Mon, May 28, 2012, 12:27 PM EDT - U.S. Markets closed for Memorial Day

HP awards new CEO Whitman with $16.5M pay package

HP brings in new CEO with $16.5 million pay package tied mostly to company's stock price

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SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -- Hewlett-Packard Co. ushered in Meg Whitman as its CEO with a $16.5 million compensation package that hinges on the one-time politician's ability to lift the stumbling technology company's stock price during the next two years.

Last year's pay consists almost entirely of 1.9 million stock options valued at $16.1 million, according to documents filed Friday. Whether Whitman ever gets an opportunity to cash in most the options will depend on whether HP's market value rises substantially from its depressed level when HP fired her predecessor, Leo Apotheker, as CEO last September.

HP disclosed Whitman would be getting the stock options shortly after her hiring, but didn't specify their value at that time.

The company, which is based in Palo Alto, also had previously disclosed Whitman's salary would be limited to $1 while she tries to rebuild the momentum that HP lost after ousting Mark Hurd as its CEO in a titillating scandal in 2010.

Apotheker fared even better than Whitman, partly because of a severance package that paid him more than $12 million in cash and allowed him to keep most of the stock awards that he got while he was CEO. Including the salary and perks that Apotheker received while he was still HP's CEO, his 2011 compensation package was valued at $26.7 million. That figure excludes a $3.7 million stock incentive that HP canceled as part of Apotheker's severance agreement.

If Whitman succeeds in her mission at HP, she could use the windfall from the stock options to offset her losses from her unsuccessful attempt to become California's governor in 2010. During that campaign as the Republican nominee, she spent more than $140 million of her own money.

Before entering the political arena, Whitman was best known as the CEO of eBay Inc. during the dot-com boom. She did so well there that she was a billionaire by the time she left the e-commerce company in 2008.

HP faces challenges on multiple fronts. Its personal computer division is trying to adapt to consumers' growing preference for tablet and other mobile devices. Meanwhile, its operations that sell servers and consulting services to big companies locked in a fierce battle with IBM Corp. and Oracle Corp.

As with most companies, HP says it is trying to tie Whitman's compensation to the company's performance.

Most of the stock options won't become hers to exercise unless HP's stock surpasses certain thresholds before October 2013.

The rights to 800,000 stock options will vest on Whitman's first anniversary as HP's CEO if the company's shares have closed at or above $28.31 for 20 consecutive trading days. The price target is 20 percent above the options' stock price of $23.59. That price requirement hasn't been met yet, though HP's stock has closed above $28.31 several times in the past two weeks. The shares gained 57 cents to close Friday at $29.07.

Although the stock has climbed since Whitman took over, it remains 37 percent below its price when Hurd left the company in August 2010.

Another 800,000 options will vest on Whitman's second anniversary on the job if HP's stock has closed at or above $33.03 for 20 consecutive trading days. That's 40 percent above the exercise price.

The remaining 300,000 options vest in annual increments of 100,000 on Whitman's first three anniversaries as CEO. Those awards aren't tied to HP's stock reaching a certain price.

Whitman, 55, also received more than $372,000 in additional compensation that stemmed from cash and stock grants that she received last year while she was a non-executive director on HP"s board.

This year, Whitman will be eligible for a bonus of up to $6 million to supplement her $1 salary if HP does well.

The Associated Press formula calculates an executive's total compensation during the last fiscal year by adding salary, bonuses, perks, above-market interest the company pays on deferred compensation and the estimated value of stock and stock options awarded during the year.

 

14 comments

  • Anonymous  •  3 months ago
    exactly what we need to get this economy going, tons of money in the hands of dumb people. she squandered money like no other running for governor. . .more please!!!
    • Ron 3 months ago
      At least she squandered her own money. She lost the election to someone who promised to squander much more taxpayer money by not reigning in public employee pensions, not stopping the $98 billion high-speed train to nowhere, etc.
  • cwahooca  •  Pleasanton, California  •  3 months ago
    That smart and didn't even know her housekeeper was an illegal. What ever that company does wont be because of her unless it tanks!
  • t  •  3 months ago
    More of the Fat Cats giving themselves obscene pay packages. I feel sorry for the shareholders and customers.
  • Dan  •  Dallas, Texas  •  3 months ago
    Thank God, I worried that she might only get 10 mill and have to pay some tax..... Close one
  • MK23  •  3 months ago
    When is HP going to reward the stockhoders?
  • Carol R  •  Philadelphia, Pennsylvania  •  3 months ago
    That is a disgrace - what does anyone do to command that kind of pay/bonus... I am outraged when an athelete gets that kind of salary. To top it all we have a man - candidate - running for President who sweeps the poor and that is half of America aside like they are dirt under his feet.
    We should consider him the "Mitt Witt" of the Republican Party.
    • MK23 3 months ago
      What has Obama done for you?
  • DinGLeBeRrY  •  3 months ago
    HP's plan to reward INCOMPETENCE still works. What's new at HP? They will NEVER be an IBM or better, just another 'low balling' clone !!! Neither Meg nor the current board can restructure HP. They need reform from the 'ground up', which will never happen as long as the current board is in place. Just MY 2 cents -GL!
  • tom  •  3 months ago
    that's a dumb plan because the price could go up even if she does a poor job... the market moves as a whole. so the market as a whole jumps 20-40 percent does that mean she actually earned the money? NO. they should have pegged HP's performance against it's peers (computer and computer services industries) as in do X% better than dell, ibm, etc.
  • John  •  Greensboro, North Carolina  •  3 months ago
    I'm not sure that she will lift the stumbling technology company's stock price during the next two years, because after hearing what this GREEDY PIG's income will likely be after cutting American jobs and selling off company assets (venture capitalist style), many of us will be buying a different brand for the principle of it. This is ridiculousness compensation, and not very socially responsible to main street American consumers.
  • Henri  •  3 months ago
    She should do what Romney did at Bain Capital:
    sell the "underperforming" divisions, ... lay off people, move the rest of the operations to South Carolina or some other Southerns states with slave labor laws and the rest to China/India ... Cut the pensions. HP has no chance of beating IBM or Oracle. Even I can do that ... and I would do it for less money.
    • Joe 3 months ago
      You're right, anyone can and have done that. That's why our economy is in the toilet now!
  • A Yahoo! User  •  3 months ago
    Whitman is perfectly qualified to work as a stewardess with american airlines. She's old and her skin is melting, she has a lousy attitude, she has holes in her chest where her "T".its used to be, and she eats "P".ussy. You're hired, bit*ch!
  • Bill  •  3 months ago
    I hope you left wing, liberal, ratfaced kookballs, are going nutts over the salary. GREAT
    • KeithS 3 months ago
      This is why there are no jobs left in America. I don't care how much they pay her but look at what they are paying her to do. She isn't getting paid to increase profits or sales. Her job is to increase share price. To do that she can just fire people and sell off company assets.
  • NoWayGray  •  Tulsa, Oklahoma  •  3 months ago
    Worth every penny.
    • MC 3 months ago
      Low risk for HP to offer her that in my opinion. If she can just add 2.5% to the company's market cap, that's about 1.5 billion increase. At 16.5 million they got a steal.
  • Alan Porter  •  Philadelphia, Pennsylvania  •  3 months ago
    don't bet against Meg
 
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