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Between the Lines

Larry Dignan, Andrew Nusca and Rachel King

HP blows nearly $47 million on its CEO follies

By | February 3, 2012, 9:12am PST

Summary: HP spent $30.41 million in total compensation for ousted CEO Leo Apotheker. New CEO Meg Whitman landed $16.52 million in total compensation.

For HP, fiscal 2011 was the year of two CEOs—Leo Apotheker and Meg Whitman—and it cost the company dearly.

In its proxy statement filed Friday, HP outlined the compensation packages for its relatively new CEO and the parting gift for Apotheker.

The damage? Whitman took a salary of $1 for fiscal 2011 and option awards worth $16.15 million. Toss in other competition and the grand total comes to $16.52 million rounded.

And then there’s Apotheker, who wrestled with strategy, communications and a decision whether to spin off HP’s PC unit. Simply put, the Apotheker reign was a disaster.

However, that disaster was $30.41 million in total compensation. Apotheker landed $1.15 million in salary, $6.4 million in bonus, $17.66 million in stock awards and another $5.2 million in other. Apotheker made a bundle for just a few months work.

Add it up and you’re at a $46.9 million tab for two CEOs in a year. And that’s simplifying the equation a bit. Interim CEO Cathy Lesjak also made out nicely. She had $11 million in total compensation, but that’s worth it given Lesjak held the fort while HP was going through a messy transition.


As for the footnotes in HP’s compensation tale, Apotheker’s separation agreement deserves a callout. HP said:

On September 22, 2011, Mr. Apotheker terminated as President and Chief Executive Officer of HP, and HP and Mr. Apotheker subsequently entered into a Separation Agreement and Release (the “Separation Agreement”). The Separation Agreement confirms that Mr. Apotheker would receive certain compensation and benefits under the terms of his then-existing employment agreement, including $7.2 million in cash severance payments (subject to his continued compliance with certain non-compete and non-solicitation provisions) and accelerated vesting of 156,000 shares of restricted stock. The Separation Agreement also provides for Mr. Apotheker to receive a fiscal 2011 bonus of $2.4 million, reflecting his nearly 11 months of service with HP, and certain relocation and repatriation benefits to assist him in returning his family to France or Belgium, along with certain financial protections in connection with the sale of his California residence. In addition, Mr. Apotheker retains the right to receive future payouts under two of the three PRU awards granted to him in connection with his commencement of employment, subject to the company’s satisfaction of applicable performance conditions. Mr. Apotheker’s third PRU award was cancelled.

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Topics

Larry Dignan is Editor in Chief of ZDNet and SmartPlanet as well as Editorial Director of ZDNet's sister site TechRepublic.

Disclosure

Larry Dignan

Larry Dignan has nothing to disclose. He doesn’t hold investments in the technology companies he covers.

Biography

Larry Dignan

Larry Dignan is Editor in Chief of ZDNet and SmartPlanet as well as Editorial Director of ZDNet's sister site TechRepublic. He was most recently Executive Editor of News and Blogs at ZDNet. Prior to that he was executive news editor at eWeek and news editor at Baseline. He also served as the East Coast news editor and finance editor at CNET News.com. Larry has covered the technology and financial services industry since 1995, publishing articles in WallStreetWeek.com, Inter@ctive Week, The New York Times, and Financial Planning magazine. He's a graduate of the Columbia School of Journalism and the University of Delaware.

For daily updates, follow Larry on Twitter.

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RE: HP blows nearly $47 million on its CEO follies
dsf3g 6th Feb
Think of how many small businesses could get their start with that money. What a waste!
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No matter which this is spun - the amounts involved are a joke for any Fortune 500 company, period. Then again, a few more years of this sort of expensive musical chairs, and this company will not be in the Fortune 500.
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@Matthew A. Sawtell
+ 1 that's true
@Matthew A. Sawtell -

Agreed.
0 Votes
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But it was worth it.
otaddy Updated - 3rd Feb
Mr or Ms CEO brings valuable experience in some made up talent , and will allow us to focus on core competencies that are aligned with our core values. This realignment will carry us forward and bring us increased profits.

