The CEO pay gains came during a year when the total return of the S&P 500 was negative 18% as the Federal Reserve's rate hikes slowed economic growth. Total return for the companies whose CEO pay was studied was negative 11%.
Boosting the CEO's pay gains were stock awards that have become a centerpiece of U.S. executive compensation but not as much for employees. The median value of CEO's stock awards rose 20% to $13.8 million for 2022. Equilar director of research Courtney Yu said much of that was awarded at the start of last year, as companies looked to keep their top leaders in place.
"You want stability of leadership to guide you through tough times," Yu said. He added that amid the macroeconomic uncertainty, "There's still a little more of this incentivizing of executives that's leading to the increases in CEO pay." HANG ON TO LEADERS
One of the biggest pay increases went to Jefferies CEO Richard Handler, whose $56.9 million received last year was nearly double his total compensation in 2021. Must of the pay, $25 million, reflected a one-time "leadership continuity grant" of restricted stock, Jefferies' proxy states. At the company's March 29 shareholder meeting only a slim majority, 59%, of votes cast backed the pay. Asked about the pay, a Jefferies representative referred to a previous company description of actions it took in response to shareholder feedback, including that it would not make further special equity awards. Another big gain went to Hamid Moghadam, CEO of logistics real estate company Prologis, whose $48.2 million total compensation last year was 93% more than the year before, driven mainly by stock awards. A Prologis spokesperson said last year's awards reflected how the performance of part of its business exceeded three-year goals, creating value for investors. Founder Moghadam for years has taken a salary of just $1. "Our CEO’s compensation is and will continue to be 100% performance based," the spokesperson said. <^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ U.S. CEO pay soars 31% on stock and cash awards, study finds CEO Compensation gains drive up pay ratio vs workers ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^> (Reporting by Ross Kerber; Editing by David Gregorio)