For the past few days, The Australian Financial Review has been publishing its annual salary survey of the country’s highest-paid executives and chairs.
It’s a fascinating round-up, and shows that for the first time in a decade, no ASX300 CEO received more than $10 million in total pay.
However, the focus on CEOs hides a more nuanced picture. The salaries of chairs and chief executives has been closely scrutinised by investors and proxy advisers during this AGM season. But in many leading companies, the highest-paid executive isn’t the CEO; it is one of the executive team.
Take Wesfarmers, for instance. Chief Richard Goyder has final responsibility for several high-profile business divisions employing 200,000 people, with group revenues in excess of $58 billion. It’s a huge business, and he’s paid $8.01 million a year to oversee it all. That makes him the 12th-highest-paid chief executive in Australia.
Coles is a division of Wesfarmers, and contributes $8.35 billion in sales to the group. However, the managing director of Coles, Ian McLeod, gets a tidy $14.8 million in total pay. That puts him well above the highest-paid chief executive in Australia, ANZ’s Mike Smith, who pockets $9.674 million a year.
In out-earning his boss, McLeod is unusual but not alone. At Whitehaven Coal, the chief operating officer of Aston Resources and Boardwalk Operations, Peter Kane, pockets $3.3 million in total pay – more than three times what Whitehaven’s CEO gets. Tony Haggarty takes home a relatively paltry $1.025 million.
At construction company Downer EDI, David Cuttell, who is CEO of company’s infrastructure division, only narrowly out-earns group boss Grant Fenn with total pay of $3.935 million to Fenn’s $3.682 million.
Why do these executives, and others, earn more than the person they answer to?
The payout of long and short-term incentives and bonuses has a lot more to do with it than higher rates of base pay.
McLeod’s outsized pay, which was even higher (at $15.6 million) last year, is the result of the generous performance-based bonuses he was promised when he was headhunted from Britain to turn around the Coles supermarket chain in 2009. It’s a move that has paid off handsomely for both Coles and McLeod – in the four years since he took over, he’s pocked more than $44 million in salary and bonuses.
After his five-year contract expires next year though, McLeod’s pay will be pared back to $5 million a year, in line with other Wesfarmers executives. Guy Russo, head of Wesfarmers’ Kmart division, earned $3.96 this year, while Wesfarmers finance chief Terry Bowen got $3.41 million.
At Whitehaven, Kane joined after the company bought Nathan Tinkler’s Aston Resources in April. However, he lost his job in cuts to Whitehaven’s Queensland operations two weeks ago. His base salary was a modest $122,371, but it was boosted by more than $3.3 million in long-term incentives.
Downer EDI’s Cattell had his pay boosted by more than $1 million in short-term incentives, as well as $600,000 in long-term incentives paid out this year. His base pay was $1.4 million.
This year, several high-profile CEOs turned down their bonuses and incentive payouts to placate shareholders after a disappointing year on the stock exchange. There’s rarely pressure on other leaders in a business to do the same. Even though in some instances, they earn just as much.
COMMENTS
SmartCompany is committed to hosting lively discussions. Help us keep the conversation useful, interesting and welcoming. We aim to publish comments quickly in the interest of promoting robust conversation, but we’re a small team and we deploy filters to protect against legal risk. Occasionally your comment may be held up while it is being reviewed, but we’re working as fast as we can to keep the conversation rolling.
The SmartCompany comment section is members-only content. Please subscribe to leave a comment.
The SmartCompany comment section is members-only content. Please login to leave a comment.