a 607 percent increase over the $2.7 million take-home of the top exec in the Observer's 1987 survey, RJR Nabisco president F. Ross Johnson.. |
Sectoral
CEO Pay Reports |
Source |
Methodology |
Median
CEO pay |
Annual
increase |
Worth
noting |
Electronic Business
June 1, 2006
|
Survey covers the 50 highest-paid execs
at "public companies that derived a majority of
their total revenue from the design, manufacture or
sale of semiconductors, related components and systems." Pay
includes salary, bonuses, gains realized from stock
options exercised, and various perks. Not included:
restricted stock awards. |
$10.9 million
(average)
|
|
The San Diego-based Qualcom posted
four execs on the top 50 list, led by Irwin
Mark Jacobs, who stepped down as
CEO halfway through 2005, with $78.5 million. His successor
as CEO, Paul Jacobs, tallied $31.4 million.
Steven Altman went home with another $9.138 million, just slightly more than
Sanjay Jha's $9,128 million. |
|
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