December 11, 2012
ISS Peer Groups and Say-on-Pay Myths
This week I have a couple of additional treats from the smorgasbord of topics related to stock compensation. Enjoy!
FAQs on ISS Peer Groups
I guess I wasn’t the only one confused by ISS’s new peer group methodology; ISS has issued an FAQ to explain the new process.
There’s still a bunch of stuff about 8-digit, 6-digit, 4-digit, and 2-digit GICS codes that I don’t understand, but the gist that I came away with is that peers are selected first from within the company’s 8-digit code. ISS constrains which companies can be considered peers based on size (by revenue and market capitalization), so if there aren’t any 8-digit peers that fit within those constraints, then ISS moves to the 6-digit peers, and then to the four-digit peers. ISS will not select peers that match only based on the 2-digit code.
I finally googled “GICS Codes” to figure out what all these digits mean. Standard & Poor’s assigns companies to ten 2-digit industry groups (your 2-digit GICS code). Then within that 2-digit code, you are assigned to a more specific 4-digit code, and within that 4-digit code…all the way down to the 8-digit code. So the companies that share your 8-digit code should be those that most closely resemble you in terms of industry classification.
When selecting among those peers that meet your size constraints, ISS will give priority to companies that are in your self-selected peer group or that have been selected you as a peer, as well as companies that have been selected as peers by your peers or that have selected by your peers as their peers. This sort of feels like that game “Six Degrees of Kevin Bacon.” Note that if you’ve changed the companies in your self-selected peer group since last year, ISS has provided a special form that you can use to notify them of the change; you have until Dec 21 to do so.
What does all of this have to do with stock compensation you ask? Well, not much, because these peers have nothing to do with the burn rate tables published by ISS (those are based solely on 4-digit GICS codes). ISS uses these peer groups only for purposes of determining whether compensation paid to your CEO aligns with company performance. But it’s good to be aware of your ISS peer group because it probably differs from the peers you’ve identified for purposes of your performance awards and other LTI programs. Thus, even though your CEO has awards that vest based on performance, ISS could still find that his/her pay doesn’t align with company performance.
Top Ten Myths on Say-on-Pay
A group of academics from Stanford and the University of Navarra have written a paper to debunk myths related to Say-on-Pay. Beside being an interesting topic, the paper has the advantages of being short (only 14 pages, including exhibits) and is written in fairly straightforward English (the word “sunspot” doesn’t appear in it anywhere).
My favorite myth is #6: “Plain-vanilla equity awards are not performance-based.”
– Barbara