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$140 million cash payout for New York Stock Exchange CEO
By Jeremy Johnson
9 September 2003
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Eyes popped even among Wall Streets high flyers when
the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) revealed its $140 million payout
to its Chairman and CEO Richard Grasso. The payment was negotiated
as part of a deal to extend the 57-year-old Grassos current
contract, due to expire in 2005, another two years to 2007. It
represents $51.6 million accumulated in his pension plan, $40
million in a supplemental executive savings account,
plus another $47.9 million in incentive awards.
The payout is extraordinary even by the standards of the brokerage
giants that produce billions of dollars of profitsall the
more so because Grassos windfall is in cash, rather than
in the stock most executives receive, which is subject to market
downturns. Moreover, the NYSE advertises itself as a not-for-profit
corporation, whose main function is to provide a market where
its 1,336 member-owners can trade securities. It is also charged
with regulating its members to ensure fair and efficient trading
for the investing public, a secondary responsibility that many
observers see as an inherent conflict of interest, since the brokers
being regulated own the NYSE itself.
Thursdays Financial Times of London reported a
move by as many as 400 membersconsisting mostly of those
who rent their seats on the exchange to othersto file legal
action to force a renegotiation of Grassos package. Another
group of members is reported to be petitioning for changes in
the composition of the NYSE board of directors, whose members
are said to be too much under Grassos influence.
Reports of Grassos gargantuan pay packages started circulating
last May, with estimates of total compensation of $12 million
in 2002 and $20 million the year before. In spite of NYSE board
member claims of a new transparency, Grassos
year-by-year pay has yet to be revealed. William Donaldson, chairman
of the federal Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), has demanded
this information as part of investigation into possible corruption
in the setting of NYSE executive pay. Donaldson was himself the
chairman of the NYSE from 1991 to 1995.
Until public scrutiny forced a change this past June, the NYSE
boards compensation committee (which sets Grassos
pay), included a number of CEOs of the largest brokerage firms
that the NYSE was supposed to regulate. David Komansky of Merrill-Lynch,
James Cayne of Bear Stearns, and Henry Paulson of Goldman Sachs
were the most well known. The former chairman of the compensation
committee was Grassos long-time friend Kenneth Langone,
the director and founder of Home Depot, on whose board Grasso
still sits for now, although he has promised to step down.
While these obvious insiders have resigned from the compensation
committee, its new chairman, the former New York State comptroller
and last years unsuccessful Democratic candidate for governor
H. Carl McCall, lauded Grasso in a press release announcing his
$140 million payout. He later said he was surprised
that the SEC would question the size of Grassos package,
stating, He was entitled to this money.
McCall, who parlayed his now defunct political career into
the Vice-Chairmanship of the private equity fund HealthPoint Partners,
specializes in providing image makeovers to corporations caught
up in scandal. In January, only two months after losing the gubernatorial
election, he accepted a seat on the board of directors of Tyco,
Inc., a company notorious for the corruption of its executives
led by former chairman Dennis Kozlowski, who looted company assets
to the tune of hundreds of millions of dollars. Its current chairman
Ed Breen was among the countrys highest paid executives
in 2002, raking in $62 million for only a few months on the job.
At the time of his board appointment, McCall gushed about Tycos
outstanding management and commitment to the highest standards
of corporate governance.
McCall similarly described the NYSEs Grasso, stating
with brazen cynicism that throughout his term, Dick has
shown an unwavering commitment to regulation and the interests
of Americas 85 million investors. In fact, only last
April, 10 leading NYSE members were fined a total of $1.4 billion
for fraudulently misleading the investing public about the value
of certain stocks! In that case, the 10 brokers (and no doubt
many others who were not caught) falsely produced favorable research
reports to promote companies that were doing business with the
brokers investment banking affiliates.
