The NASPP Blog

March 29, 2011

Trends in Stock Compensation

I recently attended a San Francisco NASPP chapter meeting that featured a presentation by Yana Plotkin of Towers Watson on trends in equity compensation. Yana included some data from the Towers Watson “2010/2011 Report on Long-Term Incentives, Policies and Practices.” Here are a few highlights:

Portfolio Approach

More companies are granting at least two types of awards–73% of respondents indicated this practice, an increase of 10% from 2009. Larger companies are more likely to utilize three types of awards than smaller companies.

Pay for Performance

Towers Watson is seeing a strong trend towards performance awards, which are now the second most common type of long-term incentive offered by survey respondents, ahead of stock options. Full value shares (RS/RSUs) were the most common type of LTI offered. In the NASPP’s 2010 Stock Plan Design and Administration Survey (co-sponsored by Deloitte), we also saw a strong trend towards performance awards, although we did not see them outpace the usage of stock options.

Full Value Awards

Towers Watson reports that full value awards have outpaced stock options for grants to employees at the manager/individual contributor level. In the NASPP survey, we also saw an increase in full value awards and even performance awards to employees at these levels, but many respondents were still granting stock options.

Award Sizes

For employees earning under $200,000, award sizes (as a percentage of salary) remained flat from 2009 to 2010 in the Towers Watson survey. But for employees at higher salary levels, award sizes increased, although not quite to 2008 levels.

Award Design

In terms of performance award design, Yana mentioned that they are seeing interest in awards with shorter performance periods, e.g., two years, and some sort of trailing service requirement after the performance goals have been met. I am a proponent of this design; for executives, it helps facilitate compliance with ownership requirements and clawback provisions and, for everyone, it can simplify tax withholding procedures.

Interestingly, Towers Watson reports that 35% of respondents to their survey measure performance relative to peers or a market index. For the NASPP survey, this was about the same (41% of respondents). Both surveys also agree on how commonly TSR is used as a performance metric (25% of respondents in the Towers Watson survey, 29% of respondents in the NASPP Survey). Yana indicated that Towers Watson is seeing more companies use TSR than in the past and that certainly aligns with the buzz I am hearing from compensation consultants, etc.

Performance Awards Are the Future

The biggest takeaway I got from Yana’s presentation is that the Say-on-Pay, the disclosures required under the Dodd-Frank Act, and shareholder expectations are making performance awards the hottest thing going today in terms of equity compensation.  If you aren’t fully up to speed on them, don’t miss the pre-conference session, “Practical Guide to Performance-Based Awards,” to be held on November 1 in San Francisco, in advance of the NASPP Conference. Register by May 13 for the early-bird discount!

Online Fundamentals Starts in Two Weeks–Don’t Miss It!
The NASPP’s acclaimed online program, “Stock Plan Fundamentals,” begins on April 14. This multi-webcast course covers the regulatory framework and administrative best practices that apply to stock compensation; it’s a great program for anyone new to the industry or anyone preparing for the CEP exam. Register today.

NASPP “To Do” List
We have so much going on here at the NASPP that it can be hard to keep track of it all, so I keep an ongoing “to do” list for you here in my blog. 

– Barbara