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Sustainability Comes to Equity Sustainability Comes to Equity Compensation Compensation Athanasia Karananou, Investor Engagements, United Nations Athanasia Karananou, Investor Engagements, United Nations Principles of Responsible Investing Initiative (UK) Principles of Responsible Investing Initiative (UK) Fred Whittlesey, Principal Consultant, Compensation Venture Fred Whittlesey, Principal Consultant, Compensation Venture Group, SPC Group, SPC A Certified B Corporation (US) A Certified B Corporation (US) Brit Wittman, Director, Executive and Equity Compensation Brit Wittman, Director, Executive and Equity Compensation Intel Corporation (US) Intel Corporation (US)

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Sustainability Comes to Equity Sustainability Comes to Equity CompensationCompensation

Athanasia Karananou, Investor Engagements, United NationsAthanasia Karananou, Investor Engagements, United NationsPrinciples of Responsible Investing Initiative (UK)Principles of Responsible Investing Initiative (UK)

Fred Whittlesey, Principal Consultant, Compensation Venture Group, SPCFred Whittlesey, Principal Consultant, Compensation Venture Group, SPCA Certified B Corporation (US)A Certified B Corporation (US)

Brit Wittman, Director, Executive and Equity CompensationBrit Wittman, Director, Executive and Equity CompensationIntel Corporation (US)Intel Corporation (US)

Discussion TopicsDiscussion Topics

• What is sustainability?• The global movement• Executive compensation meets ESG• Equity compensation and stakeholders• The United Nations PRI• Intel’s Compensation Programs• Conscious Compensation® in startups

What is Sustainability?What is Sustainability?

What is Sustainability?What is Sustainability?

• Conscious Capitalism• ESG (environment, social, governance)

• CSR (corporate social responsibility)

• Responsible Investing• Social Impact• Triple Bottom Line

Is Anyone Taking This Seriously?Is Anyone Taking This Seriously?

• You know about ISS– What about ISS SRI?

• You know about the FASB– What about the SASB?

• You know about ISS’s EPSC– What about GIIRS?– RobecoSAM Sustainability?– Dow Jones Sustainability Index?

Is Anyone Taking This Seriously?Is Anyone Taking This Seriously?• “…socially responsible investors have dual objectives: financial and social. Socially responsible

investors invest for economic gain, as do all investors, but they also require that the companies in which they invest conduct their business in a socially and environmentally responsible manner.”

• In voting their shares, socially responsible institutional shareholders are concerned not only with sustainable economic returns to shareholders and good corporate governance but also with the ethical behavior of corporations and the social and environmental impact of their actions.

• Generally, we take as our frame of reference policies that have been developed by groups such as the Interfaith Center on Corporate Responsibility, the General Board of Pension and Health Benefits of the United Methodist Church, Domini Social Investments, and other leading church shareholders and socially responsible mutual fund companies. Additionally, we incorporate the active ownership and investment philosophies of leading globally recognized initiatives such as the United Nations Environment Programme Finance Initiative (UNEP FI), the United Nations Principles for Responsible Investment (UNPRI), the United Nations Global Compact, and environmental and social European Union Directives.

• Source: Institutional Shareholder Services (ISS) 2015 SRI Proxy Voting Guidelines

Is Anyone Taking This Seriously?Is Anyone Taking This Seriously?Socially responsible shareholder resolutions are receiving a great deal more attention from institutional shareholders today than in the past. In addition to moral and ethical considerations intrinsic to many of these proposals, there is a growing recognition of their potential impact on the economic performance of the company. Among the reasons for this change are:

•The number and variety of shareholder resolutions on social and environmental issues has increased;

•Many of the sponsors and supporters of these resolutions are large institutional shareholders with significant holdings, and therefore, greater direct influence on the outcomes;

•The proposals are more sophisticated – better written, more focused, and more sensitive to the feasibility of implementation;

•Investors now understand that a company’s response to social and environmental issues can have serious economic consequences for the company and its shareholders.•Source: Institutional Shareholder Services (ISS) 2015 SRI Proxy Voting Guidelines

The PRI at a glanceThe PRI at a glance

• Launched in April 2006 at the NYSE, the Principles for Responsible Investment has:

The PRI: The six principlesThe PRI: The six principles

This is This is about being a better investor about being a better investor

Performance

not philanthropy “The high-sustainability companies dramatically outperformed the low-sustainability ones in terms of both stock market and accounting measures”

Harvard Business School

riskmanagementnot breach of

fiduciary duty

“As we note above, the links between ESG factors and financial performance are increasingly being recognised. On that basis, integrating ESG considerations into an investment analysis so as to more reliably predict financial performance is clearly permissible and is arguably required in all jurisdictions.”

