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5/13/2020

Gene Sperling, Counselor to the Secretary of the Treasury, Opening Statement before the U.S. House of Representatives Committee on …

U.S. DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY
Press Center

Gene Sperling, Counselor to the Secretary of the Treasury, Opening Statement before
the U.S. House of Representatives Committee on Financial Services
6/11/2009

TG-166
Chairman Frank, Ranking Member Bachus, Members of the Committee, I appreciate the opportunity to testify before you on this important
topic of systemic risk and executive compensation.
Each of us involved in economic policy has an obligation to fully understand the factors that contributed to this financial crisis and to make
our best effort to find the policies that minimize the likelihood of its recurrence. There is little question that one contributing factor to the
excessive risk taking that was central to the crisis was the prevalence of compensation practices at financial institutions that encouraged
short-term gains to be realized with little regard to the potential economic damage such behavior could cause not only to those firms, but
to the financial system and economy as a whole. As Secretary Geithner said yesterday, too often "incentives for short-term gains
overwhelmed the checks and balances meant to mitigate against the risk of excess leverage." Compensation structures that permitted key
executives and other financial actors to avoid the potential long-term downsides of their actions discouraged a focus on determining longterm risk and underlying economic value, while reducing the number of financial market participants with an incentive to be a "canary in
the coal mine."
After one large investment bank suffered large losses, it acknowledged – properly reflecting on what it should have done differently – that
it had skewed its employees' incentives by simply measuring bonuses against gross revenue after personnel costs, with "no formal
account taken of the quality or sustainability of those earnings." And the potential harm caused by compensation arrangements based on
short-term results with little account for long-term risks went beyond top executives. Indeed, across the subprime mortgage industry,
brokers were often compensated in ways that placed a high premium on the volume of their lending without regard to whether borrowers
had the ability to make their payments. As a result, lenders, whose compensation normally did not require them to internalize long-term
risk, had a strong incentive to increase volume by targeting riskier and riskier borrowers – and they did, contributing to the problems that
spurred our current crisis.
As we work to restore financial stability, the focus on executive compensation at companies that have received governmental assistance is
appropriate and understandable. But what is most important for our economy at large is the topic of this hearing: understanding how
compensation practices contributed to this financial crisis and what steps we can take to ensure they do not cause excessive risk-taking in
the future. And while the financial sector has been at the center of this issue, we believe that compensation practices must be better
aligned with long-term value and prudent risk management at all firms, and not just for the financial services industry.
Yesterday, Secretary Geithner laid out a set of principles for moving forward with compensation reforms. Our goal is to help ensure that
there is a much closer alignment between compensation, sound risk management and long-term value creation for firms and the economy
as a whole. Our goal is not to have the government micromanage private sector compensation. As Secretary Geithner said yesterday, "We
are not capping pay. We are not setting forth precise prescriptions for how companies should set compensation, which can often be
counterproductive." We also recognize these principles may evolve over time, and we look forward to engaging in a discussion with this
Committee, the Congress, supervisors, academics and other compensation experts, shareholders and the business community about the
best path. We begin this conversation recognizing that the reforms we put in place must be based not only on our best intentions, but also
a clear-eyed understanding of the need to minimize unintended consequences. But we think these principles offer a promising way
forward.
1.

Compensation plans should properly measure and reward performance

There is little debate that compensation should be tied to performance in order to best align the incentives of executives with those of
shareholders. But even compensation that is nominally performance-based has often rewarded failure or set benchmarks too low to have
a meaningful impact.
There is increasing consensus in the expert community that performance-based compensation must involve a thoughtful combination of
metrics that is indexed to relative performance as opposed to just following the ups and downs of the market. Performance pay based
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Gene Sperling, Counselor to the Secretary of the Treasury, Opening Statement before the U.S. House of Representatives Committee on …

solely on stock price can on the one hand, "confuse brains for a bull-market" and in the other scenario, fail to recognize exceptional
contributions by executives in difficult times. A thoughtful mix of performance metrics could include not only stock prices, but individual
performance assessments, adherence to risk management and measures that account for the long-term soundness of the firm.
2.