And on and on and on...
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Don't forget da cheddah!
klumper 3rd Feb
@otaddy

Never'ever do dat. wink
@otaddy -

These days, most companies fire "talent" if they're employed for too long (higher wages/benefits/demands). The ageism problem doesn't help either.

Companies think that things written on paper and parrots to squawk them is adequate. Real talent, real labor, and real quality are just too expensive for the quarterly balance sheet... (until people notice and abscond the brand because they're no longer performing...)

But given the declining quality of products made by these companies, something bigger is going on.

Economic and societal cannibalism...
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True.
otaddy 5th Feb
@HypnoToad72 And you know, I'm expecting this to happen to me one of these days. Of course, I get no golden parachute.
@otaddy
The reason for taking $1 salaries is they know that regular income is taxed at a higher rate, so they prefer to get their money in stock options which are taxed at half that rate.
The Reagan revolution ushered in the era of indexing capital gains, cutting capital gains taxes and pushing instead consumption taxes in order to push the tax burden down to the middle class and poor.
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So it's political?
otaddy 5th Feb
@johnsmith9875 I'm no Republican, so I don't mind criticisms of Reagan. But I gotta ask: What have the Dems done to fix this? And there sure are a lot of wealthy libs around that seem to be profiting from the current system too!
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Come in...get paid millions of dollars...screw up the company...then get paid MORE millions of dollars to leave.

Is this a great country or what?
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@IT_Fella You win either way. Stock goes up you get a bonus, stock goes down, you get your golden parachute.
0 Votes
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Sometimes you have to cut off the pinkie to save the hand. Meg gets it. Salespeople are getting raises, previous defectors are being sought out and enticed back, 80 engineers have been redeployed from HP-UX to storage. In the Enterprise space they have begun to reverse the brain drain of The Hurd Era. The pendulum is swinging back...
@john.defrees@... pretty much everybody at HP that supported our company well is now gone, including the account rep, project managers, technical architects and network gurus. All gone. Now we are having failures out the wazzoo on servers and laptops and we see why HP is rated at the bottom of the barrel for support. Leo torpedoed the company, and Meg didn't fix anything as far as we can tell.
@john.defrees@... HP's quality has continued to go downward since 2005 or so.

With luck Meg's changes will do some good, but we'll see what happens.

After all, some people try to cure the disease by killing the patient...
How does a CEO that screws things up qualify for a bonus?
@schultzycom - You have no idea how many zillions of stock options they would have got if things had gone right. The money that Leo got was the *minimum*, the maximum could have been $120 million. It's just insane, and complete robbery of the stockholders.
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About the only surefire thing, besides follies of every stripe, that you can ALWAYS count on being delivered from our vainglorious movers and shakers.
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@klumper They are worth every penny... NOT!
Why do shareholders go along with this. This is a clear sign that the board needs to go as well. wtf is this cr@p shareholders have to swallow. Might as well give them a pearl necklace as well!
@Tokamak123 -

Assuming that have a choice.

Beware of politicians that vote 'no' to letting stockholders having any real say...

Here's one:

http://ontheissues.org/OH/John_Boehner.htm#Corporations


"Voted NO on letting shareholders vote on executive compensation. (Jul 2009) "

Funny how these same cats talk of "freedom" and "free market" and how everyone is supposedly at the will of the stockholders...
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Its the CEO Club, Baby
jpr75_z 4th Feb
If you can get in, you are set for life. Do well-get millions, screw up-get millions, get fired-get millions, and 6 months later land another CEO job where it starts over. Cha-ching Baby! And it's not just money. Some of these "fired" CEOs get full health care benefits, get to take expensive art work with them, and get continued use of corporate assets such as planes, helicopters, cars and apartments. Truly mindboggling.
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And to top it off
GoPower 4th Feb
They want capital gains and estate taxes eliminated. Then we'll have a true royal class.

@jpr75_z
Above all, HP has blown its chance to meet with the future... The latter being priceless.
Above all, HP has blown its chance to meet with the future... The latter being priceless.

Caroline Olsen
Leo Apotheker - A Man, A Destiny
Looking Backwards
Replace a CEO with a decision dartboard, and you save $16 million dollars and get pretty much the same job performance
Think of how many small businesses could get their start with that money. What a waste!

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