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Saturday
May232009

Director Compensation Project: 2009 Compensation Comparison

Over the last several weeks, The Race to the Bottom has covered corporate compensation through its Director Compensation Project. In an effort to compile the mass of information, we are providing a series of charts to compare how these corporations are compensating their executives and directors. In the following table, we have paired average director compensation, executive total compensation, and if the corporation has separation between its CEO and Chairman of the Board. The companies are Fortune 100’s top 20, Wells Fargo, Goldman Sachs, and Chesapeake Energy Company, a company with extraordinarily high compensation. 

 

Company

Average Director Compensation ($)+

Chief Executive Officer Total Compensation ($)

Separation of CEO and Chairman of the Board

Exxon Mobil

398,400

22,414,602

N

Wal-Mart Stores

225,628

30,156,490

Y

Chevron

246,684

19,271,249

N

Conoco Philips

409,831

29,391,987

N

General Electric

280,798

14,096,603

N

General Motors*

N/A

N/A

N/A

Ford Motor Company

155,713

13,565,378

N

AT&T

275,604

11,565,255

N

Hewlett-Packard

285,899

42,514,524

N

Valero Energy

262,833

10,471,795

N

Bank of America Corp.

153,018

9,959,076

N**

Citigroup

206,472

10,815,263

Y

Berkshire Hathaway

4,033

175,000

N

International Business Machines

263,014

28,524,392

N

McKesson

240,456

39,942,625

N

J.P. Morgan Chase & Co.

255,691

1,000,000

N

Verizon Communications

139,901

18,573,638

N

Cardinal Health

191,258

11,060,176

N

CVS Caremark

445,407

24,102,648

N

Procter & Gamble

181,648

23,532,410

N

Goldman Sachs Group

313,923

1,113,771

N

Wells Fargo Company

252,860

13,782,433

Y

Chesapeake Energy Company

669,516

100,069,201

N

 

 

 

+To give a more accurate depiction of average director compensation, we limited the directors included in the formula. We excluded directors who did not serve on the board for all of fiscal year 2008 (because of retirement or mid-year appointment) and executives who served on the board. Additionally, Citigroup’s average does not include director Hernández Ramirez

because his compensation was only for “other compensation” including security and perquisites.

* General Motors has not filed its 2009 proxy statement.

** On April 29, 2009, Bank of America’s shareholders stripped its CEO of his chairmanship; however, he will continue to serve as the company’s Chief Executive Officer.

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