Google Execs Happy With $1 Salaries
DarkClown writes "ZDNet is on the one hand reporting that Google execs will keep their $1 salaries again this year, and on the other hand is reporting that the executives cashed in more than $160 million worth of stock last month." From the stock article: "Since the search giant went public in August 2004, Brin has sold about 6.5 million shares at a market value of $1.68 billion. Page has sold about 5.8 million shares at a market value of $1.4 billion, according to calculations from Thomson Financial. Chief Executive Eric Schmidt, who was brought in to run the company before it went public, has sold more than 2.1 million shares, worth more than $502 million." They could be getting a multi-million dollar salary *and* the stock money. Good faith efforts go a long way in my book.
Sadly this is not the way it has worked in practice.
Executives are granted options that are already in the money on issue. Thus, they get substantial income even if the stock does nothing. If the stock goes down these options are regularly repriced with lower exercise prices which effectively removes all the downside risk.
Furthermore, options are a poor tool. The link should be between the executives performance and outcomes, not the stock price. The stock price will move for many reasons unrelated to the executive's performance - for example, stocks go up in booms and yet you would be hard pressed to argue that any executive was responsible for the economic boom. Thus, at a minimum, they should only be paid when their stock outperforms other similar stocks (or even just the whole market index). Instead, you see executives being rewarded heavily for good luck. If the market is going up, only the most grossly incompetent executive could make a stock go down. A mere seat-warmer is still likely to get significant returns.
The basic economics is that poorly designed incentive schemes, of which option grants are an example, encourage gaming of the system and not proper results or rewards.
From TA, they sold 6 millions shares, but they still own 30 millions. so they still have an interest in Doing Good (stock-price wise)