General Motors CEO Mary Barra is sworn in before testifying on Capitol
Hill regarding a GM safety defect linked to 13 deaths, April 1, 2014.
Photo: Mark Wilson/Getty Images
General Motors Co. Chief Executive Mary Barra's compensation for 2015
rose 72 percent from the prior year to $28 million as she guided the
company to record profits, the company said on Friday.
Her compensation, including pension and perks, was $28.6 million, the automaker said.
Her compensation, including pension and perks, was $28.6 million, the automaker said.
Much of Barra's compensation was tied to stock awards she
cannot yet cash in, and some of those awards are tied to share price
performance. The total compensation she realized in 2015 from the awards
was $7.3 million, GM said.
The compensation included a one-time grant last June of
stock that could be valued at $11.2 million, which is tied to the stock
being at least $31.32 per share. That was the value of a GM common share
last June when the awards were granted. That award vests over more than
four years.
GM shares were trading midday Friday at $32.42 per share.
Barra, 54, became CEO in January 2014 and steered the
company through a massive safety recall and costly litigation related to
ignition switches in older-model small cars.
In 2015, GM reported record revenue of $152.4 billion and record EBIT-adjusted earnings of $10.8 billion.
In February, Fiat Chrysler Automobiles (FCHA.MI) (FCAU.N)
told the Securities and Exchange Commission that Chief Executive Sergio
Marchionne's total compensation was an estimated $73.6 million,
including the value of the stock awards when they vested. Marchionne has
not yet cashed them out and their value fluctuates over time.
Marchionne received a salary of $4 million and a bonus of $6.85 million in 2015.
Ford Motor Co's (F.N) CEO Mark Fields' 2015 compensation in
salary, bonus and stock rose 17 percent from the prior year to about
$17.4 million. Ford also had record pretax profits last year. Including
pension and perks, Fields made $18.6 million last year, down from $18.9
million in 2014.
GM President Dan Ammann's 2015 compensation was $11.8 million, some
of it also is based on future company share performance, and $4.2
million of his compensation came from a one-time award granted last
summer, GM said.
GM also announced that its annual meeting will be held in
Detroit on June 7. At that meeting, 57-year-old Jane Mendillo will stand
for election to the GM board of directors, and Steve Girsky, who is now
53, will retire from the board, GM said on Friday.
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