Off Peak

Fortnightly Magazine - January 1 1997
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Options, that is, as they pass the nationwide median in long-term pay incentives (em more than their counterparts at transportation or industrial firms (em but still less than execs at automotive and consumer companies.

Report - Grid Investment for Medium & Heavy Duty EVs

Among CEOs (chief executive officers) at consumer products companies, industrial concerns, and transportation firms, top executives at energy companies can now boast of long-term pay incentives accounting for some 44 percent of their overall annual pay packages. That gives energy CEOs almost $950,000 in annual long-term pay incentives (44 percent of annual pay) compared with $503,000 (28 percent) for industrial CEOs, only $225,000 (26 percent) for transportation CEOs, but a whopping $2.07 million (53 percent) for top execs at consumer products companies. The median figure nationwide comes in a about $838,000 (41 percent), as measured across eight industries (automotive, chemicals, consumers products, energy, food and beverages, industrial products, retail, and transportation).

On the other hand, a higher proportion of long-term incentives (which usually means stock options) can be seen as placing cash compensation more at risk.

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