Moderator: Dictators in Training
DALLAS (AP) - A $69.7 million compensation package and $98 million pension payout to Exxon Mobil Corp.'s former chief executive and chairman Lee R. Raymond has some shareholders and economists asking, "how much is enough?"
"Some folks will ask the question, 'Is this more evidence of big oil taking an enormous windfall and retaining all the riches?'" said Mel Fugate, assistant professor for Southern Methodist University's Cox School of Business.
Exxon benefited from high oil and natural gas prices and solid demand for refined products en route to earning $36 billion last year. The company has defended its profits, saying that other industries have larger profit margins but oil companies' bottom lines stand out because they operate on a much larger scale.
Recent news of Raymond's payout and pension is stoking embers Fugate said had been starting to die out. But with gasoline prices again reaching $3 a gallon at the pump in some areas and big oil companies about to report first-quarter earnings in coming weeks, expect more fallout, economists say.
On Wednesday, Exxon reported executive compensation in a regulatory filing that showed Raymond receiving $48.5 million in salary, bonuses, incentive payments and stock awards.
His compensation package also included $21.2 million from exercising stock options, which the company stopped awarding in 2001.
His $98 million pension payout reflects 43 years of service. But he would have received nearly $17 million less had he retired just last year, according to the company's 2005 proxy statement.
In this year's proxy statement, Exxon defended the package by saying it rewards Raymond's "outstanding leadership of the business, continued strengthening of our worldwide competitive position, and continuing progress toward achieving long-range strategic goals." Raymond had been CEO since 1993 before stepping down at the end of last year.
Exxon added that Raymond's compensation is "appropriately positioned relative to CEOs of U.S.-based, integrated oil companies and other major U.S.-based corporations, particluarly in view of the long-term performance of the company and the substantial experience and expertise that Mr. Raymond has brought to the job."
Last year, Chevron Corp. Chairman and CEO David O'Reilly received a $1.55 million salary, $3.5 million bonus and $3.57 million in long-term compensation. He did not exercise any options, but owns options valued at just over $34 million, including exercisable options worth $28 million, according to Chevron's proxy.
Fugate, who specializes in executive compensation and management, said Exxon is sending a "very, very bad signal" by allowing Raymond to select the lump-sum payout.
"They are in very, very rich times, so on one hand they say, 'we can afford it,' but on the other hand they are taking an awful lot of heat because they've made too much at the expense of consumers. I'm surprised they are not being asked to justify that."
They will be at the company's shareholders meeting in Dallas on May 31. Several shareholders have placed resolutions on the agenda that, if passed, would put the clamps on some executive pay.
Shareholder Emil Rossi, author of one of the resolutions, says that although he's done well as a longtime owner of Exxon stock, he believes the executives are keeping too much for themselves.
"(Raymond) took over a good company," said Rossi, of Boonville, Calif. "He didn't bring it out from being a bad company, so his pay is clean out of reason. It's not because of his smartness."
Twice since November, big oil executives, including Raymond before his retirement, sat in Senate hearings defending their profits and deflecting accusations of gouging.
© 2006 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
DangerPaul wrote:get ready for another year of record breaking profits by the oil companies and the government not doing anything to help the poor who cannot afford to fill their tanks
Zanchief wrote:Harrison wrote:I'm not dead
Fucker never listens to me. That's it, I'm an atheist.
Maybe where you live. No ride makes it real hard to make the whle job thing work ina lotta areas man.cars are a luxury, not a necessity
By Tom Doggett
Tue Apr 18, 4:53 PM ET
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Amid record oil prices and soaring gasoline costs, Exxon Mobil's $400 million retirement package to its former CEO is a "shameful display of greed" that should be reviewed by Congress and investigated by federal regulators, Democratic Sen. Byron Dorgan (news, bio, voting record) said on Tuesday.
