5/14/2024
Proxy Advisors to BlackRock: Why Are You Paying Larry Fink So Much Money?
Barron's (05/14/24) Ungarino, Rebecca
BlackRock (BLK) has come under pressure in recent years over its unparalleled size, enormous influence in voting on other public companies’ policies as a shareholder through its funds, and sustainable investing practices. Joining the criticisms: the way the firm pays its top management. The two most influential U.S. proxy-voting advisors are recommending that shareholders vote against approving 2023 pay packages BlackRock is looking to award top executives—including CEO and co-founder Larry Fink—at its annual shareholder meeting on Wednesday. At issue is the asset management firm’s compensation for Fink and the five executives who serve as president, chief operating officer, global client business head, chief financial officer, and vice chairman. BlackRock says it evaluates these executives against the firm’s financial performance goals, “strategic objectives,” and “organizational priorities” when deciding incentive awards. Institutional Shareholder Services and Glass Lewis, the two largest proxy advisory companies that track thousands of annual meetings, have said separately in recent weeks that the paydays BlackRock wants to give management are cause for shareholder concern because it is unclear exactly how the firm arrives at those awards’ overall size. There is also a misalignment between the investment firm’s performance and the pay packages BlackRock has outlined, the two advisory firms said. “We believe that the disconnect between pay and performance during the year in review warrants shareholder concern,” Glass Lewis said last month. Glass Lewis last recommended that BlackRock stockholders vote against executive compensation in 2018. Although most of BlackRock’s equity-based awards are rooted in “clearly disclosed multi-year goals that appear reasonably rigorous,” ISS said in its report, it has “significant” concerns about how the firm decides to dole out cash incentives. ISS said Fink’s pay of $27 million last year was higher than median CEO pay at peer firms. Fink’s pay in 2023 declined 18% from $32.7 million the prior year; median CEO pay at ISS-selected competitors was $21.5 million in 2023. While BlackRock stock’s total return has outperformed the S&P 500’s total return over five years, it has lagged behind on a one- and three-year basis, according to ISS, which also pointed to flat revenue year-over-year. Net income and per-share earnings rose in that time, ISS noted. BlackRock, which managed $10.5 trillion of assets as of March, has recommended that shareholders support ratifying its 2023 executive compensation. The New York-based firm said in its proxy statement that it reached out to its 50 largest shareholders to discuss different matters ahead of its meeting and found that “no significant concerns regarding executive compensation were raised from our engagements.” “BlackRock has a longstanding pay-for-performance culture, and our executive compensation program is based on the same metrics-driven approach that has received substantial shareholder support in prior years,” a BlackRock spokesperson said in a statement to Barron’s. “Over the last five years, the firm has delivered industry leading growth and shareholder value, generating more than $1.9 trillion in new client assets and outperforming the financial services sector and the S&P 500. We look forward to engaging with our shareholders.” It is rare that stockholders vote against companies’ proposed pay packages in general. Investors at just 12 companies in the S&P 500 voted against the item last year and the average vote for so-called say-on-pay across the index was 88.7%, according to consulting firm Semler Brossy. During the 2023 shareholder meeting, BlackRock investors overwhelmingly supported the executive pay item, with 92% voting in favor. It encompasses pay for so-called “named executive officers,” or NEOs—legalese used by BlackRock and other large public companies to define top officials, such as CEOs and CFOs. Like other big asset managers, BlackRock casts tens of thousands of their own votes at other companies’ annual meetings because of the stakes it has amassed through its funds. BlackRock is also working on a new program that gives individual investors options to vote. “One of the reasons that BlackRock is a particular concern is that BlackRock also votes on pay packages. If BlackRock itself has a problematic pay package, that suggests a tolerance for high pay,” said Rosanna Landis Weaver, a consultant who examines executive pay with the not-for-profit shareholder advocacy organization As You Sow. The group is voting against BlackRock’s executive pay this year. Segal Marco Advisors, a consultant that advises clients overseeing some $600 billion of assets on matters including proxy voting, also plans to vote against BlackRock’s say-on-pay proposal, said Max Dulberger, Segal Marco’s director of corporate governance and engagement. Pay and CEOs who also serve as board chairs, such as Fink, are under scrutiny at several Wall Street firms. A tiny London-based activist investment firm, Bluebell Capital Partners, has proposed that BlackRock split the roles of CEO and chair. BlackRock has recommended that shareholders vote against the proposal.
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