Larry Culp was appointed to head GE as its CEO in 2018. The Boston Globe via Getty Images BOSTON - NOVEMBER 5: GE CEO Larry Culp is pictured as General Electric unveils the world's largest offshore wind turbine blade at a wind testing facility in the Charlestown neighborhood of Boston on Nov. 5, 2019. GE CEO Larry Culp was on hand to show off the 117-yard-long, 50-ton blade made of glass fibers held together with 1 mile of glued seams. It will undergo months-long testing at the facility. (Photo by John Tlumacki/The Boston Globe via Getty Images)
Larry Culp was appointed to head GE as its CEO in 2018. The Boston Globe via Getty Images BOSTON - NOVEMBER 5: GE CEO Larry Culp is pictured as General Electric unveils the world's largest offshore wind turbine blade at a wind testing facility in the Charlestown neighborhood of Boston on Nov. 5, 2019. GE CEO Larry Culp was on hand to show off the 117-yard-long, 50-ton blade made of glass fibers held together with 1 mile of glued seams. It will undergo months-long testing at the facility. (Photo by John Tlumacki/The Boston Globe via Getty Images)
Larry Culp was appointed to head GE as its CEO in 2018. The Boston Globe via Getty Images BOSTON - NOVEMBER 5: GE CEO Larry Culp is pictured as General Electric unveils the world's largest offshore wind turbine blade at a wind testing facility in the Charlestown neighborhood of Boston on Nov. 5, 2019. GE CEO Larry Culp was on hand to show off the 117-yard-long, 50-ton blade made of glass fibers held together with 1 mile of glued seams. It will undergo months-long testing at the facility. (Photo by John Tlumacki/The Boston Globe via Getty Images)
Larry Culp was appointed to head GE as its CEO in 2018. The Boston Globe via Getty Images BOSTON - NOVEMBER 5: GE CEO Larry Culp is pictured as General Electric unveils the world's largest offshore wi

How a contract tweak helped GE's CEO Larry Culp earn $124m


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Larry Culp needed a mega-million do-over.

The pandemic was tanking General Electric stock and pushing Mr Culp’s big prize – a $232 million equity windfall – out of reach for the top executive.

Before long, he got his do-over: GE’s directors shifted the goal line for the haul by cutting his targets in half. In a stroke, the lucrative deal he’d secured in hardball negotiations two years earlier had become even more lucrative, enough to make him one of the highest-paid US executives for 2020, according to the Bloomberg Pay Index.

Most shareholders weren’t happy, especially as GE’s stock has trailed the broader market since Mr Culp took over in 2018. Despite pushback, the chief executive’s deal remains intact and has now secured him shares currently worth around $124m.

The story of how GE saved its chief executive’s giant windfall is an extreme example of how hundreds of US corporations looked out for their executives during the pandemic economy. They tweaked bonus conditions, letting bosses collect hundreds of millions in bonuses that otherwise would never have been paid out.

But perhaps no chief executive benefited more than Mr Culp.

At GE’s annual meeting this month, more than half of investors voted against the executive pay programme in a non-binding referendum, an exceedingly rare result for a large US company.

Some investors told the board that Mr Culp’s Covid concession looked like a repricing – an echo of corporate America’s freewheeling compensation practices two decades ago that sparked federal investigations and the ouster of dozens of bosses.

“It’s highly problematic,” said Michael Varner, head of compensation research at CtW Investment Group, which represents union pension funds with more than $250 billion in assets.

Mr Culp’s tweak was included in a contract amendment that prolonged his tenure by two years to August 2024.

Thomas Horton, GE’s lead independent director, defended the decision at the May 4 annual meeting, saying it was the responsible thing to do. The lowered thresholds reflected the “significant uncertainty related to the pandemic at that time”, he said.

A GE spokeswoman said the award won’t pay out unless Mr Culp stays his full term. She said in a statement that it’s “tied to producing results and only can be attained if the company delivers substantial value for shareholders and employees”.

The controversy centers on restricted shares Mr Culp received when he took the job in 2018. The payout depended on how high he could get the stock’s average closing price over a 30-day stretch at any point during his tenure.