Compensation should be structured in line with the time horizon of risks

As I mention above, much of the damage caused by this crisis occurred when people were able to capture excessive and immediate gains
without their compensation reflecting the long-term risks they were imposing on their companies, their shareholders, and ultimately, the
economy as a whole. Financial firms offered incentives to invest heavily in complex financial instruments that yielded large gains in the
short-term, but presented a "tail risk" of major losses. Inevitably, these practices contributed to an overwhelming focus on gains – as they
allowed the payout of significant amounts of compensation today without any regard for the possible downside that might come tomorrow.
That is why we believe companies should seek to pay both executives and other employees in ways that are tightly aligned with the longterm value and soundness of the firm. One traditional way of doing so is to provide compensation for executives overwhelmingly in stock
that must be held for a long period of time – even beyond retirement. Such compensation structures also reduce the risk that executives
might walk away with large pay packages in one year only to see their firms crumble in the next year or two. In these cases, the dramatic
decline in stock price would effectively "claw back" the previous year's pay. Other firms keep bonuses "at risk," so that if large profits in one
year are followed by poor performance in the next, the bonuses will be reduced.
Yet, as Harvard Professor Lucian Bebchuk has written, compensation packages based on restricted stock are not a fool-proof means of
ensuring alignment with long-term value, as such pay structures can still incentivize well-timed strategies to manipulate the value of
common equity or take "heads I win a lot, tails I lose a little" bets depending on the capital structure and degree of leverage of the firm.
3. Compensation practices should be aligned with sound risk management
Ensuring that compensation fosters sound risk-management requires pay strategies that do not allow market participants to completely
externalize their long-term risk, while also ensuring that those responsible for risk management receive the compensation and the
authority within firms to provide a check on excessive risk-taking. As the Financial Stability Forum recently stated, "staff engaged in
financial and risk control must be independent, have appropriate authority, and be compensated in a manner that is independent of the
business areas they oversee and commensurate with their key role in the firm."
This authority and independence is all the more important in times of excessive optimism when consistent – though unsustainable – asset
appreciation can temporarily make the reckless look wise and the prudent look overly risk-averse. Former Federal Reserve Chairman
William McChesney Martin Jr. once said that "The job of the Federal Reserve is to take away th e punch bowl just when the party starts
getting interesting ." Likewise, risk managers must have the independence, stature and pay to take the car keys away when they believe a
temporary good-time may be creating even a small risk of a major financial accident down the road.
Yet there are several reports showing the degree to which risk managers lacked the appropriate authority during the run-up to this financial
crisis. Accounts of one Wall Street firm discuss how risk managers who once roamed the trading floors to gain a better understanding of
how the company worked and where weaknesses might exist were denied access to that necessary information and discouraged from
expressing their concerns.
That is why we believe that compensation committees should conduct and publish a risk assessment of whether pay structures – not only
for top executives, but for all employees – incentivize excessive risk-taking. As part of this process, committees should identify whether an
employee or executive experiences a penalty if their exceptional performance is based on decisions that ultimately put the long-term
health of the firm in danger. At the same time, managers should also have direct reporting access to the compensation committee to
enhance their impact.
I should also note that in the rule we released yesterday concerning executive compensation for recipients of assistance through the
Troubled Asset Relief Program, we put forward – as the Administration called for on February 4 th – a requirement that compensation
committees not only provide a full risk assessment for their compensation, but that they do so in a narrative form that explains the
rationale for how their pay structure does not encourage excessive risk. We believe such a requirement not only increases transparency,
but forces firms to think through the basic risk logic of their compensation plans, and we hope it will help begin an important discussion
between shareholders, directors and risk managers about the relationship between compensation and risk.
4.
We should reexamine whether golden parachutes and supplemental retirement packages align the interests of executives
and shareholders
While golden parachutes were created to align executives' interests with those of shareholders during mergers, they have expanded in
ways that may not be consistent with the long-term value of the firm, and – as of 2006 – were in place at over 80 percent of the largest
firms. Likewise, supplemental retirement packages that are intended to provide financial security to employees are too often used obscure
the full amount of "walkaway" pay due a top executive once they leave the firm. Indeed, Lucian Bebchuk and Jesse Fried have shown that
there is substantial evidence that "firms use retirement benefits to provide executives with substantial amounts of `stealth compensation' -compensation not transparent to shareholders – that is largely decoupled from performance." [1]

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Gene Sperling, Counselor to the Secretary of the Treasury, Opening Statement before the U.S. House of Representatives Committee on …

