



Published on July 20, 2023
This year’s proxy filings mark the first time that public companies have prepared the SEC’s new Pay Versus Performance (“PvP”) disclosure. The disclosure introduces Compensation Actually Paid (“CAP”), a complex interpretation of pay that adjusts Summary Compensation Table (“SCT”) pay by principally “marking to market” the value of granted, outstanding, and vested equity awards within a fiscal year.
The commonly accepted view is that CAP directionally represents the change in equity holding power for an executive in a given year. However, CAP values are highly dependent on pay design, the timing of pay increases for an individual executive, stock price at the end of fiscal years, and other factors that are not immediately apparent when reviewing the disclosure. As a result, companies with similar total shareholder return (“TSR”) performance over a defined timeframe can have divergent PvP outcomes that can be difficult to reconcile without a deeper understanding of the CAP methodology’s idiosyncrasies.
The disclosure sheds light on specific elements of pay and performance but is not a substitute for time-tested approaches to assess a pay program’s efficacy and alignment with performance over a multi-year time horizon. Board compensation committees should continue to rely on more robust benchmarking and outcome based analyses to assess pay programs. Competitive pay benchmarking, incentive goal rigor analyses, and more traditional realizable pay analyses provide a more exhaustive set of tools to calibrate and assess pay and performance.
CAP values are highly dependent upon the weighting of equity relative to cash in an executive’s pay package. It is important to note that CAP reflects cash compensation as it is reported in the SCT, without reference to target cash bonus or prior year earnings. Thus, equity is the component of CAP that varies relative to SCT values. The example below shows two executives with different cash/equity pay mixes and the same single-year TSR (-50%) to illustrate this point.

Pay philosophy and pay mix vary based on a company’s industry, talent objectives, and growth stage (among other factors).
Differences in equity vehicle mix can also yield very different CAP outcomes under similar stock price scenarios. To illustrate, we compared the year-to-year CAP valuations of a $1.0M equity grant using three different vehicles: time-vested stock awards (RSUs), performance-vested stock awards (PSUs), and stock options. We valued the vehicles in two stock price (TSR) scenarios: a period with inter-year TSR volatility and a consistent +10% TSR CAGR.

Volatile TSR scenario assumes projected PSU performance of 75% at FYE1, 50% at FYE2 and 130% at FYE3 and Black-Scholes value for options of 40% at grant, 24% at FYE1, 16% at FYE2, and 36% at FYE3. Consistent TSR scenario assumes projected PSU performance of 150% at FYE1, 175% at FYE2, and 200% at FYE3 and Black-Scholes value for options of 40% at grant, 45% at FYE1, 50% at FYE2, and 53% at FYE3.
The charts demonstrate how CAP values can diverge for different equity vehicles under the same stock price scenarios.
We examined three companies with similar TSR performance over the last three years to test this theoretical model in the real world. These examples show how the CAP calculation mechanics can cause companies with similar annual TSR profiles to have significantly different PvP outcomes.

CompanyCash/Equity MixEquity Vehicle MixAnnual TSRHealth Care Company25% / 75%Options: 25%
PSUs: 50%
RSUs: 25%2022: 12%
2021: 13%
2020: 13%CPG Company25% / 75%Options: 30%
PSUs: 70%
RSUs: 0%2022: 11%
2021: 12%
2020: 2%Pharmaceutical Company30% / 70%Options: 30%
PSUs: 60%
RSUs: 10%2022: 6%
2021: 12%
2020: 11%
The divergent PvP outcomes for these companies are explained by different design features for each of their programs, which are not clearly disclosed in the PvP table:
The PvP disclosure methodology relies upon other inputs that may not reflect actual pay and performance dynamics or the compensation committee’s intent with grants.
The disclosure is a helpful back-of-the-envelope snapshot of the change in equity holding power for the CEO in a given year. However, it is difficult to distill the complex notion of “pay versus performance” into a table that is both intuitive and comprehensive.
As such, we suggest that compensation committees continue to answer the following questions when assessing the reasonableness of pay and performance outcomes:
This multi-faceted approach to measuring pay for performance allows for a holistic analysis of inputs and outputs, and it also ensures that the compensation committee maintains a constant pulse on the efficacy of the pay program—including whether the program incentivizes performance against the right “metrics of success.
External stakeholders can use the information provided in a company’s proxy statement to take a similar approach. The compensation tables provide complete information about equity awards, and the proxy Compensation Discussion and Analysis section provides information on goal-setting rigor, pay mix, incentive plan payouts, and a narrative description of why companies chose their pay designs. These pieces of information as a whole can provide a better picture of a program’s competitiveness, particularly against peer companies, and can help ground stakeholders in the broader story of performance that might otherwise be lost in the PvP table and its accompanying narrative.
About the company

Semler Brossy
We partner with Boards, Compensation and Human Capital Committees, and Management teams to develop sound executive compensation and talent strategies that address critical business issues, drive sustainable business performance, align with stockholders’ key priorities.
Capabilities
Digital, Technology & Data, Finance, Risk & Compliance, Business Transformation
Industry
Agriculture
Language
English
Location
Bangladesh, China, Aruba, Afghanistan, Togo
Type
Official
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