Company News » US CFO salaries swell to fill bonus vacuum

US CFO salaries swell to fill bonus vacuum

Chief financial officers among S&P-500 companies saw higher salary rises to make up for the shortfall when the value of their cash bonuses fell by 23% in the year, new figures suggest.

According to US-based executive compensation research outfit
Equilar, the annual median base salary for S&P-500 CFOs increased by 6.6% in
2008, from $500,000 to $532,758. But aggregate bonus compensation (the sum of
all bonuses CFOs received) dropped by 26.2%, falling from $287.2m to $211.8m in
the year.

That is compared with Equilar’s figures for 2006-07, which showed an even
steeper rise in salary, but a fall in bonus compensation ­ median base salary
for S&P-500 CFOs rose by 9.1% to $525,000 in the year, while median
aggregate bonus compensation fell 3.4% to $576,880.

A separate survey conducted by
Equilar
on chief executive officer pay and compensation revealed that CEOs saw a salary
increase of 5.7% in 2008, from median of $1m to $1,057,118.

“CFOs’ salaries are rising at a faster rate than other executives and though
salaries are not linked to performance, CFO salaries rose more in 2008 than
you’d expect,” says Equilar spokesman Alex Cwirko-Godycki. “In part, salary
increases offset compensation losses elsewhere, but CFOs have increasingly
complex roles and can get larger salaries in today’s marketplace.”

The research also found that annual incentive plan payouts for CFOs fell by
18.4% from 2007 to 2008, from a median annual incentive plan payout of $332,800.

The value of other forms of compensation awarded to CFOs in 2008, including
“prerequisites” such as travel on corporate jets, relocation expenses, financial
planning assistance and personal and home security, fell 3.9% to a median
$60,648. That compares with a 9.1% increase, to $63,152, in the award of these
types of compensation to CFOs between 2006 and 2007.

Cwirko-Godycki believes CFO compensation will continue its decline in 2009
and that the trend in curbing excessive compensation packages will spread from
the financial services sector to the economy at large. “Ultimately, shareholders
will need to stay interested in this topic long enough to keep the pressure on
companies,” he says.

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