Examining these practices is all the more important because when workers who are losing their jobs see the top executives at their firms
walking away with huge severance packages, it creates the understandable impression that there is a double-standard in which top
executives are rewarded for failure at the same time working families are forced to sacrifice. As Secretary Geithner said yesterday, "we
should reexamine how well these golden parachutes and supplemental retirement packages are aligned with shareholder interests,
whether they truly incentivize performance and whether they reward top executives even if their shareholders lose value."
5. We should promote transparency and accountability in setting compensation
Many of the excessive compensation practices in place during the financial crisis likely would have been discouraged or reexamined if
they had been implemented by truly independent compensation committees and were transparent to a company's owners – its
shareholders. Companies often hire compensation consultants who also provide the firm millions of dollars in other services – creating
conflicts of interest. According to one Congressional investigation, the median CEO salary of Fortune 250 companies in 2006 that hired
compensation consultants with the largest conflicts of interest was 67 percent higher than the median CEO salary of the companies that
did not use consultants with such conflicts of interest. [2]
That is why we hope to work with Chairman Frank and this committee to pass "say on pay" legislation, requiring all public companies to
hold a non-binding shareholder resolution to approve executive compensation packages. We believe that "say on pay" will place a greater
check on boards to ensure that their compensation packages are aligned with the interest of shareholders. Indeed, in Britain, where "say
on pay" was implemented in 2002, it has – according to a study by Professor Stephen Davis at Yale's Millstein Center for Corporate
Governance and Performance – been associated with greater communication between boards and shareholders, while a recent paper by
Fabrizio Ferri and David Maber of Harvard Business School has found that say on pay made CEO compensation more sensitive to
negative results. [3] As a result, the resolutions have gained more and more support, with 76 percent of Chartered Financial Analysts now
in favor of say on pay. [4]
In addition, we want to work with this committee and the Congress to pass legislation directing the SEC to put in place independence rules
for compensation committees analogous to those required for audit committees as part of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act. Our goal is to move
compensation committees from being independent in name to being independent in fact. Under this proposal, not only would committee
members be truly independent, but they would also be given the authority to appoint and retain compensation consultants and legal
counsel, along with the funding necessary to do so. This legislation would also instruct the SEC to create standards for ensuring the
independence of compensation consultants, providing shareholders with the confidence that the compensation committee is receiving
objective, expert advice.
I am pleased today to be testifying here alongside my colleagues from the SEC and the Fed. We are encouraged by the efforts of the SEC
to seek greater transparency and disclosure on compensation, and by the commitment of the Federal Reserve and other bank supervisors
to ensure compensation practices are consistent with their fundamental duty to promote the safety and soundness of our financial system.
As Secretary Geithner announced yesterday, we also hope to work further with other agencies on this issue by asking the President's
Working Group on Financial Markets to provide an annual review of compensation practices to monitor whether they are creating
excessive risks.
As we move to repair our financial system, get our economy growing again and pursue a broad agenda of regulatory reform, we must
ensure that the compensation practices that contributed to this crisis no longer put our system and our economy at risk. I commend the
committee for holding these hearings, and I look forward to approaching this difficult issue with a degree of seriousness, reflection and
humility – seriousness over the harm excessive risk-taking has caused for so many innocent people; reflection over the lessons we have
already learned; and humility in recognizing the complexity of this issue, its potential for unintended consequences, and the importance of
testing each of our ideas against the most rigorous analysis.
###

[1] Quoted in Lucian Bebchuk and Robert J. Jackson, Jr., "Executive Pensions," NBER Working Paper #11907, December 2005.
[2] House Oversight Committee Majority Staff, "Executive Pay: Conflicts of Interest Among Compensation Consultants," Report Published
December 2007.
[3] Stephen Davis, "Does `Say on Pay' Work? Lessons on Making CEO Compensation Accountable," Millstein Center Policy Briefing No.
1, 2007; Fabrizio Ferri and David Maber, "Say on Pay and CEO Compensation: Evidence from the UK," Harvard Business School Working
Paper, 2009.
[4] Keith L. Johnson and Daniel Summerfield, "Shareholder Say on Pay: Ten Points of Confusion," Briefing Prepared for Shareholder
Forum Program on Reconsidering "Say on Pay" Proposals, October 2008.

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