Freshfields Bruckhaus Deringer

Returnsnot sacrifice “There are positive, strongly statistically returns associated with going long good corporate governance firms and shorting those with poor governance.”

Yale School of Management

DIVERSE APPROACHESnot just excluding “unethical” investments

“We believe that ESG analysis should be built into the investment processes of every serious investor and into the corporate strategy of every company that cares about shareholder value.”

Deutsche Bank

An inevitable agenda gathering momentum An inevitable agenda gathering momentum

The SignatoriesThe Signatories• The current 1,359 signatories include:

– Asset owners

• BP Pension Fund (UK)

• BT Pension Scheme (UK)

• Harvard University Endowment (US)

• Marks & Spencer Pension Scheme (UK)

• Pension Fund City of Zurich (CH)

• Petros (BR)

• Skandia (SW)

• University of California (US)

The SignatoriesThe Signatories• The current 1,359 signatories include:

– Investment Managers

• ABN AMRO Bank NV (NL)

• Allianz Global Investors (DE)

• BayernInvest Kapitalverwaltungsgesellschaft mbH (DE)

• BNP Paribas Investment Partners (FR)

• ING Investment Management (NL)

• JP Morgan Asset Management (US)

• The Vanguard Group (US)

• UBS Global Asset Management (UK)

The SignatoriesThe Signatories• The current 1,359 signatories include:

– Professional Service Partners

• Aon Hewitt (UK)

• Bloomberg LP (US)

• Glass, Lewis, & Co LLC (US)

• GMI Ratings (US)

• Institutional Shareholder Services-ISS (US)

• McGraw Hill Financial (US)

• Mercer Investments (CA)

• MSCI (US)

• Thomson Reuters (US)

• Towers Watson (US)

How the PRI supports signatoriesHow the PRI supports signatories

Investor engagements: collaborative Investor engagements: collaborative investor initiatives investor initiatives

Should ESG issues be linked to pay? Should ESG issues be linked to pay?

Opportunities • Aligning pay and long-term

strategy = sustained shareholder value

• Long-term thinking is rewarded

• ESG value drivers & risks = new business opportunities & cost savings

Challenges• Lack of universal standards for

companies and consultants

• Risk of creating perverse incentives vs. holistic approach

• Different performance metrics to compete & complexity

PRI initiative: Integration of ESG issues into PRI initiative: Integration of ESG issues into executive payexecutive pay

PRI Guidance to help investors engage in dialogue with companies on how to integrate ESG issues into executive pay in a meaningful way (2012)

Recommendations for companies:1.Adopt a clear process for identifying appropriate ESG metrics to be linked to pay

2.Link these appropriate ESG metrics to reward systems in a way that they form a meaningful component of the overall remuneration framework

3.Endeavour to clearly and concisely disclose the rationale, method and challenges presented by the incorporation of ESG metrics into executive pay

Executive compensation meets ESGExecutive compensation meets ESG

Review of 84 companies in utilities and extractives:

Executive compensation meets ESGExecutive compensation meets ESG

Investors also asked:

What is the proportion of incentives awarded for ESG performance?

Approx. 10%

In determining payouts, are factors considered retrospectively or are they preset at the beginning of the performance cycle?

Fewer than half of executive pay plans are based on pre-set targets

Are ESG factors incorporated into the measurement of corporate goals and/or individual objectives?

Far more likely to be measured relative to corporate-level targets

Are ESG factors a precondition for a portion of the incentive award to vest? Can ESG factors reduce awards otherwise earned? 

Yes, but rarely

Executive compensation meets ESGExecutive compensation meets ESG

Type of ESG issues linked to pay by sector:

Executive compensation meets ESGExecutive compensation meets ESG

Are companies linking the right issues?

Safety was by far the most prevalent ESG factor Safety is a key issue for the industry. However, no other ESG factor was employed by

almost half of companies reviewed. Is there excessive focus on just one issue?

Climate (i.e. carbon emissions) was the least prevalent ESG factor This was despite many references to climate related issues as a material risk by the

companies’ own sustainability reporting. Is there a disconnect between companies’ own reporting and selecting appropriate issues to link to pay?