At the lower end – $18.60 – he’d cash in around $43m. At the high end – $31, where GE hadn’t traded since late 2016 – he’d get $232m. With his new contract, those thresholds were slashed to $10.01 on the low end and $16.68 on the high end. GE shares closed at $14.06 on Friday in New York.

Mr Culp came to GE during a precarious time. A raft of issues – toxic insurance holdings, troubles in its power-equipment division and a federal accounting probe – had torpedoed the stock.

The executive had made his name at Danaher Corporation, a Washington-based manufacturing conglomerate founded by two reclusive billionaire brothers. Hardly a household name, it’s highly regarded in industry circles for its operational prowess. He spent more than a decade as its chief executive and retired in 2015 after having collected more than $300m in cash and stock, with plans to fish and ski.

In April 2018, he was asked to join GE’s board. Six months later, chief executive John Flannery was ousted and Mr Culp took the reins.

Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates. November 7, 2016/// GE, General Electric oil and gas's logo. ADIPEC, Day 1. Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates. Mona Al Marzooqi/ The National ID: 56905 Reporter: LeAnne, Tony, and Dalia Section: Business *** Local Caption *** 161107-MM-ADIPECday1-071.JPG
Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates. November 7, 2016/// GE, General Electric oil and gas's logo. ADIPEC, Day 1. Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates. Mona Al Marzooqi/ The National ID: 56905 Reporter: LeAnne, Tony, and Dalia Section: Business *** Local Caption *** 161107-MM-ADIPECday1-071.JPG

Bruised by the plummeting share price and a recent scandal centering on ex-chief executive Jeff Immelt’s jet travel, the board offered Mr Culp a no-frills pay package worth about $25m per year, according to people with knowledge of the matter, who asked for anonymity to discuss private information. The offer didn’t include a big upfront stock award.

Mr Culp’s attorney sent a counteroffer so extreme that some recipients balked. Mr Culp’s underlying message, the people said, was clear: Make it worth my while to take this job.

The parties settled on a middle-of-the-road option: an annual pay package worth $21.3m, plus the award of restricted shares. The board sold it by saying Mr Culp will only get rich if shareholders also win.

“Larry and I are very much working arm in arm in this endeavour,” Mr Horton, the GE director who’s also chairman of the board committee that oversees executive pay and negotiated with Mr Culp, told the Dallas Morning News in 2019. “He’s a first-class guy.”

Mr Culp quickly got to work reorganising the power division, selling off businesses and shoring up cash by slashing the dividend. By early 2020, the shares traded above $13. Then the pandemic struck and GE stock dropped to just $5.49, its lowest level in around three decades.

By the summer, Mr Culp was privately souring on his pay package.

Why should I be steering GE through all this, Mr Culp asked an associate at the time, if I’m not getting rewarded for what I’m doing?

“These assertions are absolutely false,” a GE spokesperson said by email, saying Mr Culp never complained about his pay.

The board offered to cut the price targets in return for a commitment to stay on until 2024. “There has been overwhelming support for Larry’s leadership” among investors, Mr Horton said at the meeting.

Some investors were flummoxed by the move. GE stock rallied in the following months, erasing the loss suffered early on during the pandemic.

The two major proxy advisory firms blasted the board’s reasoning and BlackRock, its third-biggest investor, said there was a clear misalignment between pay and performance.

“I don’t think they needed to do it to keep him,” said Tim McNamara, a vice chairman at executive recruiting firm Odgers Berndtson, who’s recruited hundreds of company bosses and owns GE stock.

At the May 4 meeting, almost 58 per cent of GE’s investors voted against the package –  the company’s worst result since advisory pay votes were first held a decade ago.

The vote has no bearing on Mr Culp’s pay deal. And with three years left on his contract, he has plenty of time to achieve the full payout.

Carol Bowie, the former head of Americas research at proxy adviser Institutional Shareholder Services, said senior executives rarely focus on the dollars and cents, but are more concerned with how they stack up against their peers.

“It’s not the money –  it’s the esteem,” Ms Bowie said. “It helps them stand out.”

