Disclosure of “forward-looking” board pay offers a competitive advantage
Main Data Group includes “forward-looking” director compensation disclosures
Main Data Group includes “forward-looking” director compensation disclosures
The calendar of activities for corporate boards does not generally follow a company’s fiscal year, but rather the 12-month period following the election of directors at the annual shareholders’ meeting. By the time proxy statements are prepared, decisions about changes to director pay for the upcoming year already have been made and communicated to nominees standing for election. These changes are disclosed in the same portion of the proxy statement that conveys the actual pay for the prior year.
While certain aspects of future pay cannot be determined in advance—the stock price on the date of the equity grant, for example, or the number of board or committee meetings to be held—savvy corporate boards will want to access whatever “forward-looking” information their peers disclose in planning for the forthcoming year. Companies that file their proxy statements relatively late are particularly well-positioned to anticipate and respond quickly to evolving compensation trends, but all companies benefit from knowing what others are currently paying, rather than what they paid last year.
Typical “forward-looking” pay disclosures include:
MDG has enhanced its board pay report to include both the traditional historical and forward-looking pay perspectives, showing:
With MDG’s enhanced board pay report, it will be easier than ever to identify trends affecting director pay now, rather than a year from now in the rearview mirror.
Forward-looking director pay information can be accessed as part of the board pay details report, run from the Peer Groups page.
Glean insights into director pay and how the board operates and more with this module