Approximately 30% use integrated ESG metrics While the use of integrated ESG scorecard factors addresses a broad range of ESG

performance in some cases, these factors typically lack transparency, specificity, or disclosed performance metrics, thereby diluting their incentive value

Executive compensation meets ESGExecutive compensation meets ESG

What will investors be asking going forward?

Investors will be encouraging companies that do not incorporate ESG issues into executive pay to consider doing so, or explain why not appropriate

For companies that do incorporate ESG factors, investors will expect disclosure of clear targets, performance against targets and link to pay-outs, as well as discussion of material issues and progress towards goals

Given the long-term nature of ESG issues, investors will be inviting more companies to incorporate ESG factors into LTIPs; or even moving away from traditional structures but ensuring an appropriate long-term time horizon

Investors will also expect any discretionary power of the compensation committee to be applied for downward adjustments to account for unusual events or unintended consequences, and that awards are subject to claw-back provisions

Executive Compensation Meets ESGExecutive Compensation Meets ESG

• Not a new issue: Equity Residential 2011 shareholder proposal (3.7% yes)

• RESOLVED: That the shareholders of Equity Residential (“Equity” or “Company”) request the Board’s Compensation Committee, when setting senior executive compensation, include sustainability as one of the performance measures for senior executives under the Company’s annual and/or long-term incentive plans. Sustainability is defined as how environmental, social and financial considerations are integrated into corporate strategy over the long term.

•  

• British utility company National Grid announced last year it would partly base executive compensation on meeting targets for reducing carbon emissions. In addition, Xcel Energy in its 2009 proxy statement discloses that certain annual incentive payments are dependent on green house gas emission reductions alongside the weight given to meeting earnings per share targets. Also, Intel Corporation calculates every employees annual bonus based on the firm’s performance on measures that include energy efficiency, completion of renewable energy and clean energy projects, and the company’s reputation for environmental leadership.

Executive Pay and ShareholdersExecutive Pay and Shareholders

• How do companies protect shareholders through executive pay design?– Burn rate/value transfer limitation– Vesting schedules– Performance conditions– Stock ownership guidelines– Clawbacks

Equity Compensation and StakeholdersEquity Compensation and Stakeholders

• Long history of shareholder-focused concerns…assuming these affect shareholder value– Dilution– Executive pay– Board independence– Share plan design

Equity Compensation and StakeholdersEquity Compensation and Stakeholders

Intel’s Compensation ProgramsIntel’s Compensation Programs

• Annual Cash Incentive: all employees (currently ~107k) participate in program– Payout is based half on financial metrics and half on

operational metrics– Operational metrics change annually but have/do

include:• Environmental/sustainability goals (energy

consumption; carbon-footprint reduction; recycling)• Conflict-free sourcing• Employee population diversity and inclusion

Intel’s Compensation ProgramsIntel’s Compensation Programs• Stock Program Summary – Employee Perspective:

– Virtually all (~98%) employees participate annually

– For Exec Population (top ~350) equity is:

• 60% performance-based RSUs; rTSR to basket of 15 high-performing peers; 3-year cycle; more leverage up than down (but w/threshold & max)

• 40% time-based RSUs; quarterly vesting over 3 years

• This population also has holding requirements (total share, not per grant)

– Broad-based population equity is exclusively time-based RSUs, vesting annually over 4 years

– Additionally, Intel has a Qualified Stock Purchase Plan with high participation worldwide

Intel’s Compensation ProgramsIntel’s Compensation Programs• Stock Program Summary – Stockholder perspective:

– Annual dilution commitment of <2%; currently running closer to 1%

– Return to shareholders every 2 years for authorization approval

Conscious CompensationConscious Compensation®® in Startups in Startups

• Linked to concepts of Conscious Capitalism®

• Parallel thinking with strategy for investors, customers, suppliers, governance, and staffing

• Contrary to the legacy “startup” model of pay

How Would Sustainable Equity Look?How Would Sustainable Equity Look?

• All-employee participation• Dynamic dilution measurement, not burn• An equity grant size “ratio” (vs. CEO)• Longer vesting schedules• Required holding periods• ESG performance measures for all• Other ideas?

Athanasia KarananouUnited Nations

Principles for Responsible [email protected]

Fred WhittleseyCompensation Venture Group, SPC

[email protected]

Brit WittmanIntel Corporation

[email protected]

Contact InformationContact Information