Thread regarding Honeywell International Inc. layoffs

WSJ Article - 12/6/16 - CEOs Enjoy Richer Perks

http://www.wsj.com/articles/ceos-enjoy-richer-perks-1481036403?tesla=y

Privileges like trips on corporate aircraft account for the fastest-growing segment of executive pay.

Perks such as exit payments and trips on corporate aircraft account for the fastest-growing segment of executive-pay packages at some of the world's largest companies.

According to new data from research Firm Equilar, the median compensation - without perks - for C-suite executives at Fortune 100 companies jumped nearly 15% to $7.4 million in fiscal year 2015 from $6.5 million in 2013. Over the same period, perks jumped 21.6% to a median value of $126,550.

Investors and critics of corporate extravagance pay close attention to executive pay packages, but perks get somewhat less consideration.

"Over the past few years, investors have been much more scrutinizing of executive pay, and it's not always clear what that entails," says Dan Marcec, director of content at Equilar, which tracks information about corporate executives and boards. "We want to let shareholders, boards, and HR professionals see these details so they can appropriately help to set pay levels."

Pay includes salaries, bonuses, awards of stock and stock options, as well as deferred payments. Perks range from estate-planning services to event tickets and club-membership dues.

More than half of the 501 executives reviewed had corporate aircraft privileges in 2015, with a median value of $63,975. John H. Tyson, chairman of Tyson Foods, Inc., was the top jet-setter, with aircraft services valued at $818,462. Next was David M. Cote, chairman and chief executive of Honeywell International, Inc., whose company aircraft perks were valued at $581,753.

High Fliers

Corporate executives with the 10 richest corporate-travel perks.

Name Value of Corporate Aircraft Perk, 2015

John H. Tyson $818,462

Chairman of Tyson Foods

David M. Cote $581,753

Chairman and CEO of Honeywell

Andrew N. Liveris $446,065

CEO of Dow Chemical

Eric E. Schmidt $395,385

Executive chairman of Alphabet

Stephen B. Burke $389,455

CEO of NBC Universal

Brian T. Moynihan $380,323

CEO of Bank of America

Indra K. Nooyi $333,303

CEO of Pepsico

Walter James McNerney Jr. $302,583

CEO of Boeing

Brian L. Roberts $299,618

CEO and chairman of Comcast

William Clay Ford Jr. $291,151

Chairman of Ford

(Full article can be found at the link provided)

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Post ID: @OP+KJmntT2

3 replies (most recent on top)

Let them eat cake... Sincerely, the "C" level crew at Honeywell International...

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Post ID: @eng+KJmntT2

Beyond disgusting. People are loosing their jobs and every one of us has had a pay reduction due to no raise and the rest of the cost cutting measures. Yet this pig continues to gorge at the corporate trough.

He has always been a pig. If anyone remembers that edition of Fortune magazine called "Have they no Shame?", cover had a pic of man in a business and a pigs head. It was about the greed of some of the CEOs. And yep you guessed it - Dave Cote was featured as an example of one of the greedy pigs. He has not changed a bit.

Nothing will change until there are laws to prevent CEOs from gorging themselves - like other civilized countries have.

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Post ID: @ztu+KJmntT2

Congrats to DC. He may be near the bottom on the empathy list, but he's made it to second on the greed list. A few more RIFs and furloughs may just get him to the top. We're all rooting for you man!

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Post ID: @hdt+KJmntT2

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