On August 25, 2022, the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) adopted a long-awaited final rule requiring certain public companies to disclose information relating to the relationship between executive compensation actually paid by the company and the company’s financial performance. This new disclosure rule implements Section 953(a) of the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act of 2010, which added Section 14(i) to the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended (Exchange Act). Most public companies will be required to include this pay-versus-performance disclosure in their proxy statements for the 2023 proxy season.
Section 14(i) of the Exchange Act adds Item 402(v) of Regulation S-K, which requires companies to provide, in any proxy or information statement in which executive compensation is required to be disclosed under Item 402 of Regulation S-K, a table in the format provided below disclosing for each of the past five completed fiscal years executive compensation (summary compensation table reported and compensation actually paid) for each individual serving as the company’s principal executive officer (PEO) during each year covered by the table, as well as the average executive compensation (summary compensation table reported and compensation actually paid) for the company’s named executive officers (NEOs) other than the PEO, the cumulative total shareholder return (TSR) for the company and a selected peer group, the company’s net income, and a company-selected measure of performance that, in the company’s assessment, represents the most important performance measure used by the company to link compensation actually paid during the most recently completed fiscal year to company performance (Company-Selected Measure). Following the table, companies will also be required to describe the relationship between each of the company performance measures and the compensation actually paid to its NEOs and to compare the company’s cumulative TSR to the cumulative TSR of the selected peer group.
Pay Versus Performance
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Average Summary Compensation Table Total for Non-PEO Named Executive Officers ($) |
Average Compensation Actually Paid to Non-PEO Named Executive Officers ($) |
Value of Initial Fixed $100 Investment Based On: |
Net Income ($) |
[Company-Selected Measure]* |
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In addition to the new Pay-Versus-Performance Table, companies will be required to disclose a table listing at least three, and no more than seven, of the most important performance measures used by the company to link executive compensation actually paid for the most recently completed fiscal year to company performance.
The chart below summarizes the highlights of the pay-versus-performance disclosure rule under new Item 402(v) of Regulation S-K.
Topic |
Item 402(v) Requirements |
New Pay-Versus-Performance Table: Overview |
In all proxy or information statements in which executive compensation disclosure is required, Item 402(v) will require companies to provide a table that includes the following information for each of the past five completed fiscal years:
The Company-Selected Measure to be disclosed will require the company to identify the performance measure that, based on its own assessment, represents the most important measure (that is not already included in the table) it used to link compensation actually paid to its NEOs during the most recently completed fiscal year to company performance. If the Company-Selected Measure is a non–GAAP measure, the company must disclose how the measure is calculated from the company’s audited financial statements. Disclosure of the measure is not otherwise subject to Item 10(e) of Regulation S-K or Regulation G. If the company’s most important performance measure was already included in the table, it would disclose its next-most-important measure as its Company-Selected Measure. If a company did not use any measures other than those already included in the table, it would disclose that fact. A company will be required to provide following the Pay-Versus-Performance Table a clear description of the relationship between the compensation actually paid to its PEO and other NEOs and each of the company’s cumulative TSR, net income, and the Company-Selected Measure (and any supplemental measures voluntarily provided by the company, if applicable). Item 402(v) provides companies with flexibility to determine how best to present the relationships (e.g., graphically, narratively, or a combination of the two). A company will also be required to include a comparison of the company’s cumulative TSR and the TSR of the peer group selected by the company. |
Tabular List of the Three to Seven Most Important Company Financial Performance Measures for Determining Executive Compensation |
In addition to the Pay-Versus-Performance Table, companies will be required to provide a tabular list of at least three (unless the company considers fewer than three financial performance measures), and no more than seven, of the “most important” financial performance measures used to link compensation actually paid to company performance. The “most important” determination is made on the basis of the most recently completed fiscal year. A company may include non-financial-performance measures it used to link compensation actually paid to its NEOs to company performance if it determines that such measures are among its three to seven most important performance measures and it has disclosed its most important three financial measures (or fewer, if the company uses fewer than three). |
Timeframe |
A company must provide information in the table for each of its past five completed fiscal years or, in the case of an SRC, three years, subject to the phase-in periods described below. |
Summary Compensation Data |
Under the existing requirements of Item 402 of Regulation S-K, a company must provide the summary compensation data for the NEOs. In the Pay-Versus-Performance Table, the data must be presented separately for each individual who served as PEO during the year and as an average for the other NEOs. |
Multiple PEOs During Fiscal Year |
If more than one person served as a company’s PEO during a fiscal year covered by the Pay-Versus-Performance Table, the company must include additional columns in the table to separately disclose the summary compensation table total and compensation actually paid to each person who served as PEO during such fiscal year. |
“Executive Compensation Actually Paid” |
To reflect the meaning of “executive compensation actually paid,” Item 402(v) will require disclosure of a compensation metric that starts with the total compensation reported in the summary compensation table, as adjusted to
Under the disclosure rule, in the event of a modification of an outstanding equity award, the excess fair value, if any, of such modified award over the fair value of the original award as of the date of modification would also be included in the total of compensation actually paid.
