Compliance
SEC Pushes Firms To Show Performance, Executive Pay Links

Activist investors often target executive pay as a reason for removing underperforming bosses, and data on pay and results is often a big conversation point in the market. The SEC is trying to lift the lid on the space, although such a move may prove controversial.
Registered firms must disclose links between what corporate
executives are paid and a business’s performance, following rule
changes announced yesterday by the Securities
and Exchange Commission.
The SEC said the rules implement a requirement mandated by the
Dodd-Frank Act (2010). The SEC proposed pay versus performance
disclosure rules as far back as 2015. It reopened the comment
period on the proposal this January.
The changes come at a time when corporate pay – and how it fits
with results on the ground – remains a sensitive political as
well as financial issue. The move is also an example of the kind
of activist approach under current SEC chair Gary Gensler. The
SEC has also taken the controversial step of forcing companies to
disclose their ESG exposures. That step prompted political
pushback from legislators who said the SEC was exceeding its
brief.
Disclosure
“The Commission has long recognized the value to investors of
information on executive compensation,” Gensler said.
“Today’s rule makes it easier for shareholders to assess a public
company’s decision-making with respect to its executive
compensation policies. I am pleased that the final rule provides
for new, more flexible disclosures that allow companies to
describe the performance measures it deems most important when
determining what it pays executives. I think that this rule will
help investors receive the consistent, comparable, and
decision-useful information they need to evaluate executive
compensation policies.”
The details
Specifically, the amendments require registrants to provide a
table setting out specified executive compensation and financial
performance measures for their five most-recently completed
financial years.
A SEC-registered entity must report its total shareholder
return (TSR), the TSR of companies in the registrant's peer
group, its net income, and a financial performance measure chosen
by the registrant, the regulator said.
Using the information presented in the table, registrants will be
required to describe the relationships between the executive
compensation actually paid and each of the performance measures,
as well as the relationship between the registrant’s TSR and the
TSR of its selected peer group.