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Genesis G80 2020 5.0-litre Royal Specs

Engine: 5-litre V8

Gearbox: eight-speed automatic

Power: 420hp

Torque: 505Nm

Fuel economy, combined: 12.4L/100km

Price: Dh260,500

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Empty Words

By Mario Levrero  

(Coffee House Press)
 

Winners

Ballon d’Or (Men’s)
Ousmane Dembélé (Paris Saint-Germain / France)

Ballon d’Or Féminin (Women’s)
Aitana Bonmatí (Barcelona / Spain)

Kopa Trophy (Best player under 21 – Men’s)
Lamine Yamal (Barcelona / Spain)

Best Young Women’s Player
Vicky López (Barcelona / Spain)

Yashin Trophy (Best Goalkeeper – Men’s)
Gianluigi Donnarumma (Paris Saint-Germain and Manchester City / Italy)

Best Women’s Goalkeeper
Hannah Hampton (England / Aston Villa and Chelsea)

Men’s Coach of the Year
Luis Enrique (Paris Saint-Germain)

Women’s Coach of the Year
Sarina Wiegman (England)

RESULTS

Light Flyweight (48kg): Alua Balkibekova (KAZ) beat Gulasal Sultonalieva (UZB) by points 4-1.

Flyweight (51kg): Nazym Kyzaibay (KAZ) beat Mary Kom (IND) 3-2.

Bantamweight (54kg): Dina Zholaman (KAZ) beat Sitora Shogdarova (UZB) 3-2.

Featherweight (57kg): Sitora Turdibekova (UZB) beat Vladislava Kukhta (KAZ) 5-0.

Lightweight (60kg): Rimma Volossenko (KAZ) beat Huswatun Hasanah (INA) KO round-1.

Light Welterweight (64kg): Milana Safronova (KAZ) beat Lalbuatsaihi (IND) 3-2.

Welterweight (69kg): Valentina Khalzova (KAZ) beat Navbakhor Khamidova (UZB) 5-0

Middleweight (75kg): Pooja Rani (IND) beat Mavluda Movlonova (UZB) 5-0.

Light Heavyweight (81kg): Farida Sholtay (KAZ) beat Ruzmetova Sokhiba (UZB) 5-0.

Heavyweight (81 kg): Lazzat Kungeibayeva (KAZ) beat Anupama (IND) 3-2.

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Brief scores:

England: 290 & 346

Sri Lanka: 336 & 243

The specs

Price, base / as tested Dh1,100,000 (est)

Engine 5.2-litre V10

Gearbox seven-speed dual clutch

Power 630bhp @ 8,000rpm

Torque 600Nm @ 6,500rpm

Fuel economy, combined 15.7L / 100km (est) 

BMW M5 specs

Engine: 4.4-litre twin-turbo V-8 petrol enging with additional electric motor

Power: 727hp

Torque: 1,000Nm

Transmission: 8-speed auto

Fuel consumption: 10.6L/100km

On sale: Now

Price: From Dh650,000

UAE currency: the story behind the money in your pockets
Test

Director: S Sashikanth

Cast: Nayanthara, Siddharth, Meera Jasmine, R Madhavan

Star rating: 2/5

WHAT IS A BLACK HOLE?

1. Black holes are objects whose gravity is so strong not even light can escape their pull

2. They can be created when massive stars collapse under their own weight

3. Large black holes can also be formed when smaller ones collide and merge

4. The biggest black holes lurk at the centre of many galaxies, including our own

5. Astronomers believe that when the universe was very young, black holes affected how galaxies formed

The figures behind the event

1) More than 300 in-house cleaning crew

2) 165 staff assigned to sanitise public areas throughout the show

3) 1,000 social distancing stickers

4) 809 hand sanitiser dispensers placed throughout the venue

Living in...

This article is part of a guide on where to live in the UAE. Our reporters will profile some of the country’s most desirable districts, provide an estimate of rental prices and introduce you to some of the residents who call each area home.

How to volunteer

The UAE volunteers campaign can be reached at www.volunteers.ae , or by calling 800-VOLAE (80086523), or emailing info@volunteers.ae.

UAE currency: the story behind the money in your pockets