Equity ownership guidelines vary widely and don’t exist at some companies at all
Main Data Group’s equity ownership and guidelines report
Main Data Group’s equity ownership and guidelines report
Every year, public companies deliver a substantial portion of executive compensation in the form of equity or equity equivalents to align the economic interests of the corporation and its executives. But these interests stay aligned only if the executives retain the shares after they vest, are exercised, or earned, which is not a guaranteed outcome. Here are a few common scenarios:
To maintain the alignment of economic interests, many companies impose stock ownership or retention guidelines (or both) on their senior executives.
Unless they are new hires, executives’ equity portfolios typically combine:
SEC rules require public companies to include a Beneficial Ownership Table in the proxy statement, showing the equity ownership for all named executive officers, directors, and third parties holding five percent or more of the company’s shares. This disclosure does not directly sync up with any other disclosure, since the tally is “as of the most recent practicable date” rather than fiscal year end. The rules require disclosure of options exercisable within 60 days and footnote disclosure of time-vesting restricted stock, but companies seldom include even footnote information about other option grants or performance shares. Notwithstanding these discrepancies, the Beneficial Ownership Table contains the most precise and detailed information regarding a named executive’s unrestricted holdings that, when combined with the data in the Outstanding Equity at Fiscal Year-End Table, provides a comprehensive view of the executive’s total potential ownership.
Companies may count restricted stock, performance shares, and/or stock options towards compliance with their stock ownership or holding guidelines, so it is important to consider all forms of ownership and equity vehicles in tallying an executive’s aggregate equity holdings. MDG’s equity ownership and guidelines report does exactly that. For each executive, it shows:
Our governance module allows you to easily review how much stock each Named Executive Officer owns and information about any stock ownership guidelines