The largest fine, $400 million, was paid by Citigroup, whose
chairman Sanford Weill only a month earlier had been nominated
by Grasso to a seat on the NYSE board, supposedly as a representative
of the public rather than as a representative of the securities
industry. An outcry over the worlds largest banker, and
parent to the major stock brokerage firm Smith Barney, being presented
as an advocate of the general public forced Grasso to withdraw
Weills nomination.
(The NYSEs charter calls for 12 directors from the securities
industry and 12 directors representing the public,
plus three from management. In fact, the directors designated
to represent the public are top executives of such corporate behemoths
as DaimlerChrysler, Viacom and AOL Time Warner, along with wealthy
former political figures such as McCall and Bill Clintons
former secretary of state Madeleine Albright.)
More recently, a number of the NYSEs specialist tradersbrokers
who are designated to make markets in specific stocksare
being investigated for improperly profiting off the price movements
in their assigned stocks. The CEO of the largest such specialist
firm, Robert Murphy of LaBranche and Co., resigned his vice-chairmans
seat on the NYSE board last month in a dispute over the exchanges
investigation of his firm.
In part, Grassos good fortune stems from being in the
right place at the right time. After a long climb up the NYSE
hierarchy, he succeeded Donaldson as chairman in 1995, as the
stock market boom was getting into full swing. Under his watch,
the number of companies listed on the NYSE more than doubled to
nearly 2,800, with their market value now approaching $15 trillion.
Share volume quadrupled, reaching 1.45 billion a day, with the
transactions valued at $38 billion daily.
Grasso had a certain ability to put a congenial and reassuring
face on the workings of the worlds largest stock exchange,
whose spectacular growth in the late 90s became based more
and more on financial manipulation and fraud carried out to boost
the share prices of listed companies.
Using his position as regulator of the exchanges memberswho
also set his payhe succeeded in transforming the boards
executive compensation policy from being on a par with other quasi-public
regulatory bodies (SEC chairman Donaldson earns $142,500 a year),
to being comparable with major brokerage houses, where the CEOs
regularly took home eight-figure packages. The New York Times
reports that the board determined Grassos bonus by taking
the average of the CEO pay of the big investment banking companies
and reducing it 10 percent.
Since 1998, Grassos employment contract further provided
a guaranteed 8 percent return on all deferred compensation, of
which he was entitled to defer 100 percent. As market interest
rates dropped, the 8 percent guarantee became highly advantageous,
allowing Grasso to accumulate the huge sums in his accounts that
he is now cashing in.
There is no evidence of any specific quid pro quo between Grasso
and the executives who set his compensation. However, it should
also be noted that the NYSE played virtually no role in uncovering
the scandals that overtook Enron, WorldCom and many other companies
that were supposed to meet minimum standards to maintain their
listing on the exchange. Likewise, the NYSE generally left it
to state and federal authorities to pursue its broker-members
over various schemes to defraud investors.
While McCall, in promoting Grassos new contract, claims
that the NYSE will actually save $3.5 million a year in interest
expense, negotiations are still under way on two key elements
of the package, namely, the new interest rate guarantee on deferred
compensation and the methodology for determining Grassos
bonus. The base salary remains unchanged at $1.4 million, with
the bonus set at a minimum of $1 million, but no maximum.
Meanwhile, Grasso himself sounds more and more hollow as he
continues to try to shore up the image of corporate America. When
one television interviewer asked him in July to comment on the
one-year anniversary of the passage of the Sarbanes-Oxley legislation
(consisting of a few cosmetic reforms, primarily having CEOs sign
their companys financial statements), Grasso glibly spoke
about the enormity of reform thats come in a relatively
short period of time. When later asked about what reforms
he would like to see to rein in executive compensation, he quickly
replied, Well, I think weve seen it.
The size of his own pay package revealed last week would indicate
why he sees no need for any further reform in that areaand
neither would most of his CEO cronies.
See Also:
US: Incomes of the ultra-rich
quadrupled in eight years
[1 July 2003]
US: CEO pay continued upward
spiral in 2002
[3 June 2003]
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