Companies will be required to compute the fair value of the equity awards in a manner consistent with the methodology used for financial statement reporting purposes. Finally, for awards subject to performance-based vesting conditions, companies will be required to assess the probable outcome of the underlying performance conditions as of the last day of each year when calculating the fair value for such awards. |
Measures of Financial Performance |
The Pay-Versus-Performance Table will require disclosure of cumulative TSR for the company, the cumulative TSR of a peer group selected by the company, the net income of the company, and the company’s performance with respect to a Company-Selected Measure, in each case, for each of the past five fiscal years. For purposes of the Pay-Versus-Performance Table, cumulative TSR will be measured from the market close on the last trading day before the company’s earliest fiscal year in the table through and including the end of the fiscal year for which TSR is being calculated. The peer group used to measure cumulative TSR must be either the peer group identified in the company’s Compensation Discussion and Analysis for the applicable year or the peer group used for the company’s Item 201(e) stock performance graph. |
Clear Description of the Relationship Between Executive Compensation and Financial Performance |
Using the information in the Pay-Versus-Performance Table, Item 402(v) will require a company to clearly describe the relationship between the executive compensation actually paid to the PEO and the company’s other NEOs and each of (1) the company’s cumulative TSR, (2) the company’s net income, (3) the company’s performance with respect to the Company-Selected Measure, and (4) if applicable, any supplemental measures voluntarily provided by the company, in each case, for each of the company’s five most recently completed fiscal years. Item 402(v) gives companies the flexibility to choose whether to describe the relationship graphically, narratively, or as a combination of the two. A company will also be required to include a comparison of the company’s cumulative TSR and the TSR of the peer group selected by the company. |
Voluntary Supplemental Disclosure |
Item 402(v) allows a company to supplement the required pay-versus-performance disclosure provided that such supplemental disclosure is clearly identified as supplemental, not misleading, and not presented with greater prominence than the required disclosure. |
Data Tagging |
Under Item 402(v), companies must provide the pay-versus-performance disclosure in tagged data format using Inline XBRL. Item 402(v) will require companies to separately tag the values disclosed in each column of the Pay-Versus-Performance Table and to separately block-text tag any footnotes to the table and the description of the relationship between executive compensation and financial performance. The tagged data must be filed as an XBRL exhibit to the proxy or information statement in which the same disclosure is included. |
Applicability; Scaled Disclosure for Smaller Reporting Companies |
The pay-versus-performance disclosure requirements apply to all companies with securities registered under Section 12 of the Exchange Act, with the exception of emerging growth companies, foreign private issuers, and registered investment companies. Pay-versus-performance disclosure is not required to be included in registration statements, including registration statements filed in connection with a company’s initial public offering. Item 402(v) will permit a SRC to provide scaled disclosure by (1) allowing it to provide three years of data rather than five, (2) removing the requirement to make pension plan adjustments when calculating executive compensation actually paid, (3) removing the requirement to disclose peer group TSR, (4) removing the requirement to include a Company-Selected Measure in the Pay-Versus-Performance Table, and (5) removing the requirement to provide a tabular list of the three to seven most important financial performance requirements. Item 402(v) also provides that SRCs will not be required to comply with the Inline XBRL detail tagging requirements applicable to the pay-versus-performance disclosures until the third filing in which they provide such disclosures. |
Phase-In Periods |
In the first proxy or information statement in which such disclosure is required, companies (other than SRCs) are permitted to provide three (rather than five) years of data, adding a year in each of the two subsequent years’ proxy or information statements. SRCs will initially be required to provide information for two years, adding an additional year in the subsequent year’s proxy statement or information statement. |
Practical Implications
Companies must begin to comply with the new disclosure requirements under Item 402(v) in proxy and information statements that are required to include Item 402 of Regulation S-K disclosure for fiscal years ending on or after December 16, 2022, which for calendar-year-end companies will be the 2023 annual meeting proxy statement. As a result, most public companies will be required to include the pay-versus-performance disclosure in their proxy statements during the 2023 proxy season.
Although some of the data to be disclosed in the Pay-Versus-Performance Table (and its footnotes) can be derived from information currently reported under existing disclosure requirements, companies should consider the need to implement any additional processes to support the new disclosures, including retesting the probability of achievement of performance-based awards on a year-end basis. Companies should begin evaluating what they deem to be the most important financial measures used to determine executive compensation and whether to provide any voluntary disclosure to supplement the required pay-versus-performance disclosure. Companies should also consider discussing the new disclosure requirements and their implications with their compensation committees and, specifically, the additional compensation measures that will be included in the disclosure.
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