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Dorgan said he wants Exxon Mobil officials to appear at a Senate Commerce Committee hearing to explain how the corporation "justifies" giving its former boss, Lee Raymond, such a huge retirement package.
He also said the Securities and Exchange Commission should investigate the deal that "appears to shortchange" shareholders.
"There can be no more compelling evidence that the price gouging and market manipulation which has produced record oil prices is out of control, and is working to serve the forces of individual greed and corporate gluttony at the painful expense of millions of American consumers," Dorgan said.
Dorgan's criticism of Raymond's financial package came on the same day that U.S. crude oil prices hit a record high of more than $71 a barrel at the New York Mercantile Exchange.
Higher crude oil prices are helping to push of up gasoline costs. The Energy Department reported prices jumped 10 cents over the last week to a national average of $2.78 a gallon, up 55 cents from a year ago.
President George W. Bush said on Tuesday he was "concerned" about the impact high gasoline prices were having on families and businesses.
Exxon earned the wrath of many lawmakers when it reported more than $36 billion in profits last year as energy prices paid by consumers soared.
Dorgan said he will push to win passage of his legislation that would impose a windfall profits tax on big oil companies and rebate that money to consumers, unless the companies used their earnings to explore for and produce more energy.
"I think a sensible public policy would insist that the big oil companies either invest those windfall profits in things that will increase our own domestic energy supplies, or we should return some of that money to consumers," Dorgan said.
"Using them to drop $400 million dollars in the pocket of a big oil executive is simply unacceptable," he added.
Exxon Mobil has defended Raymond's retirement package, saying it was pegged to the rise in the company's profit and market capitalization that occurred during his tenure.
Diekan wrote:Ask yourself this. How much of a difference is there between gas prices of different stations? Where I live if the Exxon is selling it for 2.70 a gallon - the BP across the street is also selling it for 2.70 a gallon. If there was true competition between them we'd never see prices rise much above 2 dollars a gallon.
The problem is that most gas stations don't really make their money at the pumps. They make the bulk of their money from the shit they're selling inside. The cokes, pepsi, candybars and everything else. However, if we say true competition at the pumps the BP across the street (in the above paragraph) would be selling gas at lets say 2.65 a gallon, then the Exxon would lower their price to 2.60 and so on. We're not seeing that. Because there is no competition.
I don't believe for a second that there is any true competition that high up the corporate ladder. I do believe they're in bed together. ESPECIALLY big oil and auto.
Whether you all think I'm crazy or not. The fact is there is no crisis, there is no shortage. These companies know the market well. They wait until price per barrel is "low" and buy tremendous amounts and stockpile it. When the prices rise they buy much much less, but the refining continues. They know the average American knows jack shit about how the market works, so they wait for the press to start spouting off about how high a barrel of oil is - then they take the opportunity to jack their prices up through the roof - laughing all the way to the bank.
If that doesn't make sense then ask yourself this: if this wasn't the case then how could they be showing record profits ever time this happens. People drive more during the summer - people use more fuel all the away around more in summer. So, with usage going up, and if the companies are shelling out 20 dollars a barrel more and "have" to raise the price per gallon by up to a dollar or more per. Then how in the hell can they show RECORD profits at the end of the quarter?
Look at this way. Say you're making widgets. Say it costs you 5 dollars a piece to make and you sell them for 8 dollars a piece. The price of wood goes up so now it costs you 8 dollars a piece to make them. Ok, so you're going to have to raise the price of your widget to 12 dollars a piece to continue making a profit right? Now with that said - there's no way you could suddenly be showing record profits UNLESS you've stockpiled wood BEFORE the prices shot up and are just using it as an excuse to pump your prices up.
Raymond S. Kraft wrote:The history of the world is the history of civilizational clashes, cultural clashes. All wars are about ideas, ideas about what society and civilization should be like, and the most determined always win.
Those who are willing to be the most ruthless always win. The pacifists always lose, because the anti-pacifists kill them.
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